Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

York Herald, 25 Jul 1889, p. 3

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Wm. Atkinson DRY GOODSâ€"4 -â€"--& CROCKERY -â€"-Direct Importer and Dealer iiiâ€"- Domestic Manufactures, Millihery, Mantles, &c. Stock magnificently assorted for the Summer Trade. All Goods at'the Lowest Figures possible. _ Sugar, Fruit Jars. Jelly Mugs, for the approaching Fruit Season ; Extra Value. . _ Highest Price allowed for Butter, Eggs, Lard, Dried , Apples, Bacon, &c. WM. ATKINSON. Choice :: Groceries â€"â€"GO TO THE Eâ€"â€"-â€" Gntario House I FULL LINE OF PIEIWISIllNS, CRElCIlEItY, BIPGTS & SIItlIlS. PRICES AWAY DOWN. Choice Flour, Bacon, Ste. always kept in stock. The People Cryâ€" Suvel Saving! Saved! and money laid up for a rainy day by purchasing Household Supplies at the Ontario House. Butter and Eggs wantedâ€"Highest Price Paid. E. mil-ALL. . . c w» f - ‘ i ~GKLA't-t o In A-â€"â€"-â€" Tho Fire Proof Store RICHMOND 'HILL, ~â€"â€"â€"Where there is theâ€"â€" , Choicest Stock ofNew (Seasons-Sb; e Goods The business, we are pleased Ever brought into our Town. to say, is improving every day, ,which, we think, proves what we have often repeated, viz :â€" (l ). “ That the Prices are Right.” (2). “ That the Quality of the Goods is Right.” Our first desire and ambition is to please each and every one of our Customers, and by strict attention to business and m to the wants of our Patrons, and by corteous treatment of everyone we hope to continue our past success. Please note that we consider it a favor and no trouble to show our Goods to you, OEAII Parcels delivered if desired: WILL. D. ATKINSON SPRING: Are you threatened with 1888.};â€" Typhoid, Malaria or Bilious Fever TAKE Iron Age "onic. - It works like magic, driving the disease or its symptoms out of the system. It builds up the entire system and renders you able to attend Try it I Try it I to your accustomed pursuits. Prepared only by BROS. BHEMISTS AND IlRIIIiGISTS, RIEIIMBNH HILL Irma-â€" Savage icholls’ arrears. SHOPâ€" Has a complete Stock of Repairs for Binders, not only a few pieces but all that is i needed to repair a Binder, and all parts of Reapers and Mowers kept in Stock. Also a erotic or assure cirrus As Cheap as any House in Canada, It was bought for (lash and will be sold at the Lowest Prices. - W’Busiucss attended to any day a the week except on Sundaymcsa I839. -â€"â€"â€"{1888. 1. The Yor T «.vmtr TIIU At his printing Office, You" . Hill, Ont. rim. Terms of Subscription :â€":‘,‘»‘1 ()0 per annum in advance. When not paid in ad mince 5,31 50 will be charged. Transitory advertisements, first i nscrtion, perlino ......................... Each subsequent. insertion, poi Contracts for time and space inn. tion. Advertisements without- writtcn instructions will be inserted until forbid and charged transiu ent rates. , . rcr- t, Richmond e. do on COMMCNICATIONS. To the Editor of the Herald : Simâ€"In my last letter I referred to Mr. Egan’s denunciation of Pascal. In this letter lam desirous of supplementing my remarks on that writer, and, at the same time, I wish to make some reference to the writings of the Jesuit Gary. mentioned with so much approbation by Mr. Egan in his letters, I do so in order to show that there is a reverse side to both the characters, and reputations,‘of the works of those writers to that given by Mr. Egan, a consideration of which may enable your readers to judge more fully of the reliance to be placed 0n the statements of that gentleman through- out the whole of the Percival-Egan contro- versy. And here, at the outset, I am free to any that any controversalist who will deliberately mystify, or misrepresent, a single feature of a case, in order to gain an advantage, may, without doubt, be charged Willi setting aside all modesty as to truth, when a falsehood will the betler serve his purpose; and I really fear that the position of the Rev, gentleman in this affair is open to the above reflection. ' To take the gen- eral tenor of his writings, I shall be safe in saying that of all other controversal efforts that I have met with during a some- what active life, I have no recollection of having seen, at any time, anything of a literary