* Dr. 1 F. Mervitt Results Astonish MEN OF SCIENCE. Sarsar AYERS paritia A MEDICINE WITHOUT AN EQUAL. Statement of a Well Enown Doctor " Ayer's la is without an equcl nga blood- waster a and Spring medicine, ned cannot have praise cuough., Lhave watched its effects in chronle cases, where other treatment was of no avail, and have beet astoni+ ihed at the results. No other blow medicine 1 hove ever used, and I have tried the mall, -- so nro gh in it ermuunent ¢ures pr. li, F. Men z as aise sarsyatil Admitted at the World's Fair. & ST A SS RN aE Ee Se | aper's Pills for liverand bozels. wy { DODDS) 3 Kis PILLS J [awa CURE // AFTER TEN YEARS SUFFERING Two Box Cure MiiveErton, 287TH Jury, 1895. --For the last ten years I had eroubled with kidney dis being *| bad at iutervals ¢ could not lie in bed at night nor ny I had tried ney Pills and a Tam most happy to say Tt for my own gake as well as for others that I am per fectly r eured after using four boxes. JOHN RILEY all the p to the ground, find eard of Dodd's Kid ~-- at rertrtereuwernu ae ee ee es ee ' PYNY- PECTORAL §' ] Positively Cures f COUGHS and COLDS surprisingly borer igh It's a sci- ( oothing ts effects, , ina seilge cbr certainty. W. C. McComszr & Son, Bouchette, Que., -Pectoral Ma. J. H. Hurry, Chemist, 528 Yonge a, Teavieto, ey. i and tung a sea ube tn thelr mamas It is suitable for old or yo! the taste, Its sale with mo Deen bronder and [can Feeommend relia' ugh medicine ~ 'fia mand DAVIS & ea RENCE co., prictors ; J | I tubes, and also cured W. G. McCom! ) iong-eutnding cold. ] J : : E i Seer a) Large Bottle, 25 Cts: 3 ,] Wee SIRT a ' re 5 2isUyy sg 7 BY MALL ' ¢ ans comfort te you. wd wil en it, a CHAS, CLUTHE {84 Xmasr. Wer TO +--+ Can AD Booed itey >» PPP PIPL LDL RP LGN Oey ee RENT { DUNN Ss. BAKING [Ovt- O- DOORS. | THE COOKS BEST FRIEND oad SALE IN CANA LADIES' GOLF All About the Presedat ied Champloa of Engla Although knowing myself vory little > intricacies and tecu stealities » Virtues and tauings of in general, says Anna Went- worth Sears, in Harper's Bazar, it was mevertheless very pleasan, to muke a visit to the present lady champion in at her pretty little home it from Miss Amy Pas coe herself all abvut the game as it is pluyed in her country, and tmMy year's championship tournament on the links of the Royal Liverpool Club at Hoy- lake. Miss Pascoe is about as perfect @& specimen of a young woman athlete es u girl can be, She fs call and muscu- lar, with the sturdy, well-developed look that English women, i) the women of any other uble to acquire--but only woman Who has from her babyhood led uty Out-door Ife wad bnalalsed in -very hain "ot perf ? uch aoph Miss Pascoe is a very deligt in the outing costume that she hume in the daytime ah woollen viirt. " seavhlow te the top of her boots, silk blouse-waist made loose envugh hot to confine movements of her arms gud chest in the least, and the scout waterproof boots tha: she, with other oylish girls, doses not scorn to Wear. ine golfing carver of is young wo- ean Ras been rather remarkable. Al- tiough since her childhood she has boc an adept at every Kind ef out- door sport, ridin: on a pony or horse : she bexan to walk, and piaying » sh vis and erieket and hockey all her within the past three + has turned her atten- golf, The first year to play, in splte of tet of the wise, who told toa i ths] Soe had bexun too late to master as far enough advanc- tu enter for the national F tournament of that season; and 71 sear, her third of play. she came Winner In the contest. was Lady three } . ever since th, Ladies' Golf Union was formed and va annual tournament played. It was expected that she would again defend her tithe as the lady champion -- of Enghand, but. to the regret of m vheo had enjoyed seeing the oaite relberornan an vers praceful valve, | hk Upprarune May at pleading the number of social cngagemenss and the demands of her regular life as an ex- cuse for not having had time for the Practice and training necessary fer a competitor in the tournament. But it is probable that the three-times vie- lor felt lr would be only fair and gens eraus to step out of the competition fleld clear succesaful rivais, for her less A few Words about this tournament, and the way in which the entries for It are made from the different clubs, may be Interesting to those who are not acquainted with English methods of conducting sruch contests and the rules for the competitors. The first place lt must be well under- stood that the lady golfers of Great Eritain come from the very best people socially, and a professional is never edmitted into a club or allowed to