_;tl1:at_ .live in . .. V .,::._`r;$,. DYSI-psia` Colds T Ayjer s P5553 Fevers ' gAy`e r.'s Pills |%BARl1E=8T0VE & manner nnarm Put- in at short notice. A full stock of iron Pipe for Steam, Water and Gas, Globe Vah-ea _ Stop and Check Valves, Steam Gauges, and Water Glasses. All work _"__ 10-9 A .' _ ' in this line promptly attended to. ALL THEMOST APPROVED `MAKES, WITH THE LATEST AND BEST ma. . T NISEINGS, AT- MANUFACTURERS PRICES. . a i"A rew the Abe`s:t on j the market. ` Theyare. stamped T. B. &.fC. Co, Ask` ybur grocer for them. % G. G. sm-rn, _v;u the lonely 'llo-1rhe;e 11;; -y<->uh'g"-gelllf come to shot himself up with his sorrow -and his inopiration. He em no 3little aregmed of devoting his` honro to e.u:thor- ehip the? he even neglected to provide ` himself "gvitIi;_l.jIIli5_'y*:i5f`ipa3pe;gg. I " Cemilh; wu !vrt'iten5oIi the` b|ok I"t`> f` 'Eletteri,. on the of the .'bo_ok| `he; Ii1f6_;n`g1i 2 j\gif!i h!m.' .on' xmpvink Piper. 6:11 `blottinmpnpen onenything of the kiIid,,`, in short; that -o:`me"to9`hiI ihend. IE9 neverjtirred froii exoe[$t:-. -'-to o .ohtyiwheitA eiheiiit&l;rBy51itirk*iudhgtiijj; I I ' ,_ ' in `I- - _.-_I_ LL- 3__;..4 __,_ A'!,;g ,,I_; n ' ' ""* ` 1 ':F*:*..:*.2..'.".:~:...*-=*' mm .::':.::-v` '; -.'_..> , ' .; on :`:JonN- cB, ..0oll1u-It:-oot.. ` as-ct, FLETCHER & BRUWNLEE H .A@F.F!1'.3._ % 1'08 l.'0])lllBl' [SOULS 1143858110. W033. VVlIllll pe , Chicago. Mont:-ea.l.etq. Intendingsettlers WI` ing for information will receive prompt rep 0 ' ` }.To sliw theslgoods` properly and allow an early choice `We have Opened a SHOW ROOM- in basement of ROSS : Block, directly opposite the old stand. 4 l3:(}`(]'|"|',l1?|-I:-;. BGOKELLER, BA|- ;R|[ -_ `Money to loch on regaonnble rates. n._J'. nnionnn, V .A. nnowmmm. 8 ` ' innnlopstroot. Barrio. ' iSE"o"x'-"'hii'"-`S mm-[no P. ` FULL nnoon E01.-1`. . lofwoeks old. NEW BOAT with Cushions. Carpet eto.. Pin and Qnnnn mm hnnt hdnnn I-ant nnltl fnr nnn vaun- DUAl` WIFE Ul.ll!Ill_0lll, Ulrpnu ew.. rm anu. Spoon Oars. boat house rent id for one year. Stset-ond-bend FIRE PRO0 SAFES. 1 new Double-Barrel Bteecheboading SHOT GUN. 10 gauge. 1;. C. LAISHLEY. Man. Sin er Mn. 'r_ u, Rm-u-in- 99.9. 4 I1'oronIoBiseuil&.Gon f.I FIRST LGLABSTARM FOR SALE.-Lot No. .18 in 7th oonoenlonu ofvenprn. `three and one-halt` milegvt;-om Barrio. will sell the whole loco? fn `S6100. `A991: to J. A. DUNN, Bu-rloP. . in .' 2 V 30-H`. I Andkthgsg whom he'd. kindiy pat on the; |\\ \\ IIISIIIIAIGE & REAL ESTATE AGENTS. The Popular Rbhte East ..T.a% West." `winni- nur, flainnnn. Mnntipnl ntn, Tnfnhdlnonntnni of new Xmas from the Old Country --FoR SALE- --i-',mad _6 by the-- Stoves ! Stoves ! Stoves I Mllle 8: Plaxten _s celebrated Furnaces `SOUTH `SIDE DUNLOP STREET, NEXT TO THE CANTON T % TEA sromn. T Pen Plotutufr tbqtu dud najmirox. 7; Who is this genioe to; whom we an-ong nukes way `xlpivtfehfialy--he vyvith lesn wrinkled face, set mouth, yet with some- BARRIE AND {STROU D. a'o:E|:1\r PI....A.X'I'<)1\T. V - 7- '--7 "-"--"7 W And all Funeral Requisites Furnished. ' Orders by Telegraph or o_therwiae prompt}; attended to. \ ' ' G. O. DOLMAGE, :Manager, Stroud. Steam Works and Show Room, COLLIER-ST.. BARBIE * Permanent enlargements bye f=.j; new- and beautiful process. PHOTO STUDIO! Bofhwa|| s B_Iock, Barrie, CQFFIN AND GASKETS OF ALL K1I\`DS BARRAIJ I) |FlAobes, Grape, ..A ..'ll `lIP.