BREAKFAST. Brat viedge of the nat n we whi« g : perations of i and rit ana it oe sreful a al ft p sof well-sele ed Cac A | EK pps has pr ded break fa ables with a d alu fla beverag whico may ay Th ! 4 doctors’ bill«. 't ia by the judicious use of Such articies f diet that »< tution may be gradua built uy strong enough to resist every tend to disease Hundreds of subtie maladie : floating around us ready to attack wherever there is a weak point We may escape many a wel! fort a properly nourish fatal shaft by Keo p og rselves fied by pure blood and ed frame.”—C ice Gazette Made simply with bowling water or milk, Bold only in packets, by Gracers, labelled i Serv bus, JAMES EPPS & CvU., Homecpathic Chemists, London. En seand STAMPS WANTED. OLD Canadian, United States’ and other siampe, as used 25 to 40 years ago. For many pay $1 to $6 each GEORGE LOWE 346 Spadina Avenne. Toromo, durable to her father when his first in- fatuation was past. then, as well as for her mother’s mem- ory, this match mnst be prevented. And yet how powerless she was to prevent it! What could she ‘o? Could Harold aid her? Perhaps. Or Ida? At least she would tell her sister and see what she could suggest. ida was in her bondoir, a tiny little tapestried room, as neat and dainty ae | herself, with low walls hung with Imari plaques and with pretty little Swiss brackets bearing blne Kaga ware or the pure white Coalport china. In a low chair beneath a red shaded standing lamp sat Ida in a diaphanous evening dress of mousseline de soie, the ruddy light tinging her sweet ie and glowing on her golden curls. She | sprang up as her sister entered and | threw her arms aroand her. To Protect the Public from imposition, | Pond’s Extract is cold only in bottles with landeape trade-mark on buff wrapper. ’ oe - USE SKOD A’S DISCOVERY, the great Blond and N erve Rerne dy For his own sake, | She pushed forward his chatr and ran t jetch his slippers. ‘Dear old Clara! Come and sit down here beside me. I have not had a chat for days. But, oh, what a troubled face! What is it then?” She put up her fore- finger and smoothed her sister’s brow with it. Clara pulled up a stool, and sitting down beside her sister passed her arm round her waist. ‘I am 60 sorry to trouble you, dear Ida,” she said, “but 1 do not know what to do.” “There's nothing the matter with Har- old?’ “Oh, no, Ida.” “Nor with my Charles?” “No, no.” Ida gave a sigh of relief. ‘You quite frightened me, dear,” said she. ‘You can't think how solemn you look. -What is it, then?” “I believe that papa intends to ask Mrs. Westmacott to marry him.” Ida burst out laughing. ‘What can have put such a notion into your head, Clara?” ; (To be Continued.) Don’t stuff a Cold, If you do you will nine times ia ten, have a fever to starve. A cold is a shock received by the mnyriad nerves that bristle near the surface of a human body. This shock is transmitted to the nerve centres, and then back to the mucous membrances, forcing a great amount of blood to those membrancea, creating a more or less severe irritation and consequent rise in the temperature, followed by chills. Excess of food in the -tomach stil] more increases tie tempera- ture, and, worst of all, helps clog secre- tions or natural outlets ofthe bedy. It is high time we broke away from an old notion which, like some others, has done more harm than good. For example, in years past how many poor fever sufferers, burning with internal fire and thirst, were hurried to an untimely grave because not allowed cooling drinks or a bit of ice by the old time treatment for fevers as fool- ish asthe adage for colde. At last one cunning delirious patient got to a pump of cold water and drank his fill; deteomined no to leave till the well ran dry, he siack- ed the fever, recovered, and doctors karn- ed a lesson. Experimenting with a asvere cold is a dangerous custom, a3 most per sons try one remedy only untill some friend another “sure cure,” as Mark fwain so humorously describes. When lbwht hoarseness or tightening of the nase wembranes warns one ofa -kin exposur act promptly 3; a celay With children it may snggests x culll from wet, danzerous. 