Piay in the annual tournament or any of the smaller contests. Mure than any fr PA THE APPROACH StoT. other game tis ia ~ Bg et one row, and, in fact, so ch is it the rage that In anoint: "when there Is snow during the winter, the golfers even then do not stop their sport, but in snowy weather use red balls Instead of the regulation clubs are found membership of them 'all old and young scem to find equal en- joyment in the game. Indeed. some of the vhitehatred elderly ladies, who have made a study of it and have had léng ye@)- of practice, are among the best players. and nqt a few of them entered for-the tournament this year, as erMbusiastic,and eager to win as the younger contestants. Most of the clubs belong to one big leagse, called the Ladies' Golf Uni-n, and they a club having offered its grounds for the From all over England, Sco! and, the different clubs their members for the tourna England, and are very ora of color in the landscape, besides being most comfortable garments to play, in on a cold or a rainy day, The shade of all these coats is bright red. and the cut and shape of all much alike} but the buttons vary,,and_ the fscinr of the turn-back collar and revers turn-back cuffs are different for The members of different clubs, one club having these facings, white, another another black with white' pIp- .. and those who belong to a vlub which boasts the appellation royal having their facings always blue. No lady can enter for the tournament unless she {s a member of a club, and the members of clubs which betong t9 the union and subscribe an annual duc to !t pay a smaller entrance fee than thore who are member« of a club that is outside of the league The entrance? & ees, dues, etc.. are ured to buy the prizes. circulate and print the Htera- ture of the union. and for other €X- penses cp ae where the cantest took place this year, is just out of gig and pro beautifully situated, Her the Players and spectators ene A a day or twe before the fray began, and all was y for the start, which was made . » o'clock on Monday after tiuon, May The course over which the ladies fluyed was the m:a's Hinks, but short- ened from three miles to two and a helf, as is custov ary In the women's tournaments, Th number of entries was 8), and included women of every age, but almost all of them dressed In a similar costumer to that Miss Pascoe wears--a loose waist of silk or cotton short cloth skirt. and thick, -- hat or cap a thick, nailed boots. ema'l THE APPROACH--AFTER THE STROKE. The red coats were worn when the weather made it necessary, but during the week of playing the weather was generally all that cou be- e@ games were most interesting @ all times, not only to the competitors, but to the spectators also, as was well testified to by the numbers who were secent, Th- crowd a the final matcd bitWeen Miss Pascoe and Mis Thom- son on Friday sumbered nearly 3000 people. Naturally, to be the winner of such contest Was a most grtifying feat for Miss Pascoe: but in the least turned by her success and amoun; of attention and notice she has r-ceived on every side since her victory, Telling me all .bout tournament, she attributed her winning to good fortune as much 88s unything, and lef: it for others to tell huw very skillful was her play. how calm and sure her judgment und cool her head in the most critical moments of the game. It a playing such as bers and sume of th y piay~ ergs of England that justifies the critles In asserting ubat in golf, as tn other Kam such as tennia, etc., the wemen of their land can hold ati own with al] but the best male playe In speaking of the dicen betes neces es, says who has not from her chi!dhood had regular and careful golf training should unquestionably have Instruction from a skilled teacher, a professicnal belng best--ulthoush a zmateur. if painstaking in his training, wil] an- ewer, if he is accustomed tn teach and coach women on the subject, sclentious and thorough, can surely he cxpected from the most unpromising novices. Strength is not always one of the ¢8- nder good text-books sertials, she asserts, but good trained jedgm-nt, an accurate eye and a 90l head are a golfer's principal require should be of the best of their kind. Miss Pascoe's training Immediately before the tcurnament consisted in but > grounds of her home she scveral holes and putting greens. 