-.._..__1 `D.....-:_:4.__ 'm,___:_,1_ , J FR61\T7s3.o0 PER DOZEN The poor honest man whom he meets in the ` mart, . . He treats with an utter contempt, Preferring to nod to the rich and T the smart, Who for him are really God-sent; ' - T FIRST Pnizn. BARBIE. 1888. 1 see, ` 1890. 1891. ---wu1'bet6una-- 2 nouns vim or nu: name IIDTEI ~ Aoalllolloitedforsuklndsot `DRUGS, PATENT MEDICINES, DY! ' 8'I UFFS, SOAPS, 0OM_B_8, AND BRUSHES. 163 and .105 Yonge Street, Toronton Q None genuine without trade mark ant alzneture or manufacturer. ' 35-tf. um ooojtn ,m or common Z..'Its eet islbeantilul. lasting days, oftex weeks. No trouble to apply. For sale by 31 druagiata. or. at the manufactory. . Q` . ` II "name Momma, cHEMlsT AND DHIJBBIST. 6FiiE "; DTIVBIB XDBFIOR ~UII'l`I Wlll IEKUOQIVOQ IUI as whole or when mat of the lot. Apply at the-ofncea of the nndenisrned. o p;ooqo-n cuuuunoauluno` ; Q1-n-c-ob-1 , Lotnumbu-~Twenty-three in the tenth Con eel.-don ot the Township of Esau, in the Count: of Simone, 200 acres. more or less. `This form Io well and favorably known as the homestead Of the late John Arnold. is now rtrolod for sale I3`! private contract. .011 :-rs will berooeivod to: 9. n whnln nr mthnr I-ml! nf than Int Annlv At .9.ABTN%ETs At this 039 and ihaf on his way. _ With a. dread lea-5, some` of the folk he should .._--L inioiinnoks onniuuv oonrotnnaxn. 'ron.m' AB'i'IOLE_S-A FULL LINE. swrram Kine, Photo. BARBIE AND BRAGEBRIDGI IIICVIIIIICH III: III? IIIIIICI UIHIIVUI LOUNT. HEWSON E CRESWIC R.tf_ . Ila:-I-Infuu mnwvnnou -icow ron s.u.rc_aooa . Milka-. :.Apnly-uill-8.JA.N_E WRIGHT.` amino. n5.t.f_ In stock or Made to Order. 5. January. 5, 1514; }DORENWETN D`S '--FCR---_ curling and Urimpin; THE HAIR. ) -His face is a study for artists of fame, ` A With its dierentt emotions of, soul, As he bows and he: scrapes to the gel: gotten name. - ` Or to the poor turns a. visage most'cold- '1`:-3: 5 GURLINE J ak Virgigia. had coo Anchor con'1dn't ' c0u1dn t Jane Inn tlve prut "I"Ln In trwd IJJVC 15117; The h had nev as now i `I .-...`|, Ln. X uvw Jack ha ...-....A-1... -`was w< penter.' Amarill brought compari The.Si1( the mut softness procure W916 on the (195 in his 11 shallow knew tl for the \ the prt,-t needed to clasp `the hot prietor - find so: ` band's I\Nb0 One ( there '5 Woman willin g earn a want 11 We'll et Er. t mn TBut,`no, it s his` wa , heis fanciful, quite, - Kind N azure neg ected this son, When `she made his poor vision, that heaven : i own light, V - _ .Fa.irly dazzles his pathwayalong. "..VVl_-IITE ,rv\ru u. One of com the nu '1g0111.~x __ _thc lit -pecial mlrsc -like a '1l , Tho }z(,'I` lit (-5 her Hue .9 1-hekn her. b` "Lt ungl "l'l uuu It v =\\'hisk quiet] , could the 11;; . (E11156 nothi 'Ntk(. . T\._ L fanu ii1g; i and resi lnn1F J \. CI6. hal ] And the man who with trouble and trial ` doth cope. _ r With heaven : qwn geniusendowed, \ Comes under the gaze of his microscope, V: And would make it 9. privilege allowed; 1 \fIJ` Ll: fell . mul_a denlg wife 1) im . negl sert hold .a1it chil rem in g 1 and new all p and for who T , r;Jt\ lette 1y 3.] T. the hem VV K Non :thr 50m and nort : 25794 Oh, a. truly wonderful age is ours, ' With its nineteen centuries of glory ; The cad is evolved with wondrous powers; And a. world rings load with hisstory. Ebb (Hamiltom) II CIJCXIJ -\lIIl$ A hr?