character, marked by so much ver- bosity without argument, where so much is asserted and so little proved, or anything so diametrically opposed to honest discussion as those violent tirudcs that have, of late, appeared in the Richmond Hill press over the signature of .I. J. Egan. In judging his letters, it is difficult to be just and, at the same time, to acquit the author of writ- ing wholly for effect on one part of his readers, knowing that, Willi them, mere assertions from him have more force than argument, and that in their case, to a very great extent, he has ignorance of truth to trade upon. He has demonstrated that the tactics of Jesuit life is now as of old, in all controversies, to deny the truthfulness, or reasonableness of the statements, andargu- ments of their opponents, no matter how clearly they are put, and, at the same time, to make use of, and to repeat continually any misleading statement, or even untruth, (with a mental reservation) that will serve their own side. In this controversy, Mr. Egan has not relied on counter arguments to support. his position, but wholly on the skill with which he could throw coarse rc- marks, at his opponent. With 'such views, sir, it is clcarl do not consider that Mr. Egan has abandoned his order, or that he is by any means a polished controversalist. »Mr. Egan has described the writings of Pascal as of a very low order, land this he has done in concise language, denouncing them as a tissue of lies, forgcries, and mis- representations, lhougrb he must have known, if he dared to know, that every fact was against him. These hard words are easily to be accounted for. Mr. Egan is under the control of the Jesuits, and the name of Pnscal'to the Jesuits is like a red flag to a herd of wild cattle. Pascal dc nounced, and not before they richly deserved denouncing, the blasphemous writings of the Jesuits, which they called moral teach- ing. Bis letters, without doubt, were willy, but they were bitterly scathing, yet all the charges he brought forward against the Jesuits have been found, by reference to the works from which be quoted. to be distinct- ly true. Ile attacked the whole Jesuilical system through the avowed and published works of the Jesuit authors, every work of which, before passing,r through the press, had received the consent of the examining committee, or superiors of the order, which made the whole body responsible for their contents. In the researches into the teachings of the Jesuits, Pascal, Amand, and many others, have done yenman service in the cause offimoral and religious truth, for they exposed the foul sink of iniquity which had been nursed and brought to maturity at their hands, and which ran through the whole of their voluminous writings, by them so blasphemously termed moral the- ology. That the charges of Pascal were true is proved by the report of especial commission of the l" 'linment of France published in i762, which commission, in its investigations, extracted from no less , than 147 accrcrfitcd works of Jesuit authors, a collection of the base principles exposed by Pascal contained in those works, and which, amongst other things, led to the ex- pulsion of the Jesuits from France two years later. llut Mr. Egan. in his letter of the 7th of May, says the expulsion of the Jesuits from France was on account of the hostility of Louis XV and his mistress, Madam Pompadour. This is not Correct; they quarrclled with Louis and his mistress, it is true, and Madam Pompadour used her influence in the direction of their expulsion, but the real cause was their insiduous and unmitigated rasculity in every walk of life where they could intrude their poisonous pro Fence; always stirring up some turmoil, political or otherwise, which, together Will) their efforts to crush the Jansenists, was the last feather on the load, and together ended the forbearance of the Crown and brought labout their expulsion. But whatever may have been the cause of their cx pulsinn from Francé, there were not. Madam Pompadou rs in every other country in Christendom from which they were. expelled. It was not their efforts in the cause. of virtue, but the mis- chievous and blasphemous iniquity of their acts, and their writings, which