1 nine bath, and? I" - DON"] That to remove ( a few days, 3:11 apply the old an ~Putnam’s Corr painaless. Putna; _ makes no sore 3 ~ quickly and pai I soft corns. How did you happen to call this place Ailburndale, Colonel? f Fellow that founded it was .3de Ihle. _ .. . But I don’t qul-te understanl Simple enough. Dale was â€dialed. _ _.-, “WV---“ .mwuhm u weed. He .has vioIated all the canon; of hygiene from-his earliest days, 3.1.}: it, is doubtful if'he has ever had a m .- ui'ne bath, and he has not mash-km: 29550“ f '- *‘éf‘aï¬'én or mom Rheumatism for: years. and Nervine Isthe only remedy that has donene any good. " So writes Thomas BICGtg- ban, North Pelham, and his testimuv is supported by thousands of others \ho have experienced the w onderfully ypeg- £111th and pain subduing 130}.er gt Nervilineâ€"the great nerve pai'n ole Mayor Boughton,_ of North Adam, Mass.. ihas gnfen 1118 $1,000 salary to like local hospltal. That to remove corns, warts. human in a few days, 3:11 that is required‘igto apply the old and well-tested corn are ~Putnam’s Corn Extractor. Sure, éfe, painaiess. Putnam's Com Extreme: makes no sore spots hard to heal. cts quickly and painlessly on hard nd soft corns. . tains and on the burning deserts, ike other strong men who died years .nd years ago. He drank many a gaion of~ fire-water in his day and, 3.1ng with other red~skinned young buks, painted the tribal pueblo a deep ar- mine many nights. He was smo:er of cigarettes (not the White mm’s kind) for about a. century, or untiihe got too old to roll thamthimself ,nd to rust-Le {or big fayoritg ygrietyw‘ he Omm 9mm», , KNOVVS NONE OF THEM and has no recollection even~ of hair names. There'can be no.d0ubt hehaa over one hundred great-grandchilcren, whom he never knew, and a lzrge number of greatâ€"great-grandchildrn. , Physiologists will have to studyold M' uel Vejar closely to find the seret ofï¬is extraordinary long. life. Be 33.3 gï¬ï¬fered ‘ hardehigs amongthe mon- _â€".“â€"vvâ€"- “wavy“ Miguel Vejar has been married him. His first Wife was killed in an ea‘thu quake in. 180?). He married a yang squaw a year later. She died in 876. He :has been the father of thiieen children, none of whom now livesHis last child died, aged ninety, in - San Juan. He hasa dozen more grandc;i.ld- ren scattered among the half-breed In- dian tribes in Southern California ind Mexico, but he .Gen. Harrison as the oldesttman inthe United States. At that time theold fellow was able to speak a little bokâ€" en English and told a. few facts inthe story of his life. . Since then hismm- cry of English words has compleely tailed, and when he now speaks at all 1t is in a mixture of Spanish amd‘Coâ€" hillg. Indian dialect. few years ago that. he remem'bl‘ed Miguel Vejar in 1844, and that the'nan was then upward of eighty year of age. Many people remember Vixen Miguel passed'his one hundredth brth~ flay. Wihcn President Harrison was m California in 1891 old Miguel was brought from his miserable old base in Sag J aointo Valley _and presenidjo parentage and aged thirty-three yerï¬." was baptized in the missian by Faber Romero, Easter Sunday, Mamba, 799. 'flhe hte Don Pioo, who was the ,iast §panlslh Governor__in California, sad 9. l“ The records of the San Gabriel {is- sion, now in the cathedral in the Jlty of Mexico, show that .Miguel Vjar. ords of the Indians is the statinellt, dated August 9, 1788, that “itiguel Vejar, a Mexican Indian, rather‘ifltel- ligent, of good habits and very :ndus- trious, aged twenty-two,†was a. valuero of the mission herds. In March 1791, there is an entry of the birth of a. female child to Miguel Vejar, tged- twenty-five, and his Wife LugirdO. aged twenty-four. l His wonderful age is verified by the records that were carefully kept until 1831 by the priests in the Framiscan Missions of Southern California. In 1831 they were transferred to theCuth- edral of San Luis Rey, in the CW of Mexico. Among the San Diegq 1'80- Has Snfl‘ered Hardships, Drank Inn" Gallon of Whiskey, Smoked Cigattueï¬â€™ named All we Laws of flyglené and Yet Lines to Be Probably the gulch Man in the World. " The oldest living person in the: Um- ted States is a half~breed Indian, 1118' uel Vejar, who lives in the valleY 0‘! the San J white, in Riverside qunty, Southern California. He is one hmdrod and thirty years old. In 1891 in?“ Urbaza died on the tribal reserwtwn near San Diego, aged one hundréé and twenty-seven years. Miguel Vejal was born in Northern Mexico at about 1766. IS SAID TO BE 130 YEARS TEE REASON OF IT. MEXICAN AN D INDIAN DON 'T FORGET ’ "I HAVE HAD g- DON’T BEUB no YOU ï¬rm; that you can ï¬lm-g. 38in health, «em and vigor? " - In QUMk 3113th YOU 'DO BlIlVl that you no ka and in. ' Dr Wnlliams Pink Pills create 'néw blood, build up 'hhe nerves, and thus drive disease from the system. In hundreds of cases they have cured af- Within the reach of all. This remedir which I have suclgfpleasure in recom- mendiggis Dr.