-t !u90ei_-`(A J L`__L l(I",,,,! any Wrath '.*c,amu1o." A year after the delfah of .Ma.rie Dup- louin Alexuidre -Duuiaa published "his % novel of The Camellia Lady, write: 1 Lucy Hamilton Hoopglj in- an _arhiol on 1 " How Dumas Wrote ` O:millo. f _in the " Jgnqgrx Lndigsf Home _1._Iou__t-nal. It had Q Quin` nnunzin-' J` :- --_-.-X`I_ .._.I.`.. iii .}JJ{ci;1T1&II 3.} ".a."1C.Ii.% ll__._#jA, C ` i I When he happened to feel in the mood, V Would one day be snubbed, and fancy,` - alack! L - That gleir greetings, perhaps had been co . wvuu, .~ 3 Somewhat better for hiuaj i>itte_z~wpia`t`. H v nvoo vi unvinu IVA: -_ wvluv U5 Univ LVIII IIU uuvusu meet A . V L ' T , V , Miglg; be thought more than friends of A W. * _. . he mean crea."@:`Vthat live in tjiis I .'-``5` -,.' .~zq. :55. , -n~s.; Sold. (i`*!*9' 5 irnerulpit 3.4 Public Sin, C A correspondent calls for contemporane- ous sermons from the Atlantic to the Pa- cic against public corruption. Many pul- pits have already sounded out bravely on this subject and they should not cease. If this advice is followed,` A however. we shall hear from the pews and from the. press a chorus of denunciation of political` preaching. Yet if anyone will study the preaching of the J ewish' prophets, A which" has been preserved to us for our instruc- tion, we shall nd that denunciation of public corruption was the constant theme of it.` The preaching of the first Chris- tian century was marked, on the other hand. by reticence with regard to public morals. There were two good practical- reasons for this, In the first place, the people of` whom _the apostles preached were not responsible for the polity under which they` live 1. They were conquered peoples, and had no relations with gov- vernment but tmendure it. tThere was, indeed, `no need of saying anything to in- ame their wrath against a system of which they were) the victims. Insthe second place, both Jews and Christians were oppressed peoples,` among whom any talk against` the government would have afforded the authorities the very oc- casion which they desired to persecute their religions. We `nd, atvery differ- ent tone in John the Baptl_st s `rebuke to Herod and our Lord's denunciations of the authorities of the people to whom he belonged. Preaching which involves the advocacy. of a party is necessarily open to the suspicion of being` interested and can cause little but harm in a Christian congregation. To nd fault, on the other hand,` with preaching against sins in high places-sins for which the people are re- sponsible and in whichtthey are sharers-5 smacks too much of the nambybamby religion of the world of to-day`, which is quite ready to accept salvation A.-`without conviction ' of sin, whatever` salvation under such: circumstances, may nmean. The rst work of all true ._preaching is conviction .of-s,in',' not ancestral sin` either, but of, actual and personal itransgii-ession. Without preaching sin public and private the preaching of salvation is a meaning4 ` less seutimentalism. -Montreal` Witness. li.;g;{.i.I.iS.}u?.;}'.Sm.;'S;1oT1]lf .9 4.5 1 ` :. 3'z~?T~ '};;...;`*..s.