11h sia en Mrs, DeWet—* There, Reginald, are | those Rigby Waterproofs I have been tell- | ing you about. Can’t you see how stylish and comfortable they look ?—and they are just lovely for winter weather. You al- | ways wait till everybody else in the world | in it. We really mnat have them at once.” Everybody wears them, ALWAYS ASK FOR “RIGBY.’ adopts a new thing before you will believe 7 iat VX —~ we an a Seis ae oe ———— — senate “ a ’ ’ , Le ‘a 1 _ THE DAILY ENAMINER . - - 4 USE POND’S EXTRACT Women use it for all purposes FOR Have the early frosts or too late a lin- FOR “Laundry and gering by the garden gate again aroused PILES that RHEUMATISM ‘so peacefully COLDS Household BURNS slumbering the summer long? Well, if cuTS and find it « it’s very bad you must change your diet great comfort BY ‘CONAN Dove SORE and perhaps take some distasteful drug SRUISES and saver of POPYRIGHT, 1909, BY 4UTHORG ALLIANCE. ats MIONTS | EYES —the doctor will tell you what but first SPRAINS ececaves rub thoroughly the part afflicted with oe WOUNDS POND’S EXTRACT, then wrap it SORE All this might have passed as merely warmly with flannel, and the rheuma- the natural pleasure which an elderly | SORES 7 : es THROAT man might take in the society of an in- | tism may wholly disappear. It will cer- telligent and handsome woman, a Headache tainly be much relieved. Now that you Catarrh here were other points which seemed to a ~ POND: RY’ ney ies oe oo a hohe th or ieee weenben, an AND have the POND’S EX TRAC r try it for AND could not forget that when Charles | any of the many things its buff wrapper Westmacott had spoken to her one night ALL mentions, It’s a wonderful curative. AFTER i alles o the nossibilit : ‘ oo : cl on ; he ? He ~~ PAIN But don’t accept substitutes. SHAVING known or noticed something before he POND’S EXTRACT CO., 76 Fifth Ave., N. Y. would speak upon such a subject. And } = = = then again Mrs. Westacott had herself said that she hoped to change her style | oa Mae nese even wiekoscess What Tradition Tells Us About the ly new duties. What could that mean | ‘ for purity, nor excert that she « xpected to marry? And | een ein whom? She seemed to see few friends | a, ' ees outside their own little circle. She must sweetening, mcr have alluded to her father. It was a} I | 10uS | preserving the hateful thought, and yet it mnst be | 8 a ar a faced a sc a clothes and One evening the doctor had been rath- | er late at his neighvor’s. Ho used to go | ¥ hands from in- into the admiral’s after dinner, but aie LA SALLE AND HIS VOYAGE URS jury, nor for he turned more frequently in the other | . ® direction. When he returned, Clara was | oii i ia all-round sitting alone in the drawing room read- | . . . - ing a magazine. She sprang up as he | Th F f Whit M t § f F f Up Wh te N = entered, pushed forward his chair and | G II8 l G cll 0 G 0 Ou : g W an to fetch his slippers. d th Fl ; hi Cit f H Ito Se Sane’) M-Touere looking © Witle pale, deen,” Stands the Flourishing City of Himilton. See & Mitchell, Halifax, Agents for| pe remarked Nova Seotia and P. EB. Island “Oh, no, papa; I am very well.” Se ee ee eee . ra ie ae ANOTHER STORY BUT NOT TRADITIONAL “Yes. His partner, Mr. Pearson, is! 81 K i BRB Babies still away, and heis doing all the work.” | ‘Well done. He is sure to succeed. | Re Me ee ee ought to be fat. Give the Where is Ida?” Lif Thin Babies a chance. Give ‘In her room, I think.” It Comes From One Who W is Restored to e . “She was with Charles Westmacott on them the lawn not very long ago. He seems 9 very fond of her. He is not very bright, but I think he will make her a guod hus- | scott's... mi: CE See “I am sure of it, papa. He is very | e manly and reliable.” | i “Yes, I shonld think that he is not the } Emu sion sort of man who goes wrong. There is EEE SEE TE nothing hidden about him. As to his | brightness, it really does not matter, for | the Cream cf Cod-liver Oil, his aunt, Mrs. Westmacott, is very rich with hypophosphites, and —much richer a you % ule _ ron er style of hving— i si | watch them grow Fat, Chub- ae eee de ale eel ee by, Healthy, Bright. Physi- ‘Iam glad of that.” cians, the world over, endorse “It to. between ourselves. 