brought their expulsion from every country about Under the Jesuit doctrines of I’robnbifily, lr‘lzilosrm/tical sm, and Direction 0]" the Triton/inn, there is no sin in the dccalogue that, by a direct use ofthcse doctrines, can- not pruclicnlly be. made sinless if not posi- tively virtuous. There is no foulncssthat has not amongst the writings of the Jesuits its antidote by which the sin may be got rid of or palliuted; and when this state of things was so vigorously exposed by Pascal amongst others, but principally by him, is it a matter of surprise that the whole Roman Catholic priesthood should denounce Pascal and his writings to the bitter end? But it may be here said that this character of that order relates to times gone by, if it ever existed at all. Your readers must make. no mistake as to that. The Jesuits were, from the early part of the sixteenth century to their final suppression by Pope Clement the XIV, in 1773, at the root of all the turmoils in every Government in I Christendom; setting Kings against people, people against Kings; Kings and people l I agaings both King and people, and crushing the vitality out of all, as it may suit. their purpose. Such was their-past life in the political world, and in the religious world they were no better. The Jesuits were in their worst days, and are becomng as uctivcas ever. It their that k Hana.“ :1pplicaâ€" 3 against the Pope, and, in turn, the Pope. are the same now since their restoration as they they never change. Yesterday, to-day, and for ever, is their motto. The aggrandise- nientof the order, the domination over mankind, the binding of universal life under their subjection, is their aim, and to ac- complish their object the end sanctifics the ‘ means. They are, therefore, objects of suspicion‘and dread, and always will be in whatever country they curse with their presence. If the whole true Roman Catho-l lie population would renounce the society as dangerous to social order, they would be better Catholics, better citizens, and happier people, Now as to the writings of the Jesuit Gory, whose works Mr. Egan says are used as moral gtext-books- in the Jesuit semin- aries. I regret, for society’s sake, to hear that such is the case. To think that seats of learning should turn young people loose into society, _imbued with the principles which that writer adopts is to be deplored. For the credit of the Roman Catholic Church, I hope those text-books are such an extensive abridgement of the original works of Gury that little more of them are left than the covers, for what good they contained may easily be dispensed with so that all that is pernicious be lost; other- wise that the original works are so revised and corrected that they are no longer the same works originally published by that author. It is only fair,- however, to say that there is much in Gary that a sound moralist may endorse. but there is so much in his works that is detrimental to the true principles of spiritual Christianity, and agreeing with the principles of the earlier Jesuits, taught, perhaps, in A modified form of language, that they are practically an epitome of the teachings of that order in their boldest days, so forcibly condemned by the commissioners of the Parliament of Paris in I762. Paul Bert, though according to Mr. Egan’s statement an infidel (which, how- ever, does not make him so), thoroughly exposed the works of the Jesuits, through Cory, in his celebrated work, “ La Morale dc-Jesnitcs,” for which clever and search- ing exposure be was, by the Catholic journals, denounced as a materialist. a scoundrel, a rake, and much more besides, for which outbreak it is fair to conclude, with an Austrian journal which comment- ed on it, “ that Paul Bert has hit the dark fraternity only too well.” The above, in brief, gives some idea of the truth as to Pascal and Gary in the statements of Mr. Egan, and it may give a strong indication of his reliability as to the reputation of the Jesuits, when he says that “their enemies can find no valid weapons against them and' are compelled to resort to falsehood and slander.” Such men as Mosheim, Hare, Macaulay, and many others, comparatively modern men, eminent, as histor’iaiis, do not make much mistake