*a :o.s..;.; ; ..g.,;.a` 5;; +1.. rolf of piianuuoript thgt he brought him. Onlyqexgtyefqnr. nd yTet`.j3tii"e' ig"ji}thor.M, of th'`"ii*"'j wdili v_of the Hoods p . We should tuikej stock :ourselves, our capabilities, out d'ttai'nments, not in our moods of depression," but in our moods of `exsltstion. ` `True to `be on the crest of- the `wave t_n_-day may imply being in the troughof the sea to-morrow, and yet we are worth more now than then. -In the A world-beloved story of aPilgrim s P`:o-- 'gre`ss, it`was Giant Despair `who reigned with Mistress Deepondency over Doubt-`Y ing Castle, in which were dungeons black as death. N 0 man or woman is in a cou- dition to do good work or to make others happy when in the clutches of a low mood. Our moods are not always within our cun- trol, being dependent on our vitality, our environment, our digestion, our V health or illness ; but of one thing we may rest assured, we are not likely to achieve any conquest of importance when scourged by the lash of a mood of de- pressiou. To the kindred and vncqunintnnce of a gloom-enaconced victim the trial in well- nigh nnendurable. To live as neighbor to the east wind, to shiver under an iin"pend- ing storm, `are fn'int_ly.diugreeable `in come-_. pnriuon with this experience At -_timen" eelf-defenofohligea the moat ' tenderly 'nympnthetic~to escape for a. while from the spell. so oontagioua is a mood of de- preaeion. ' ' i . . L ' It belongs tot this uncanny mood to take to itself a. kind of demonize posses-' sien. Refusing to {believe that the sun shines in the heavens,` it is fnin tobblow out every osndle of encoutsgement that sympathizing friends try to` light. The depressed person spparently entrenches himself in depression-as in s citadel, ill- temper and perverseness being his wvard-' ers to banish "returning cheerfulness. uuuv Iuuup guyu _dayL; !{f 3. our mines. Continued. Gervaie-one who wears the heraldic emblem vair. Gazley-the little one with xed eyes. Ga1_legher--'-A-one lwho : wears woodendehoes. Gillem`-'-one with"; pa. culier cheek, Gowdren-e,epeoiei_ of daisy` Goodall-`-the_eI;reng.o: lgrge qne.` Gruhbbe` `--was criminally -3 digize,r_.f` _(ileupie,-}`the_ litfle -done living V by the riierfili _ the valley. Graham-osine df_'ome" Greek A town, .(?ru'il_foyl_ e-`-'-at;-tlfulily pyvord. Gilohrist-the defender} 0`f`i'l i!8'l`lvv'3_'iu i. e .the pet nnmje/`for on his |hield.; (;!oodyenr-`-aeemehdnrfgg an abundant nation.` Glqndigmlpg-+-tl}e nail:-ye .000 the `taller .G9d.l91!W- same In -Gaod_n1l-which. see. 1Gujnn- med thgt -=imtrumen1;_wlth:e eo.-9? Vm."5*'i|" f , oeompeeono.; `me. ..Gu-den-nr-no netted-.\V hour. nniplay-'2: moat. Gglbnithsief A-gowyv : ` W933 ` "1..*"*'?.!`?'!`1.":-3 '35`: i'!Wff . ?12?<`?;89I! `5?"?'!f'i. _plo1i0ll. -,}.,< G:91dis,;-$h9;,~}t`tle; d ~ 1f2=i;;.. _:i --,'s fai1f:;iarson.` Gliddo_n-ono who "moves V gently. .. .Geojrgon- -.ono ' made: I" Knight of like gs :-tor and more a. gure of`St. Georg e. Goodqonnon of the strong one. Gil:-ie, ` Gi1iec'-i.` little` William. ` -he has been described as that blonde and -rho.