1 am ber | trustee, and so I know something of her | at. arrangements. And when are you going | Don’t be deceived by Substitutes! to marry, \aare a Scott £ Bowne, Belleville. All Dragpists. Sic. £1 “Oh, papa, not for some time yet. We ————— have not thought of a date “Well, really, I don’t know that there | TOOTHACHE! is any reason for delay. He has a com- HEADACHE ! ' peten and if increases yearly. As long i aS you are quite certain that your mind | NEURALGIA! is made up” WISTANTLY CURED ST CHE APPLICATION GP “Oh, papa! , “Well, then, I really do not know why | NE RYOL. there should be any delay. And Ida, | 25 cents per Bottle, at all Druggists. too, must be married within the next | 3 few months. Now, what I want to know | is what Iam to do when my two little | Tad i, KT. : run away from me.” He iyh ly, but his eyes were grave as moor vigege t he looked qnestioningly at his danghter. | , “Dear papa, yon shall rot be alone. , It will be years before Harold and 1 : ‘ CEP think of marrying, and when we do you Piiy must come and live with us.’ No, 1 lear. I know that you mean | ™ what you say, butI have seen s thing of the world, and I know that such ar RSG rangements never answer. There can- els : pe I be two masters in a house, and yet | MR. JOHN BR. LONG at my age my freedom is very necessary ; : I poke of me and to me ae oe : : ee wl ved. Several differ “But you would be mpietely free. { ; : lvert { med.cines were reco and- » : : ; i of H e LaSa 4 Ww ecommen Fe e S No, dear, you cannot be that if you ; i ciel satan ane l to me and tried, but with no beneficia! are a guest in al ther man 8 house Can wat g | k Ontari 669. when tl r ilts; I was simply thr wing monev you suggest no other alternativ: st p val? aon an unbroken |@way. Fira /y, [reolveito try Paim’s “That we remain with you state, and the red man in nndisturbed | Celery Con p und, which was the last medi- No, no. That is out of the question. possession. The first anthentic record of e I had decided to buy, as I was tired Mrs. Westmacott herself aes thet. 0 ft thn tunation of mks snail cine’ tle f trying so many. Aftar taking nearly woman's first duty is to marry. Mar- | present city’s site, gives ume of Robt. | Ovo bottles of tuis won ierful Paine’s celery riage. however, should be an equal part- | Land as the pioneer, and the date as 1778. |' mpound, I began to feel improved, and nership, asshe points out. Ishould wish | {; js often difficult verify traditional | Tega:med cvlor and flesh. I continued ite you both to marry, but still I should like | pistory ; but from what we know of this | Use for five months, taking five bottles, a suggestion from von, Clara, as to what particular section of Canada we are in- jand at the end of that time I was complete- i should do.” lined to accept the story as handed down ly cured, and have never been sick since, “But there isno hurry, papa. Let as / to us ; |} When I commenced with Paine’s celery wait. I do not intend to marry yet.” In this issue of our paper we are per- | Compound I weighed 123 pounds, at the Dr. Walker looked disappointed. | mitted (for the benefit of our readers) to end of “ee ee I as a f a “Weil, Clara, i’ sou can suggest noth- | zive in a condensed form a wonderful his- |@ pound a week, and now weigh 4 Raat MENTS have failed even to sciiere.” told by drug ing, I suppose that I must take the ini- | tory or story as related by a gentleman pounds, the most I ever weighed in my gists oe ber iphone. OF CINE tiative myself,” said he well and favorably known Hamilton | life; and the result is, that today I am . tercate. Oat. Wrve tor pamphies Sold a= “Then what do you propose, papa?’ | and in many other cities and towns of | trong, healthy and vigorous as any man, ‘ ttetown by G. E. Hughex trnegist She braced herself as one who sees the | '/ntario. and enjoy my regular meals. Before life ‘rs 4 re’ . blow which is about to fall Mr. John R Long, of 19 Burlington os pl eget i ve cross i > Lu ik i . He looked at her and hesitated. “How | Street West, Hamilton, is a gentleman ae cranky, 80: es — pleasure as ee ike your poor dear mother you are, | who has come very prominently, before re"g ore ee My . ey One-half of the Brick House Upper | Clara,” he cried. “As I looked at you | Hamilt miane this year a the publisher - cet : alee acme oe Po — Queen Street, containing nine large room», | then it was as if she had come back from | “¢ "rst Guide Book ever issued for the aie kG ha Ach aa k rae dite Pussession abuut the middle cf November the grave ° a stooped toward her and ——-" e advertising the “ Ambitious eZ a pon a she T oe a ] ery os st the office of kissed her. ‘There. run away to your “ity. In this work Mr. Long has scored ve i i yr pe t —r a — from rr A. HORNE & CO sister. my dear, and do not troable your- | 22 mencse Success, and given such a de- | a Ne, thal 4 enjey ife, and have a desire : ee ee ee | gree of satisfaction, that he has been pre- to live long. I am cured of that horrible zZit— self about me x othing is settled yet, but | railed upon to publish an enlarved addi- | and life-ruining disease, and I testify to the SOOO 4O4844 SSO pou wll! find that all will come right.” , tion iv May of the pre-ent yea: merit Of Paine’s celery compound, because é Though you Cough ; a ee 7 a ee | Now for Mr. Long’s interesting story, | 1 know er wns wane of cases na ° as sure rv nat Ww | true in every particular and detail, and re- | mine; an trus 8 testiinony may fa , Don’t Despair ! ¢ fe red Was in . edi about to come to prs, | lated with a — f bet thon-ands | imto the hands of many suffering men and ? a and that her father was going to ask | jy eyery section of this broad Duminion. | Women Every wordI have written is é Many apparently hopeless cases ; Mrs. Westmacott to be his wife. In her | we may remark tl rief story has | God’s truth, and can be vouched for by kave been cured by a course of pure and ear mind her mother’s | « special reference to a tical period in {those who krow of my caze.” ¢ AMPBELL’S WINE OF memory was enshrined as that of asaint, | Mr. Long’s Jife; it ref toa time when | Whata history of suffering! Whata BEECH TREE CREOSOTE ; and the thought that an one shx uld take | his life was ind unger despaired of ; | wonderful history of cure! Can the re- ; TRY IT! her place se emed a terrible desecration. | when all hope and seemed to | cords of the many common advertised medi- 24 ea Even worse, however, did this marriage vanish ; when the grim reaper stood ready cines of our day furnish proof like Mr. ; * AT ALI, DRUGGISTS. appear when looked at from the point of | with outstretched urnis t laim his life Long 8 . No other can do so reader; it ie i ¢ K. CAMPBELL &CO., Montreal. view of her father’s future. | From Mr. Long’s letter we give the fol- | only Paine’s celery compound that can a «eee eee ee oe The widow might fascinate him by | lowing extracts:—“ I was so terribly | give satisfaction, relief and cure. If Mr. b her knowledge of the world. her dash, | afflicted with dyspepsia that I came near | Long had continued with the medicinés : n ore aA geuts “a anted, her strength, her unconventionalitv—all | dying. When sick with this awful disease | that agyrevate his troubles, he would not eee these qualities Clara was willing to al- | 1 had constantly a heavy load on my | have lived to publish his hand-ome and I -eprescnteddistricte | low her—but she was convinced that she | stomach, which was as sore as a be vil I varnanee ae Book. : a . a warning on this Island # [ want Loea or Dis- would be unendurable as a life compan- | ¥** continually gasping for breath, sick pon ne " — one eo that LL trict Agents ¢ present the “ Manufac ion. She had come to an age when hab- all over, my syetem “snd mind run low, | should not be unhee i ee 2 5 ag ” : rit : my kidneys were out of order, pains about to purchase medicine, do not allow 7 ea eusuratce: Com ity are not lightly to be changed, nor was every where, costive, always tired and } the dealer to persuade you to take some- j Z ‘ the she a woman who was at all likely to at- weak, indeed so weak at intervals that I | thing else instead of Paine’s celery com- mt - ” : — — - aon eae. How would a had to leave my duties to rest; and, as a | pound. The something else is for the uf, : a J beg — . on like pe ree stant the consequence, I lost my situation, a light, | seller’s ady anlage, not for your good. . : . eee. constant strain of