as to history, nor do any of them describe the Jesuit history as “.revealing scenes of knavery, vice, and treason, unparallcd in the annals of any country under heaven,” without having truth at their back. Popery is’ a drawback to any country, but Jesuitism. which is the quintessence of Popery with much other attached, is a curse. Cn looking through Mr. Egan’s letters, I notice that he objects to the statement, to the effect that “ Rome has always been an opponent to the free circulation of the Bible in the vulgar tongue.” He strongly denies it several times and calls upon Mr. Percival to prove it. This, in vulgar phrase, is a piece of bluff. It. hardly seems worth while to spend time about proving it, for a fact so Intent, so universally known, surely does not require proof. The Ifliman Catholic Church has never yet circulated, nor never yet allowed to be circulated, when it could prevent it, in any country, or in any place, a pure unadulterated translation: of the scriptures in the comment-language of the country, and I challenge Mr. Egan to show that it has. [low can we realise the scale of boldness which would allow Mr. Egan to throw down the gauntlet in the face of the fact that every page of history teems with proofs against him ? He has before him the decrees of the councils of his own Church, and has only to look at the 4th rule of the congregation of the Index of Prohibited Books to convince him. Even the Douay version. which is the best of all their translations, is falsified in its rendering to puff their Church, and here I need not go further than his own letters. He quotes Luke low and Him as follows: ‘.‘ He that will not hear the Church let him be to thee as nheathen and publican." The latest translation of the New Testament gives that verse as follows: " He' that hearelh you heareth me, and he that rejecteth you rejecteth me; and he that rejecteth me rejecteih him that sent. me.” What is there here about hearing the Church? But, if this late translation. be doubted, it is only necessary to get a I’olyglut and read side by side the originaluwilb the translation to end the matter. But let us see what dif- ferent. Itomish authorities say. First, as to, the reliability of their translations. Thc| Council of Trent declared that the old and vulgate edition, which has been npprovcdl by its use in the Church for so many ages, l shall be held as authentic, This was a. strange declaration in face of the knowledge, that the said edition abounded with errors. l l lation (assisted in its course by two Popes) were made, which translation Was set aside ‘ as too imperfect for use, and an imperfect. translation, only, produced at last. _I need“ go no farther on that head. Second, as to the circulation. A correct renderingr from the original of the scriptures the Catholics l have not. and where the distribution of a Bible of any kind can be withheld it is done. Let us see as to the truth of thin Pope Clement the VIII, in the Index of Prohibit- ed Books says the Bible published in vulgar tongues ought not to be read; Cardinal Belarmine, the Jesuit, says that it is not necessary to salvation to believe that there are any scriptures written ; Cardinal Hosius says perhaps it had been better for the l I t Church if no scriptures had been written; Pope Alexander the VII forbade, in Italy, the Bible to be ' translated into the vulgar tongue: Ferdin- and the I’opish King of Spain, forbade the same under heavy penalties; the English Ronmnists published the New Testament at Itheims in 1582 as favorable to their opiu- ions as possible, and circulated it as a core iect version; the Bishops at Bouonia gave Pope Julius the III. as their best advice, that as little as possible of the Gospel in* the vulgar tongue be read to the people; Pius the VII, in I816, calls the Bible Society a most crafty device; Leo the XII ' says the Society strolls with cffrontery throughout the world, and labors with all its might to pervert the Holy Bible into the vulgar language of every nation; the Irish - Roman Catholic Piclates concurred with this Pope’s Views. When the Priesthood! in Roman Catholic countries do pretend to‘ circulate the Bible, a. probability is that it is not the Bible but a mere