‘\§fill_la;1_g_s_'_ Pink Pills. ‘I was doomed to death. Atthe End of the school year I had become so weak that I resigned my position, and at that time it did look as if my days on earth were numbered. I went to the country to give myself some chance ‘to recruit, and at the urgent advice Iof a friend I! began using Dr. Wil- l liams’ Pink Pills I. remained on my 3 brother’s farm for a whole year, dur- ; ing which time I used the Pink Pills, I towards the end, however, only taking l them at intervals. I had not been tak- ling the Pink Pills long before- I he-' :gan to experience benefit from their use, and from the day I first felt ben- efit I steadily progressed. towards re- covery. I was able to take sound, re- freshing Bleep, my appetite became excellent and my weight increased so much that friends whom I had not seen for some time scarcely recogniz- ed me at first sight. I am completely! restored plhysically, and I can take’ heavy lifts or engage in any kind of hard work without feeling the least weariness, and this improved condition of affairs I owe to_the excellence of Dr. Williams’ Pink P1118: My,eye51g£ht is also gradually returning and I hope ere long to be able to discard my glass- es. - My story, which I fear has; been somewhat tedious, shows how many young men and many young women .211- so have their health shattered by stick- ing closely to the teaching professxon. However there is an effecgve remedy -v v v v .5 vv.“ u'uL ling the day, I generally studied until twelve at night, in order to be well prepared for entering on a college ’conrse when my teaching days would the over. The people at the hotel where I boarded used to warn me iagainst over-taxing my strength; but 'I disregarded their kind advice. 'I‘o- wards t'he end of my second year. how- ever. I began to feel the effects of my double work I Had imposed upbn my- self. My eyesight began to fail rap~ iidly, and it was not long until I had “to consult an eminent oculist, who or- dered for me a pair of specially ground glasses. He attributed the failureof my eyesight to excessive night read- ing. and forb me to read any more by lampiighft. t the weakness of my eyes was not all. Insomnia attacked me and I was unable to sleep at night and used to toss about on my bed until morning without getting] the slightest. degree . of. rest.: dition to begin my daily work. My appetite was so poor that often I was unable to partake of any breakfast, and this of course rendered my condi- tion all the worse. I became so thin and emaciated that‘my‘ friends thought Q‘vnï¬ AA-‘-â€".â€"..‘ A J Jâ€" -â€"..- “W‘Vuo “W lI began work. however, I was in ex- cellent health. and although I was :never very fleshy. I was quite muscu- ‘lar and athletic. I was a great lover of out-door exercise and sports. and was an enthusiast over the game of foot- ball. Anyone who has ever beheld a genuine game of “ old Rugby " will know that it is not at all a game for ‘weaklings. I merely state these facts to Show that at. the time I took charge of the high school I was capable of un- dergoing alm t any amount of. hard labor. During he two years of my ser- vice I labored very hard in bringing my pupils to a high state of proficiency, for I wished to have the school in as prosperous condition as possible under my management. Besides the close confinement in the school room (lur- ers engaged in the teaching profession throughout the country. more especial- ly those whose health has been impair- ed by overwork in crowded and often badly ventilated schools. “ Three years ago.†says Mr. Crofer. “I assumed Mr. Thee. Crofer, late principal of the Albercon. PE.I., high school. has passed through an experience that will prove interesping‘ to, thousands of oth- “‘A‘ IHHII 3!!II!IIIHHIHHII§ HIWIIHIIHHEHIIIWIHUIH‘ SIM-ml} h‘oa. W. Crofer, Late Principal of the Alberton High School. Gives Some Valuable Advice to His Former Co- laborers in the Sendentry Teaching Profession. umutual!HilllllWHIIUHIHHIlUl-WIHIIIIIHIUHI In one of his wonderful sermons very truthfully said, “ My brother, your trouble is not with the heart: it is a gastric disorder or a rebel- lious liver. It is not sin that'blots out your hope of heaven, but bile that not only yellows your eye- balls and furs your tongue and makes your head ache but swoops upon your soul in dejection and forebodings,â€-â€"-and Talmage is right ! All this trouble can be removed ! You can be cured ! We can give you incontrovertibl proof from men and women, forme sufferers. But to-day well, and stay so. There is no doubt of this. Twenty years experience proves our words true. - Write today for free treatment blank. W arner’s Safe Cure 00., Rochester, N .Y. A TEACHEB’S STORY. HOW? By using , HEALTH OF THOSE IN THE PROFESSION FREQUENTLY UN DERMIN ED. mmmmnmm.