such a wife, a woman | j,4¢ 1 sponsible one. [could not sleep at | De mand Paine’s celery compound; be ae ee who was all decision, with no softness | jiehts J rarely ate anything though ul. | firm in your demand ; insist upon getting PATON ans nothing ne in hee en wavs hungry, and what little I did eat | what you ask for, as your very life and :3 uM : MT 2 " J passed as & mere eccentric Ity when near!) drove me crazy J had no desire ) existence lepends upon the best — that ei , aa ; . ca they — ‘ : he i stout ae for life this condition. Those which has saved others. i cigarcite smoking, her occasional whiffs . — = ay ' ' : at a long clay pipe, her horsewhipping Grateluil ¢ omlorting. of a drunken servant and her fog POROUS ; 3 ionship with the ike Eliza, whom she AIGA WATERPROOF ; : E pps Ss Cocoa. was in the habit of bearing about in her ‘ GARMENTS. ft pocket. All this wonld become unen- M.f hy. ees j i. = 7, - ad ‘ ere Mrs, Uptodate—* Dear me, what 4 sight those DeWets are, out on the streets a day like this without Rigby Garments. Tt takes some people a lifetime to learn how to be comfortable. Just think how we used to swelter in those horrid Rubber Waterproofs, and such emelling things,” { mean croup and strangulation | , ‘ } w.th aluit-, catarrh, bronchitis, _per- ap: pneumonia. I* neglected, nothing } preve e sneezing, red nose, and e-bevon cof a person with a celd. sure of mother would as soon oO to wd without .vatches in the house, as wit- wut tuat old fashioned remedy, Johnson’s Anodyne Liniment, nearat hand for crou- py children, Uxed with a mild laxative, as de-cribed in a pamphlet which I. 8, John- son and Co., Buston, Mass., will send free to anyone, Johnson’s Liniment will cure a cold for audulis quicker than any known remedy. A mild nutritioas diet, a gentle physic to open the secretions, and a bottle of that old Anodyne from your druggist, will conquer any cold; Johnson’s Ano- | dyne Liniment was originated by an old family physician more than seventy years ago. ~ roi A Bad Breath would spell the Beauty. of a Venus. Catarrh, the fruitful source of bad breath is positively cured by using Uawker’s Catarrh Cure. Try it. Only 25 cents. -_ The greatest flesh and blood maker in existence and a life-saver to consumptives is Miller’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil, “the kind that cures” bronchitis, coughs, colds and all lung troubles. Every bottle war- ranted. No oily taste like others. In big bottles, 50c. and $1.00, at druggists. --—-+ —eoo “The proof of the Pudding’s the preen o’t. James Kennedy, Esq., the well known merchant of St John, N. B., after a per- sonal test of Hawker’s Balsam of Tolu and Wild Cherry says: “I can heartily recom- mend ii to any one suffering from a cough or cold and would ask them to test it and be convinced.” _——_< When the system is all run down, and no hope of obtaining nourishment by thie ordinary food supply, then» take “Miller’s Emulsion, the great flesh and blood maker, “the kind that cures” colds, coughs, bron- chitis and all-diseases of throat and lungs, avery bottle warrtnted. No oily taat like others. In big bottles, 50c. and $1.00, at druggists. THE BLOOD ‘is the source ot health. Tzke Hood's Sarsaparilla to keepit pure and rich. Be sure to get HOOD’S SARSAPARILLA. The Earlv Spring tries Weak Lungs, which should then be fortified by a liberai use of Puttner’s Emulsion——only 50 cents a@ bottle, at all Druggists. Terpsichore Hull.—Notice is hereby given that the second and last term for the season at Terpsichore Hall will open on Tuesday next, 23rd inst., at 8 o’clock, p- ™. j22 2i eo USE SKODA’S DISCOVERY, the grea Blood and NerveRemedy. The Premises lately occupied by Mr. George Thorne, situate on Sidney Street, containing eight bedrooms, kitchen, dining room, shop and front room; good yard and stabling, ete. Possession immediately Apply to JAMES F, CURTIS. deec1s ALL INTERESTED, READ THIS! All persons indebted to ua by note of hand, book account or otherwise, will please take notice that their accounts must be settled at once, All amounts not paid February lst, 1894, will be sued for without furthers notiee. Call and settle and save ex . POOLE & LEW” P. S.