80 eans She fs naturally proficient in every kind of our-door athletic pursuit, and in many of the sports has made famous records and carried off trophies. The assortment of prizes that she has won at golf alone ts enough to cover the top of quite a large tab! and most ¢onspicuous among them is rnament, & size of a quarter of a dollar, with the digure of a golf-player on one side, and iss Pascoe's name, the date, etc, on t o her "runner up," a Thomson, a sitpilar e silver was evel. and a bronze one fo each of the two ladles néxt to hey in score. A cup which has been in ex- istence since the first tournament f 0es to the club to which the year's wild) belongs. and it is the "Wimbled in" which will sport it this year, and vatll some one else, belo to another contest every season since the first, three years ago, and thie time tt was ciub, carries it awey. from' Miss P. Soa cor, A GONG OF LAZY TIMES. it tn the the locuat Lazy times are comlng--feel in " preeze. Ho ae are bumatog In Hear the, tow-belis cHaking, ¢lidking, th W, And 'the catb'rd's go. soft calling everywhere you Lazy times are coming--bear the willows swishing In the waters of th youngsicra are at fish Aud my aa BJ simply ales and lazing in the As I iisten i. the blvebird and the piplaz ne ploy Lazy times are coming--feel {t in the alr Oars with sunsbipe banging every- creek, where the HOW HE CUT WOOD. The Trick Played by a Wily Tramp on nsuspecting Housewife. A lady residing in tRe southeastern part of the city had an experience with a tramp the other day which has sour- ed her on that class of mendicants, The fellow came around and beggéd for something to eat, and got It. "Have you an k thag I can do?" he asked, after satisfying his hunger. "Well, you might cut that wood," said the lady, pointing to a pile of four- foot stove wood. "How much do you want for the job?" "Six bits." "Well, go ahead," she said. Shcrtly after that she had occasion to go down town, and when she left the house the tramp was industriously at Pointing at the woodpile he said proudly: "What do you think of that? Ever see an old man like me who could cut wood as quick ss that? Oh, I'm a lightning striker." The lady acknowledged that he was a him Shortly after his depart- ure she went to the woodpile for sticks, and was surprised on removing a few ° Pile consisted of uncut four-foot pi+ as to leave large Spaccs between them, It was quite apparent then that considerable of the wood had disappeared and that the remalinins sticks had been arranged in that way SO as not to show the pik had shrunk. Investigation disclosed the fact that some of the wood had been under a sidewalk, while other larg~ sticks had been concealed places around the yard and some of th- fuel taken into the woodshed. Yester- day the lady chanced to see a giant stick on top of the woodshed roof. Sie expects to happen on other pleces bere and there around the next two months, much surprised to find tnat the tramp had wedged some of the fuel In tne chimney top.--Stockton Mail. A Weary Patriot. "I've Hved here In Swrmp Center," he sald to the traveling man who had just gotten off the train, '"'man and bry, for forty odd yeor and I've c yote and lifted up my voice every time there was any 'casion fur either. the only thing I've ever got fur it all is ongratitude." "Still that ought not to prevent you . can't help takin' some inter- " alae participating {in public affairs," No, I t "There is so much, just now, to think about "T s'pose there Is. I see a good deal o word sliigin' about tt In the paper," "You don't seem to pay much atten- tion to the broad issues of our national controversies, Think of the problems that are now before the people; the cur- rency problem and the tariff problem." Yes, I know about 'em. must oa I feel myself sorter narrerin' I'm gettin' right next ter the nconauatien that most concerns me, an' -_ 4 ® 1 what your country "Yes I do. <An' 1 ain't goin' beatin' around the bush this country petsicn - aneY postmaster fur Swamp Cen I'm the only man thet kin araperty fill the bill Tin goin' ter make one last effort to bring about this reform an' ef on't suc- ceed this time, I'm dinged ef I don't retire ter private Ife an' leave my party to it fate."--D-troit Frre Press. Preeoclous, "Me b'y talked w'in he wor ttf wakes old." "That's nothing. The Heble says Job cursed the day he was born." He Grew Desperate. Charles liked to ride fast when he went out with his father. Consequeni- ly he bothered that worthy gentleman by saying whenever the horse's pace slackened, "Papa, fy don'y Kittie run? Papa, meke Kittie run," Annoyed by endless coal ra of this request his father finally s "Charile, if you say to again to- day, I shall punish you." Charile sat rebuked and stlent. Pres- ently they came to ea long viaduct, over which, 'as admonished by the sign board, they went at a slow pace, Char- lie wiggled and twisted, and several tuUmes looked up into his father's re- lentless face. At last he could: stand ft:'no longer, and burst forth with: "Well, papa, fot s'all I say, then?" At a-Diand vantage "Strange about that burglar getting arrested while disguised as a woman." "Nothing queer about that; he couldn't find his pistol pocket."