` ' Wife or near nous:-d. In appea.rance.Mrs. Haggard is charm- ing ; she has clear-cut features, a strong. self-reliant mouth, large expressive brown eyes, and an `abundance of dark brown _hair,._writes Ada Chester Bond in a de- lifghtfulisketch, with portrait, ofthe wife of. the distinguished writer, in the Janu- ary Ladies Home Journal. She is above the `medium V height, with the strong, graceful gure that belongs -to healthy, vigorous womanhood. Her personality is quite as interesting as is that of her. well- lmoywn husband, whose strong, square forehead, rm lips-and clear. T deep eyes impress you with the owner's strength and originality. .In stature Mr. Haggard is tall and erect, his voice low and melodious; athletic gentleman, While at Ditching- ham he is wont to appear in jacket and Vikniickerbockers of tweed ; thick, knitted stockings, and thick, serviceable boots. his | whole appearance suggesting the typical English squire. - - The home life of this interesting family is `beautiful in its simplicity end genuine-" -ness. The day opens withlfamily prnyers. iyhich are_re>ad_bvgith gentle reverence by ~ the master of the house, iuthe large sq usrne entrance. hall, -to which not onlythe fgnnily. (and visitors ssseinhle, but ill the sol:-. Mr. Gladstone has taken particularly good pain! not _ to:-let the. draft of `his home Rule bill get out. It was setup by a uingle compositor, who worked behind barred doors anda who was oonstentiy under guard. V -'-'1---O'O:----- hence We slime ':B.{ _'.!."."`J.....{`l.:.'_..'.l _- ..._xA 5 I" .r,9.m9v, .9y...tne}xsPI8 W % l:;.91nqg1ngest1ve,e1fectgs of 13% _: _ _ - ;;~*.-.%:>_.'!`i:drvnr~ : umy _tonic 3zi,B}6o3l%ittem DJ *".I. GLVVGJD RC5`! G UUULIU VI .1156) U-IIA 3 b"Y eIlow Oi1.for cuts, sprains and bruises. The folksnt the house use 1!: for almost every- .-thing. I know it to be a goodmedicine, it is. an xcellent mollier for cracked or' chapped= hdhn IILLU BIIVIAIGUIL, I-IVCI uuu. UUWVID Bulls IJUIQUUL `Blood Bitters` cures had blood by the same ispecio` action combined with its alterative and purifying powbrs. 3rd. Burdock Blood Bitters cures a.1I'disee.ea arising from the . two first named, such as constipation, headache, bi1ious- ness. dizziness, scrofula, etc., by removing their cause aeahown and proved in thousands of `indisputably recorded cases. PAYS FOR THE ADVANCE \FoR ONEYEAR. % L .Thra practical points `: 1st._ Burdock Bitters cures dypioepi by acting prom tly on the stomach, liver and bowels 2nd. urdock `DI.\..A I226!-.n.'.`:.n-an 1...! l.1.u..I 1. L15. .-........ A\ K )t_he. tliia. peivglentv .c9mpM'nt it-i_a:' end 3 [to - rest} prinexiaally. in mop action othe s.t,om.ach and; imp!1rity.~ or . e'i`h9'.?-exci=ilR <=.a.!18eq, are feasily .. ,oved`b",fthE, 1. int Lt ` ;aaa`mi3}. 3% oun1a{amaa.3.'li9 An%Ex*ce1lentlnvestment _, `_... > r a;{iu9oe:i,;nd-it under- stood thst,_0smill9 was simply s" dru- mstizstion of the story. o]_.n_ point? of foot, the plsy was wiltte_n_ll`>e1fo'1;o the. noyl. In the` one hour: om. 'gifief . the (loud girl, Dumas. withdraw to the country, 1 habit that he still rotslns _ yhonevercthe fever of composition ' inponhitn. Vary desolate` ` and solitsn; ____ LL- I-_-I..'iII_ ,, .7 Ontrlvitla all others. Incuringvoouchs, coldmhoaraeness, asthma, bronchitis, sore throat, and all `diseases of the throat and `lungs, there is one remedy which is unequalled by any other. We refer to -' Dr. ;Wood',s Norway Pine Syrup which has effected `many remarkable cures this season. I J , e ,: `A1i!itI!