§ E 3 a REV. :g j T DE WITT TALMAGE onderful sermons % Bi aid, “ My brother, ot with the heart: g order or a rebel- g not sin that blots g heaven, but bile i ellows your eye- 5; your tongue and a . .ache but swoops g . in dejection and _I_ D1 E ad I a. is right! All E 33 an be removed! 5 in: cured ! 5 de: 5 pa: ‘ E y usmg ! ha if an] 7 g Of g 116‘ e (11‘ 6’ “g -- a: ! incontrovertibl ‘i‘ by Ld women, forme 2 d1- ! iwa E on y well, g Ed. ac 50' , g but tof thls. Twenty g an; 811 )roves our words 5 out : tiox 9 treatment blank. :2 cas 0., Rochester N. Y. I not Illflï¬mI[MINIMUM-ml: mg n. A‘hthe End had become so Spinal Disease and Hemorrhage of the Kidneys Cured. Carried from His Chair to His Bed (01' Eighteen Months. Mr. F. A. 'Gendron, lumber messurer, well known in this city and at Hull, and who has suffered for the last two years from a painful malady reputed to be incur- able, has recovered in a marvellous manner during the past month. Many celebrated doctors had treated the patient, and one after another had abandoned the case in despair. Mr. Gendron suffered from a ter- rible malady of the kidneys which had brought on locomotor ataxiaâ€"really a soft~ ening of the spinal marrow. Lying helpless Upon a bed of sickness, his case seemed to be really incurable. Indeed, these who‘ looked upon him in that state believed him . to be at the end of his life, and it was with : difï¬culty that they could believe their eyes i yesterday when they saw him walking 1 around to our ofï¬ce. To what is to be at- l tributed this cure? Mr. Gendron states it , himself in the following afï¬davit, deposed 1 and sworn before a notaryâ€"Le Canada, 1 Ottawa, September 20, 18.95. 1 OTTAWA, September 20, 1895. i I declare solemnly /that, after having 6 suffered more than two years from compli- cated malady of the kidneys, which reduced me to the most complete helplessness, I was cured perfectly by using Dr. Ryckman’s new remedy called “Keotenay Cure.†I recommend this medicine to the attention of all, especially ( those who are suffering c from diseases of tire kidneys. ‘ How Long Standin the Trouble, it Masters Disease in If an Hour, and in the Case of John Crow, Five Bot- tles Cured Heart Disease of (Pen Years' Standingâ€"Here’s His Testimony Un- solicited:â€" John Grow, son of Mr. George Crow, farmer, near the village of Tara, Ont.. Writes: “I was alarmingly afflicted with palpitation and enlargement of theI heart for nearly ten years; I doctoredl with the best physicians and tried num- erous. remedies with very little benefit. In our local papers I noticed Dr. Arg- new's Cure for the Heart advertised; and I determined to give it a trial. In- side of half an hour I had relief. I; have taken about five bottles, and feel. toâ€"day that I am as well as ever I was; I am completely cured." ' The Duke of Fife Is credited with pnvaxte income of. $400,000 a. year. by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitut- ional remedies. Deaf Hess is caused by an inflam- ed condition of the mucous li - of the Eus- tachian Tube. When this-tn inflamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing. and when itis entirely closed. Deafness isthe re- sult, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condi- tion, hearing will be destroyed forever: nine cases out of ten are caused by catarrh, which is nothing; but an inflamed condition of the mum n': surfaces. - We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by catarrh) that can- not be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. Send tor circulars. tree. F. J. CHENEY k 00., Toledo. 0- HSold by Druggista, 750. - vvv-L w“, of 2446 Marshall St., Philadelphia- Dodged Shot and Shell in the Int- erest of His Country, Only to be At- tacked by That Insidious Disease, Cat- arrhâ€"But Dr. Agnew’s Oatarrhal Powder Cured and Permanently, too --This is What He Says :-- “By a mere accident I came across ,Dr. Agnew’s Catarrhal Powder, I was fa great sufferer from that dread malm adyâ€"catarrh, Today it gives me un- bounded pleasure to state for suffer- ing- humanity's sake that this won- derful remedy effected a speedy and permanent cure in my case, and I! have been so thankful for it that I am willing to spend the remainder of my days in spreadlmg the good "AWE fn mv fnllnm nnffnm‘m. H news 'to nfy fellow ï¬niteâ€"1%}; [Pink Pills are sold only m boxeg, pear; But This Time it Was a God-Send to Mr. J dim Brgwg, 3‘ GAB. thgljan, A: 0110 ‘lr ACCIDENTS WILL HAPPEN. DEAFNEBS BANNOT BE CURE!) HEART PAIN. ‘. A. GEN DBON. “â€"146 uanaaa, today that she is the same person, suchâ€"e. remarkable change has taken place. Wish- lbel' 20. 