history, know- inglhat the people would not be likely to detect the imposture. The Bible Itoyan- meat is an cit-ample; and even where some sincere Roman Catholics have produced a. translation, more than usually correct, the book has been placed on the “Index.” Such. was the case wi'li the translatlon of Martini, the Archbishop of Florence. Yen and even the distribution of accredited ‘ltomau Catholic versions is fiercer opposed in France and Belgium; and it is not long since that a number of Protestant Bibles and Testaments were publicly burned by Roman Catholic clergyman at a Mission in Kingstown, near Dublin. rNor would a Bible of any kind be allowed to be used won in Pirates-taut countries but for th'- Attempts to produce a. more correct trans- ’ ‘ circulation of Protestant copies making the proturing of such an easy matter, t com- pete with which, their own imperfect .rans- latices are, per force, compelled to be put into the hands of those of their own people who are determined to have the Bible in their homes so as to keep the Protestant Bible out”. What menial misery does this represent? I might multiply authorities on this matter, all distinctly proving that the scriptures are withheld from the people; and I could Show that in Protestant eoun- tries where the Bible can only be partially withheld, the annotations which accompany them give them, a false bias, or the inter- pretatious of the texts are incorrect. So much for Father Egan’s veracity. The Scriptures are not only not circulat- ed, but even the service of the Romish Church is largely performed in an unknown tongue, as if the Almighty would fail to understand any but a dead language ; and, as Derby says, “she relies for the conver- sion of the people upon her own interpre- tation, and trusts to ceremonies, proces- sions. candles, incense, oil, salt, holy water, masses, bulls, indulgences, jubilees, purgatory, transubstantialion, images, saints, shrines, and orisons to the Virgin for the salvation of souls.” It, then, We should take into consideration the above facts, might we not borrow that favorite word of Mr. Egan’s (blasphemous) and apply it, with a clear conscience, to the Roman Catholic Church. But amongst the many misrepresentations and false insinualions to be found in Father Egan’s letters, there is no more slander- ous falsehood in the whole than the follow- ing, “that a Priest or Nun cannot, since this crusade commenced, walk the streets of Toronto without being insulted.” This is an unmitigated falsehood, unblushingly told and repeated, and that is denouncing it in very mild language, and all that need be said about it. I shall have a few more remarks to make on Mr. Egan’s letters which I will defer to my next and last communication. I am, 810.. Guerth Toumxsor. 9. Sailing filtrate FINER Tlrif-lhl EVER. See T. a: e. m BRONZE on ILA CH PLUG and PACKAGE nu; KEY To HEALTH. CUT and PLUG ,. Unlocks all the clogged avenues of the Bowels, Kidneys and Liver,‘carry- ing off gradually without weakening the system, all the impurities and foul, humors of the secretions; at the same time Correcting Acidity of the Stomach, curing IBiliousness, Dys- pepsia, Headaches, Dizziness, Heartburn, Constipation, Dryness of the Skin, Dropsy, Dimness of Vision, J aundice, Salt Rheum, Erysipelas, Scrofula, Fluttering‘ of the Heart, Nervousness, and Gene oral Debility; all these and many other similar Complaints yield to the liapp influence of BU'RDOCK BL OD BITTERS. T. MILBL’RN &-CO., Proprietors. Toronto. 5 LIST OF LICENSED A UCTIONEERS AN D PEDLARS, FOR THE COUNTY OF'YORK. AUCTIO NAME ______â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"-â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"'â€"â€"â€"_â€"' James C. Stokes ......... David Beldltlll.. . J. D. Evans. James O'Brien, Albert 'l‘raviss.. Edward Fox ..... Gilbert Gilmou Alexander Black. John Thompson. James Kavanagh.. H. L. Vanzant.. Nelson E. Smith. John Fleming. J. It. Clubine.. Salem Eckardt.. Joseph Bogart... Henry ItusselL Elemuel l)rapor.. A. 0. Andrews .. James Coakwell. Thomas l?oucher.. George F. Stiver.. NEE RS : RESIDENCE. Date when License Expires King... ...... July 12th, 1889 Malvcr September 3rd, (Io Isiingtoi ,October 4th, (10 Stouil'villc do 4th, do Newnntrkc do 22nd, do Toronto . November 9th, do lileiiiburg“ . do 12th, (I0 . \Voodbridge . do 26th, do Port Credit . December 5th, do .