--Chi- cman' Record. hidden | Remember All Repairs for the MASSEY HARRIS Co's Machines includ-. ing, |THR MASSEY Toronto, THE HARRIS, Brantford, THE PAT.ERSON, Wcodstock AND WISNER MACHINES Are Kept at R. MOORE'S Hardware Store. Listowel: a which soo Before Taking. bee: almost bopengases a had been treated by the most talented physi- Ld Wood's Phosphodin€.--z%e creat English Remedy, the result of over 55 years treating drugs, until at last we have' combination that will effect a prompt an Sexual Debility, Abuse or Excesses, Nervous Weakness, Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, n lead Insani --_ of cases with all known the true remedy and treatment--a and permanent cure in all stagesof Emissions, Mental Tobacco, or Alcoholic Stimulants, all at over the grave but with the contioued aod | and persevering use of} been given up to die, were to manly vigor and health--Reader you need not despair--no mat-| ter who has given you up as incurable--the remedy is now within your restored to a life of usefulness and happiness. Price, one package, $1; six packages, $55 by! mai} free of pos Wood's Phosphodins, these cases that reach, by its use you can be resto: One will please, yy ad The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. Wood's Phosphodine Is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists In the Dominion, => es @ 2 @ 28 8 82288 2848844 848288880888 La Words or Weight anu Wisdom Canada's Well-known Railroad Contractor, Mr. J. W. Dinwoodie, Ill. Treated by Several Doctors and Tried Nearly Every Proprietary Medicine--Got Very Little Benefit--Was Influenced to Use South American Nervine--Found Immediate Relief-- "The Nervousness Has Entirely Left My System "-- "I Will Never Be Without It in My Home." - \) le 2 MR. J. W. DINWOODIEF, CAMPBELLFOLD, ONT. Men of affairs usually weigh tho'r words, They are not of that class of people who carry their hearts upon their sleeve, 'One of the best known men of affairs in Canada is Mr. J. W. Dinwoodie, the large railroad contractor, evidence of whose work is to be found in all parts of the Dominion, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, to chain one section of our vast Dominion with another and bring its people into easy touch with euch other through the medium of the iron horse, as Mr. Dinwoodie has in a short lifetime done, is a work of which any man may be prond. Hard and brainy labor, however, is necessary to success of this character, and the strongest constitutions are in danger of freaking down under the strain. It has been so with Mr. Dinwoodie. The great thought that he has had to give to his work, and the care and responsibility that it has carried with it finally told on his constitution, and he became a victim of nervous troubles, his liver and kidneys becoming seriously disordered. Naturally he consulted a medical man. Comparatively no relicf was obtained. He changed his doctor, and did not stop with one, twoor three physicians, but he got no better. Various proprietary medi- cines were recommended, and, as he says himzelf, * Tried them all, but got very Sold by J. Livingstone, little benefit, Last fall I was camping out,and I wasifeoling very ill, I hap pened to pick upa paper with tie ad~ vertisement for South American Nervine. I determined to give it a trial, and pra cured a bottlo from the local druggist. After having taken but a few doses found very great relief The severe paim that I had been suffering inthe small of my back left me and the nervousness that bad rendered me, ina large measuro, so fit for work, has as a result of the tinued use of Nervine, become banished! from my system. Iam now able to en- joy refreshing sleep the night through I keep South American Nervine siways in the house, and I do not hesitate to say. that it is the very best medicine I have, ever taken, and most confidently rev commend it to anyone troubled with nervouspess of whatever form and the attendant diseases of the liver and stom=- ach that follow this weakness." 4 The important fact can not be tool often emphasized that South Ameri Nervine cures at the nerve centers, f which emanate all diseases This an undoubted scientific truth, fally perfectly demonstrated by science, it never an experiment to use Nervine, in this remedy is always found a cure Jr. Druggi t Listowel. Reiser ar »