1895. ing you continued success with your won- ._ ffter 1‘18?in derful medicine, I remain, Your: gratefully, Yours gratefully, - Taoms H. an, - MRS THOMAS A P1318. Porter, Queen’s Hegel. ‘ 199 Albert Sh, Ottawa. If not obtainable of your dealer will be forwarded, Omar on receipt of price, $1. 50 per bottle, by address} ’ cme 00- Hamilton, Ont._ Sand for “Chart’Bodk †‘ ‘8 ‘ I. 'x aid. been the means of saving her life. She now has a. good appetite, sleeps well, has a. good color and her kidneys are working with regularity._ No one who knew her ter- rible condition last winter could realize My wife, Mrs. Thomas, Bird, suffered for I cannot ï¬nd words to express my gratis a long time with kidney trouble, which tude for the services Kootenay Cure hal ï¬nally became so aggravated and painful done me. I had been treated by the best that she was compelled to enter the hos- physicians in Ottawa for Rheumatism, but pita]. Her case was pronounced by the they told me that my case was so compli-, physicians who examined her to be Bright’s cated, my trouble having originated frotd’ Disease of the Kidneys, and after a long La Grippe, that any relief they could give" course of treatment she was discharged would only be temporary. Just at this from the hospital as incurable and informed time I heard of Kootenay Cure. I had that she had only a few years to live. While very little hope of relief at ï¬rst, the Rheu- making arrangements for sending her to matism having settled. in my muscles and England I was persuaded to give her your almost destroyed my nerves. However. I medicine, Kootenay Cure. After taking the determined to try once more and began to medicine for a time, she began to improve take the medicine, and in my case, physi- and has since continued to do so. At the cally speaking, old things have passed present writing both she and I are satisï¬ed away and all things have become new. I that she is cured. and that Kootenay has can go anywhere, unaided. My nerves are been the means of saving her life. She as strong as ever they were in my life and now has a good appetite, sleeps well, has a no change in the atmosphere has any effect good color and her kidneys are working on me now. 'I cannot thank you enough, with regularity. No one who knew her ter- but write this so that some other suï¬ercr rible condition last winter could realize may read it and seek relief. You can refer today that she is the same person, such a any person to me at my residence, 199 remarkable change has taken place. Wish- Albert Street, Ottawa, and I shall be only ing you continued success with your won- too happy to give them any information ierful medicine, I remain, in my power. 'A large. ï¬nelyaquipped. aid-established insu- buttonâ€"NONE BETTER IN CANADA. Best Business Education at. Lowest Possible Coat. Graduates always enceemful. Write for catalogue. W; J. £2141me Pgincipel Mr. Selous, the African traveler and explorer. has some idea. of visiting the Rocky Mountains. see the Toronto m lEVER 3303., m.. II 5““ St» Toronto BRIGHT’S DISEASE. ‘ RHEUMATISM. Total given dur'g year ’97, $19,500 AS FOLLOWSI 10 Hrs! Prizes, $100 Staams‘ 01010103 1,000 25 Second “ $25 Gold Watch . . . 62§ Bicycles and Watches given each month 1.825 Stuttord. Ontario Monthly Competition Commencing I. 1897. and Continued during the year MONTREAL, August 12, 1896. W.P.C 848 This is a deWIOpgd claim. with shaft no fool deep. and all in p ‘ymg are, mill tests shown magniï¬cent reruns. R port. of Minister Mines very favorable. Send t4; Gaza. H. MAURER. Sec’y, 34 Victoria Street. Toronto. .1.- Dn nu nnrmrvn tor Paosmc'w's'. GOLD MINING AND mums co.,-LTD. Fully Paid-up Shares, only 25¢. each, I. block: or not less .' hall one hundred sham Write us too-day. I WATEEOUS. Brantford. Gan. '. Do not longer putofl' in- jun- . quiring thoroughly into the advan es of tho . Band over ‘irculu or , Gang. They are many and mat, and mean a MILLS handsome ruflt where with Circu at there ll little or none. We build the New “Allis" Band and every» thing needed in a modern saw mill. Sold ‘1 ï¬ï¬‚‘flilflmï¬umm. ‘ â€"q.-._â€".. Ceylon. Tea Load Packets 011.1)? 9 All C Allan: and mixed 25c... 40c SMUGGLER LARGEST SALE IN CANADQ T0 80 K To“ OTTAWA, August 7th, 1895. Gerrard and Yongo Sm, WIFE TO US! All Grocers r... 400... 5ߢ., 60. 'Médl- urtnf‘sn "