‘chmurkct . . do 8th, do stonlrvillc.. . January 18th, 1890 tiiigzwood .. .. (10 22nd, (lo Toronto .. .. February 5th. do Aurora do 11th, do .. Unionville.. do 22nd, do Ncw’niarket ...... March 2nd, do Weston . . . . . . . . . . . , :lo 6th, do Belhaven ...... do 14th, do ‘oronton ...... (10 19th. do Iarkham .. ...... do 23rd, do Brougham' ...... do 2511:, do Unionvillo ...... April 5th, do PIG I )IJA RS : ' ' . t“; r: a n r . - . . _ has DENGE "l t: ‘filtlsn 'I.i'2c1iso' ml“ ,. e. - “‘J -. 1 «M . Yaw . V _ i , Henry Penney... I‘orm‘i" . ,n’b’ro' horse Tuly 13313-1589 \Villiain Bye... Scurboro do . do .Htli, (to Joseph Cadden Toronto loci.» ..‘. me. It do 31.311” do I Benjamin Cohei d0 (10 v (30 . I. 53. AG .1 George Gibbard York One horse _ . 6th, (0 John Maloncy Toronto . ‘s‘oot plciiib’r‘l:lth, do John Ellston Tliornliill "0 horse , do 22nd, do W. Smith Toronto One llorsc , October 13th,. do Harry Mansell do .. ,. Foot do 1311), no R. G. Baldorson .. Ruttonvill do do 2utli, (In David Togendhuft.. Toronto ......... do do with, do Jonas Sanders ..... Markham . One horse... Dccmnber liith, do Otto Bombei‘g . Toronto . do January Bid, “90 Caleb Kng .................. York ..... ., do do 19th, (10 Benjamin Togendhuffi Toronto . .. Foot ......... March 13th, do Thomas Nowell ......... ., Markham . .. Two horse... do 28th, do Albert C. Hominy. Noblcton ...... do April 15:11, do R. W. Graham ..... l‘oronto .. . One horse... do 29th, do Adolph Flowon Aurora. .. Foot ..... . May 3rd, do John Grice ........ 'I‘hornhill . .. ()nc horse... - do 4th, do Francis W. Griffith... Weston . do do 17th, do Morris Abrahams ...... Toronto ,. Foot ......... lune 11th, (It) Marcus Streamer .. do do do 12th, do Abraham Brondy do do do 14th, do Israel Wolf........... do . .. do do Quill, do John T. Grange .. thpanee. ,. Two horse... do 21st, do Alfred Smiggs .. . Toronto ......... One horse... do 25th, (to Published by authority of County Council. . J, K. MACDONALD Treasurer’s Office, York County Treasurer County York. Toronto, July 12th, 1889, v... .. r73,» W. .mnm: rarsxm rmus‘wszerevv...: .3...’~.';a.;-.am-:.,~,~4~a,we R E M of Gréat Br! A NEW DEPARTURE IN MEDICINE. CO. have immense hospitals teeming with suffering humanity. Crowds charge. .‘119 most renowned physi- cians of the world teach and prac- ticc,liere,a.nd the institutions are storeliouscs ofmedical knowledge and experience. With a. View of making this experience available to the public the Hospital Remedy Co. at great ex ionso secured the prescriptions 0 these hospitals, prepared the specifics, and al- though it. would cost from to $l00to secure the attention of their r distinguished originators, yet in th's way their prepared specifics are offered at the price oftlie q Ck patent medicines that flood the market and absurd-1y claim to cure every 111 from a. single bottle. The want always felt for a reliable class; of domestic remedies is n ow fillen With perfect satisfaction. The Hospital Remedies make no unreasonable claims. The specific for Catari‘li cures that and nothing else; so With the Specific for Dronâ€" cliitis, Consumption and Lung; Troubles : Rheumatism is cured by N Ill/D Sail N na the N W [1' N goo ifs TO BE IIAD OF If your Drnggzist (ioes'not keep those remedies r ' no other remedy ; discontini quack t‘lltC-(lll inc 1 emanate from cntlfic sourc nd thus prolong ycur ’ that their medicines cost .1 fa Ions amount. Any that should cost more than One Dollar for twenty five .‘ is where these dishonest quacks get their work in, int. . that you are unwilling should be. 5. . secrecy are worthlu The on I; octopin spares in-iihcr able and responsible. firm doing bus-i i“ > fie. 1-4 cums The four greatest medical centres cure mum. at of the world .are London, Paris, Ul’.pt:b."c. '1! Berlin and Vienna. 'l‘licso Cl . discarded as it N63. 2â€"00 . l of students throng the wards CO’SUMP'I . studyin under the Professors in mere/y stops strengths 0 ill; . glumg a new {catc of life. 