-=m-vv-*4- I . SIRS;-4Aboii_t three montheego. Hyde _ '_ negrlg` _wi1d ymh 1ieadaches_._ I etert`ed_I ' I351}. KJJLID, .jQUU|l`Il Ill-IIUC lllUI.I|il1 I, WHO, ` ,. ` nearly` wild with lieedachea. stalrtetl taking B.vB. B. and took two "bottles and` my headaches have fdisap alltogetherl now. I; ghinklt egn-and tn `cine. ' T Lmxo Ronu,l Londesl6re,. 0nt.`_ ` . . .'-Vet`! Inonrluud; " .S'ms,`.s.I' am very much pleased with: the effects of ..Hagye.rde Pectoral Balsam. _ Our family lms been greatly _t:-onlbled with severe c_o_1da,'vp'o.i ii:fhe'heet e'te".', end have been promptly relieved by this valuable medicine -whiokiwe willingisv reoommed; :2 A " g f" * . ., 53:14: - Iw_ .A-_- .4 can--I-r,,,.: -.1-aw . `'v`L`\~.. ; "v.?.;?-'."v.'9`~'.:` hence e succcg` 9t 8. ait4fiiiiny?f6rfxn" 9,0. ma` %i"8%*`1i*wTs5a'v5r1er.itii .- > -- lijl-`. .5 ; ' . ' ..a. \4 1.. . -.., L'- IIRS,-I alwaysfkeep a Botfle of Hagyaa-d"sV ` Vniinnv ni` far nnivu nnroiviu awn} In-nicon .'Ili%l'l_DlI TIHIIIIIIUII lallli [recommend in: puporiortoany prescription howntome. H.A..Lna:ixu',)I.D.. 11-an. n.a.....a~no n....1.1.1.`. so as" -__4 4.-cucotIpuoaviq:1'aaag;eea`aocnnd:sn'ul cutotbonren: oi I Inlvllillhnli {Q Q: -uouugnnfn n-sup an-auun-o.r8o.- | C Three rraiouoal Polnti. Gldtone'I Secrecy. vYlnIIOIII6_I - 59-BVIIIIIIVIIQ . - j :v'"_ I C m1u A. MoKn1zu; `J J . " `c::1;:rpddn 8tgti9h,1 N.B. 3 H of- a half smile on. it,everw-ith `abstracted eye and stooping ~.'s_houlder, with hands clasped behind his 4 ba'ek,_ and with listless gait-this esh- tough-looking man with the bushy ` eyebrows-and the long. lean throat? He ' is worth looking at, for he is the greatest strategist of the. age, and has been the ruling soul of the victorious campaign. A Moltke, for it is he, has been with the . Emperor, and is probably on his way home to nish Miss Braddon s last novel ; for when he is not devising strategy he is reading sensational novels; and his ab- straction, as like as not, is caused: by speculation as to which of -the- two aspir- ants to her hand the heroine is ultimately to marry. ..A tall, burly man swings round the corner of the Friedrich Strasse, his loud Ha! ha!" "ringing out above the noise of the street as he strides down the Linden. The crowd makes way for him when it will for few others, and in truth he is the stamp of man to drive a path. for himself even through an obstructive T crowd His step is rm and massive, his shoulders are broad and square ; the un- dress cuirassier cap setso` well the strong face with the heavy snow-white mous- tache and the terrible under-jaw,` amas- sive yet~not eshy, full but not exuberant, _ which one never looks at without think- ing how symbolical it is of the blood and iron dogma which the stern but hearty man once so frankly enunciated. When last I had seen Bismarck he was sitting on his big horse under the statue of Strasb'>urg,'in the Place de la- Con- corde, on the day the German troops marched into Paris, glowering down scornfully from under the peak ot his metal helmet on a group of Frenchmen who had identiedihimfyand were shrink- ` ing as they "spat hissings-up- at him.-e Archibald Forbes, in the Christmas Scrib- ner s Magazine. a mm." `n.A.Anau3a:,_n.n.. _`E*"'."", ,`; "".'-".-""",*""` 111B~0xI:otd`8t.vl!rokIwn.n.i'z:.~.e Wltgtnflurlqunmedicatlon. Keep it on Hand. . HE, ADYANCE. 