—We have on hand a large sf@ek of Lumber, suitable for Building poses, in 1, 1}, 2 and 3 inch Pine and Hemlock Boarde, and Sheathing, Stfiddin 3 inch Spruce and Hem k Plank,’ and Palings, Cedar and Spruce: Shi so Cedar Posts, Lime and Brick, etc.j-all of which we will sell low for as our whole stock must be cleared outDy open+ ing of navigation. Come and examine and get genuine bargains. POOLE & LEWIS, Peake’s No. 3 Wharf. dec] 9—t t 2 Ch'town, Dec. 21, 1892—3m eod&wy \ : e€ ’ that can be had for the money. That is vrhy del EVERYBODY WEA:RS } The Daily Examiner The Leading Paper of P. E. Island. THE LARGEST in Size and Circulation. THE BREST for the Publi Ge Gi Zayed users. One Year, - - - $A] hee unis, - Six Months, - $2 One Month, Read This Splendid Offer to Subscribers : McCLURE'S MAGAZINE FREE to everyone subscribing for THE DAILY EXAMINER tor 12 months a 40 cents a month. 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FOSTER & 5G janli — Manufacturers of Wire Steel van Iron crt Ne . ’ Spikes. tacks. Bieads. Shee Naily Jicngayta Ns Se ’ N. i € ge _— . saber. i ‘ rh \ VA R one Bind “ . ! \ karim.” T f rats nd or tins a good Dwelling House and five Oubu ld ne u nh good co dt There i “> 8 6Oo orchare nh connect 1 T +w ~¥ Apply to GS #ENCGTY Wa treet. 3 nN Vea N iS ¥ Re A Ss ee rf -— rato THANE s = CAVEATS. TRADE MAR P COP YRIGHTS Out cost to the ir paper, iseued weekly, « has ov f a largest circtia : v Lue world. &3 a ive Building f ; gle copies, 25 ce s beane tiful piates of new show the uses, } ns, « ri reto latest desigiis anu s¢ contracts, Address MUNN & CO,, New Youn, $61 Broapway, Salt! Salt! IN STORE. 3,490 Bags | | - me * ] 1,900 bush. Tur I Salt, « L 1,000 ‘ ‘ ru-hed t i Ss & Cy, H¥ATEFUL. PLE: AFTER MAD Yow «= Queens Country Man Fuund Permanent Healing. His Own Experience Tel!s Fully and Preely some Truths which all Read- ers of this Paper Shoulia Know Here and there, in almost every town of our province, are “chronic” cases ove’ which doctors disagree; cas*+ that become worse year after year. Itisto reach such th the gentleman to whom thes lines refer, and whose portrai is here given, has written th: story of his case. Mr. Branuscomb’s home t: a Chipman, Queens Co., N B it was there that a representa- ive of the Groder compan ARS CATARRE 4S — x gL p i NS = Pema URE oh 4, kTC EFFECTUALLY CrRES CATAI tha, COLD IN THE HEAD, CATARRBAL HEAD- ACHE DEAFNESS, INFLUENZA, . Bold everywhere. Price, 25 cents. M’fd.. by THE HaWK& 8 MEDICINECO’Y., L'td., St. John, N.B ” ? ‘ “ - a a SILVERWARE Watches, Clocks and Jewelry. a We are giving BIG BARGAINS in the above line of goods, as we have a larg2 stock on, hand, cG. G& JURY, North Side of Queen Square, - - - - Opposite the Post Ofis Oharlottetown, January 4, 1894—ly & why 2 ~——s , People in this 19th century are bound to have the bea't GRANBY RUBBERS : They give perfect satisfa “GRANBY Rupsers wear like iron.’’ Tecember 26, 1899%—tu thn aat and fini and it has become”a by-word that in fit, style aud finiph —r 1 a ne alled upon him, Spt Ist, « he present year H's greetin, / was most cordial He glad acknowledyed his thanks, giv ing ¢ Xpress! the tullow state Ment: “It is five 5 since I became fil ct th a form indigestion Last winter it ft came more sever ev into chronic diar ell you h WwW tor SIX LON. W as though relief could found You will rem: mber h« { told you of my condii'o asked your advice about tu a bottle of Groprrs You told me shat the mde was a Jaxative and miyht meet my siecd- I delayed bu ing for a few hours us not 7. i ) } gan to hope that it would bh I} / me. 3 ——— Even my clothes seend a burden because of bloating ot stomach I. was with ¢:fficult that I kept about sufficiently to attend to my business. But I ama well man ovow from the use of your remedy In three days after I b ughi Grorer’s Syxup the terrible pain and distress across my stomach were removed. My bowels rapidly assumed a nat- ural, healthy condition. Now | cat ano drink a> well as I ever capld 1 have rane d constant- ' ly in fl s} inc Mar a I an periectly c it $e iis - ne to Rtahe nis LS¢ ! t t hers whe suffer | did may koow ’ ‘ _— ; Wo ; i A | 4 Truly Durs, E. A, BRANSCOMB, , wens ae § ~ x # ; a f