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The Pills purify, regulate and improye the quality of good. They assist the digestive organs, cleans o STOMACH AND BOWELS, increase the secretory powers of the Livor,bracs tlinncrvouss tom, andthrow into the cireultt-i tton tho pui - Elements for sustaining and repairing the frame. Thousands of persons have testified thti by their use alone they haue been restored to health and strength, after every other means had ovcd unsuccessful. The Ointment. will be found invaluable in every Household the cure of Open Sure-s, liard Tumours. BAD LEGSAJLD WOUNDS. COLDS Coughs, Gore Throats, Bronchitis, and all disord. or: of tlie’l'lirout and Chest. us' also Gert, 'IillOL‘ nuitism. Scrofula and other kind of skin disease filanufacturcd only at Profess~ or Hollowav’s Establishment, 533. oxronn STREET Lennon. and sold {tr-'15. lldffls. ea; in. out, 115., '22, and as cachluox and Pot, and in Canada. at- 36 cents 90 cents, and $1.50 cents, am the large sizes i proportion. ' 3‘3;â€" CAUTION-l hate no Agent in it.- United States, nor are. my Medicines 80'1 there. Purchasers should therefore I 10: l: to the label on the Pots and Boxes. “the address is not 533, Oxford Street, Londu. they are spurious. ‘m' m .TIIO Tradclfarks; o” my said cdicines are grate-rod in Ottawa, and also at Washington THOMAS HOLLOWA London. Jan. I 81 33 Oxford street, 5th itw shakes, l, esmumwmr .. fl. l‘ e"; . ;.IVTg .redtnesystemml , feel“ like} a new man. It improves the appetite and facilitates diges- tion." J. T. COPE- LAND, Prlmus, S. 0. Spring medicine means more nowadays than it did ten years ago. The Winter of 1888â€"89 haslert; the nerves all faggcd out. The nerves must be strengthened, the blood purified, liver and boyvels regulated. Paine’s Celery Compoundâ€" theflprtng medicine ofto-dayâ€"docs all this, as nothing else can. Mescrt'bed by Pity/WM, Recommended by Druggz‘sts, Endorsed by Ministen, Guaranteed by the Manufacturers to be. The Best $pring atedicinee “In the spring of 1887 I was all run down. I would get up in the morning with so tired a. feeling, and was so weak that I could hardly get; around. "ilmurgltt a bottle of Pfl‘llIClS ‘clery Com- pound, and before I had taken It a week I felt: very much better. I can chccfully recommend: , It to all who need a building up and strengthen- : tug medicine." Mrs. B. A. Dow, Burlington, Vt. , Patricia Celery Compound , is a unique tome and appetizer. Pleasant to ‘ the taste, quick in its action, and withoutany ‘ injurious etIcct, it gives that rugged, health * which makes everything taste good. It_cures dyspepsia and kindred disorders. Physicians 8 it; $1.00. SIX for $5.00. Dmgzlsts. , present) , WELLS. Rir'nannson 5200., MONTREAL. Co‘or anything any cola}. DIAMWJD 192,53 'ch1' 1mm Always sure! M3 7‘ TE F000 Ahaâ€"fishes babiesperfeclly. The Physicians? mom. The Mostfincccs‘ fol-Remedy ever discov'fi cred, as it is cur . inits effects and does not blister. .cad proof below. 93 dllhE. 01mm; on Caracas A. Smsn, BREEDAR on CLEVELAND DAY AND Tno’rrmo BRED Hams. Emwoon In'L. News!) 1888. DR. B. J. KENDALL Co. ' ' ' ‘ Dear this: I have always purchased our Ken- riall’ufipavin Cure by the half dozen I ottles, I wuulo ]" i - is in larger-gnuatity. I think it is/ one of .ziimcntn on earth. I have used it; on my. . ic forthrco years. Yours truly, CHAS. A. Silvana. l ElEiidfiiifd Widths WEE. Buoorrnvn, N. 31., November 3, 1688. Da. B. .T._KENDALL (:0. Dear SITE]: 1 desire to give on testimonial of my good qpluienot‘ycur Kenda 1‘s Spavln Cure. I have it 1302‘ 1 .timenesa. Stiff Joints and a, and I have found it 9. sure cm 9, I cox-d1. command it to all horsemen. Yours truly. A. E. GILBERT. l manager Troy Laundry Stables. ddthgg WEE. SANT, Wrxi‘ort COUNTY, Onto, Dec. 19. 1888. J. .k [.T. Co. ‘ ' v duty to say what I hays done ‘s Cnaviu Cure. Ihave cured , ‘S that. had Spuvins, ten of 3 afilictx‘d with Bi Head and a . Since I have but fine of your I ave never At‘nsnw Tumors. - Horse Docto'.‘ ..Z’7.:il.l.”$ gi’hfltl case. Price $1 per bottle, or six bottles for $5. All Drug- gists have it or can get it for you, or it will be sent- to any address on receipt; of price by the pro i'lew tors. DR. B. J. KENDALL 00., Enoshui'gh Falls, t. SOLD BY 'ALL DRUGGISTS»

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