1.. `?Inta{nts*gi;a% ensram. $1.0 `I EDI B, in Oopmv, 77 Murray Street, N. Y, . c-pc-n----- Bulbs` mi-' ' iia1l_`j_ 1_-Initnuig and` `s1'n-;'n_`g. . ` V fBl.6 y""Antl'{u.=i)silod hiliandotqer o;vu- mg. '_Iutia." j .. g-156 tin` `estimate: tbr Bed from ' an 0 re. meter and you will be Inrprised 5-how:-chub thbyrnbb at* rat.;ooat. Ind;-1_l1_o'_ Bulb! will last tor `years with care. _ , . ` ~-_wn_._1.nM TAYLOR. ' in `- ` Au__.:-n- Illltfll lll'$:U0ll0. Vvllsupuuon. Sour Stomach, Dia:-rhaaa, Emctstion. Kill: Wbrms, giyes sleep. and pronoun di- (action. I170! 'UlIlI IJIIIO II DQIWJ` d.:nud.the_an!Ih;oup -and Elisabeth ltrd auu yggll UlL`BBllBIHQU!0n (;uwr_zgpp_; _ W The grhfthgt he wiilltj 69 he`f'fo.g1ciea,V"%I '-g-:vv1I19LmLLn:,`ANnnmfr.AIL-.-f,, `.`FIO_l" |`,8`f;_~_ and 'iG"afrf(lanqr.+ f A B62 I `3'.1`5l91f0n154 um uumqrun Uoouorlu nuns. and I `I WWW!` `loo:-iota `ON IIIIIG lrwhito Eini hi Elmo. Oo:1':nI'. I~ ){f1_ll-kuin a.F1ro Bok: Plutoru-3?; Huh. Storahonoo at the Northern ?.`.*..`}.'.:.`%..;':z<* h~4!:2*.2..&J:!::.:m*.::::r.*1=2 'i'n3?'" "`C `i 5:"3 .`.` `E `:."` _ - 00 , II_ I, , D `!O`|_IDC`.'_"l.'h:` "d`,of thiI L11n'o d IIlY50lQI-kIII.=l.Ild um nlnhmnm JVITGGOC uy 1.msunx&co;P?'o'p?13?3'rs,Tomnm. PUWUK, lJlV_UL', 0.51!-JL_5 . o gradually T at. weakening the syn`- tom, al1;the.- impngies and foul hnmora of the secretions: at the same time ,Cor-`- ` nnnblunu Anlal-IO`, A0 #1111 QfKrnnnh 4 llllfgnll D116 UIUKW HVULIUUBX UL IIIIU, ~ . 1.1% V X';3a`?. .1`1`3`.?i??`n`Z"$l..keYi?3 ; i'.3;?E us uuu uqutuuuuai no one uzuuu mum Treating Acidity or the swmjE',' curing ~Bi1iou'sness, Dyspepsia, xneadaehes; Dizziness, Hea.1_;-tburn, ;Const1pa.t1on, Dryness of the skin, R1'" sE:1.;"1`:`1`..'.'.`. .~;;' OI-31st v11sa`i'a'.'31'~`61 G99 `'9 ` fnla, FlllttOl l!i Of t O Ieart,Ner'- -vcasness, and , oral Debllit ;a11 ung mud msmvnlzher similni Cam amt: iE TX lIlIIly IVEl-I51 BI.I.l.II.ll' IJUIII l5l.l.lI__ - to un'f$oc mo theha. inuenoeoB D B, A ` Fotsaubyanboalors. - IlIII|I'l|I\I'_`lIlI"1|...'_._.l-L-_... an_-_-_L_ K ' II \IUf.Ul.'vl. thus and manyother simila VI.` zlauvaag uu Upunuu 2 Com sin; .:.m 9. 9.. 1......m innhnnn M Inn: .2` .He bows `and? he nbds i?;vi_uIi"1iauiuict:on dis? 1...`; Prepanfed by D}. `C. Lowell; ;`v`x8.,\S Sold by all Druggists. , 9 ` For For For A` Foi` For For For Fo%r%Con sf:ipation V j % Ayer sPiIls 1'! .. . Mu, -xyr .a:.,1_;;.v:.. `mt 3,`. ~.:...`; .;v'.i`;. ':.~1,7 J. , ~ He walks among men with an air serene, And with self-satisfaction euwragpt ; The ~`i}..`.'I. 1.. m;.`II. .':` .6. s.. .~~;.:..'....:.... For % ,Un1ook3;ti1I the clogged ;r-enues.-, Inunnla Ylnnva anti -Y {hon nnrrv-In`:-'1 ,1&tf-T: jus KEY '|'0 lIEAl.1|I. % Every 'D6se vEffec'tIve isizltf` `sxigmzum. Bum." m."1 urund ` I;-a1imoa.1sors11k1nda.a wngogoy/indeu Elniah into flnungnl-A.nl. AI` bin . IN-g II-`I-5- . % %'%A;;+;;`is%aais Jaundice I V L ~.A'ye'r's Pills B`ilio'usness %Ayer }s Pilis Sick Headache % Z Ayer s Pius Liver Complaint l Ayer s Pills Loss Of Appetite % Ayer s Pills Rheumatism A Ayer sl Pills Dnringthe past ha1fecentury-`-sinc`ethe_dis- covery of Ayer s Sarsa` ;ille.--the. average ` limit of_human life injg:iv__.i_zejd,_;_:o1_1nt`1ies, `has 1 Been cousiderabiv lengthened. Ayer's Sarsa-_\ rilla is everywhere considered the standard lood-purier, the Superior Medicine. '