HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1906-01-19, Page 7f•
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PR1SONERI
ARE YOLiA
Tfl0titintha ei men ate pplsonera of disease alb seeut'asiy
as though they were confined behind the bare. Many
'have forged ttbeir own chains by the vices et earlygouthf
They feelthey areiriot the melt they ought to beeruq d ttobebe.
The 'vim, vigor, and vitality of manhood ere lacking'. ,are
Tau nervous and despoadeut? tired id the repartee? have**
to force yourself through the day's work ? have you Mae AM*
bitiou and enemy? aro yott irritable add excitsble7;`eyes.
„ lautiketi, depressed and haggard ioa;cinq? itte tory' bsdotr and
braid fagged? have you • west back with dt'..uunt and io ere et
night? deposit in arias? weak sexually taloa have
Iferrvotts Debility' ani Seminal Weakness.
Our ibis' *salmon Tettte't'I*eNT la guaraatbed to
Coro or Bel Peiy. 2!1
Oecutrity,, /lettere of gtyta ke«Co teln tDetroit.1' atlitRished
reliable hytaiclanb, C2oahienttatierta. V'rek. Betake
Pea*. rittra for Qai
cbtlau Olathe for Home Tiecttztent,
Diva K Ondia 'd„ ' Horgan,
an,
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19, 1906'
J•
Undigested Food
When anis p»mien of food remains in the Stomach and refuses to
digest, it causes the torments of indigestion. This undigested food
rapidly, ferments, irritating the sensitive coating of the stomach,
while outer parts of the body particularly the bead, suffer in
consequence. -
So long as this undigested foodrentable in the ateulach
discomfort conttnt}es. A few (loses of ,. the
BEECHAM'S PILLS
stop all fermentation, sweeten the contents of the stomach and give
•natural assistance that relieves the stomach of its. burden. The tree.
•sof Beechatrt's l'i1is gradually strengthens the stomach nerves and
soon restores them toa notaml, healthy condition.
Beecham's pills positively cure all, stomach troubles, while their
beneficial effects on the liver and kidneys greatly improve the gen-
eral health.
Beecham's Pills have been . used and recommended by the get=
eraI public for over fifty years.
Prepared only by the Proprietor. Thomas Beecham, St. ]felon, l.nnceebiire, Eng.
Sold everywhere he Carman end U. S.'Antertca, in boxes as cents.
it '.•..-ClN•E WIFE'S. VIEWS.
Vier Conception of Bee Baty -to Her
Hume ttnd Hsieh:Led.
m ! Wifehood and motherhood is as truly
my profession as keeping a shop -is
my husband's business, writes a corre-
spondent of the Woman's Home Com-
panion. $e is strenuously interested
In his work. I devote my best ener-
gies to mine. However, without co-op-
eration' both would fail. Tee find It to
due interest }riehejp...ech other_ at ti.
tual consideration results In a happy
home.
First, my husband spares me anxiety.
by telling ine his exact financial condi-
tion. I. reward his confidence by liv-
ing within • his income; consequently
exorbitant bilis never harass him..
•
I easty_
cul
ti -vat
__-_ed--my-callus'
ry #aleft;'-
I take pride in cooking wholesome -food
' In a wholesome way. A well fed man
(seldom worries' over trifles. This belps
to Insure domestic felicity.
I refrain from deluging nby husband
wltb a recital of my woes. I never
"nag" Such self restraint Is heroic.
I often feel that_ to indulge myself in
eee both would be joy. However, self eon -
trot invariably pays large dividends in
home comfort.
v-•
times wnen we ';Yuma nave au Lne is on
ey we wanted to ,buy the sticky' stuff
for which we were then willing to give
our two eyes.
See that your cliildrn are not rob.
bed of their penny pleasures. 'You ore
depriving them of their birthright. To
the. child there IS no future. The mo.
anent that be •wants taffy Is his past;
future and present -. his all. Don't
Make bilis clave his penny and do with -
ed bis ^tags,-E$rbange,..:_
HAVE TOL 4 BOSS.? or are yon Inde.
pendent -31f you are making money for Bona* one
else, quit aud matte money for yourself.' Get out
of slaveryaud be free. Write 0: MAasiipt L
Co., London, They will show -you the way.' t'hiey
have started thousands on the road to freedom
Seven -dollars a- day, -.every dayan-tb_,-year, is-bg.'
rug, made handling their.good9. Write taatw.
Time is money.
GET. Tt7 WORK,'
I! the skies` look dull to you,
Get to work; ,
If the' atmosphere is blue, '
• Get to work.
Fostering your discontent
• 'Will
not pay the iandlord4s rent.
Wi1I not gain for you a. cent; '
Get to work. •
Brooding doesn't help your cause,
Get to Work;
Nothing gained by pieking_ws,
Get to, work •
Weak are .trampled by the 'strong?.
Yon a yictim of man's wrong? •
Puhs Tea
Hygienic .Packages
Users of. Grand Mogul
Tea pronounce it the
beverage of good health.
Grown on the sun -kissed
mountains of Ceylon;' it
t4 has the delicious and :*
:. ,...., mellow flavor of purity:
'CI Prepared by mac?iinery
from plantation to cup. The '
packages, lined with air-
tight paper, prated it from
store. dust and microbes.
Never sold in bulk nor in
= poisonous lead. The effort
to substitute some other test
to be " just as good" is the
desire of some dealers for •
" .an excessive profit on an •
inferior article.
Grand Mogul
Tea
OMat 25c, 30c, 40, and 50e per
pound Look for the peemitinf con.
Pon and list of premiums In each
iadg'
• JOYS OF THE CHILDREN:
Do Not Rob Your Little OneI of -Their
' Penny Pleasurea.
The amount of pleasure that a single.
penny will purchase for the boy of ten
today cannot be bought for many bun.
dred times that amount when he is ten .
years older. The delight of the proud
possession of a "whole cent" Is turned
into woe wben he is called back front
hie trip to the candy shop, with the
sharp reminder that heniust "save his
pennies." It is not wasteful to let the
child have today wbat he cannot enjoy
• In the future, even if,' by spending'
them, be is out a few dollars in later
years. Allow him to have his penny's
Worth of pleasure today, for the time
will come when he will have outgrown
the playtime of life, and the pennies
her has saved will not give him the
value they would have been to his
childish mind.
k -
1 The whole situation has been shin-
Med up by Thackeray, who said that
-at twelve he wanted taffy, but didn't'
have the ha'penny;' and at twenty he
bad the ha'penny, but didn't want the
+ taffy. -It Is ever so. Once gone, the
taffy is not the same as at that mo-
ment when it seemed our only joy on
earth and when we dreamed of the
i
•
i
• Stand the storm; :it won't be long"--.
Get to work.
If success shalt come you must
. Get to work,
There's no other way •but''Just
• Get to work, -
It rnay.yieldnot wealth nor fame;
Much er little, Just, the same,
If you perish. you'll. die game '
Get.' to _work.'
• wee anew Mlrrarr.
• "1 .hall the' faintest idea.• my dress,`
hung like that,"•' said a woman' In
amazement the other day:
She caught • a; glimpse of -herself' In
the
long n ler'
las •
gP sof
g a drug store.. -
That glimpse showed' 'a snag in her
skirt that worried her,
"Haven't ; :you 'a long 'mirror -at
home?"' asked her friend; •
"No;; they're' so expensive.,, t `
J
"Mydear. they arethe cheapest aril-
.
eleof furniture a woman, can buy,",
was the:reply. "Take frig:wwd. for it
'They seem expensive, but they aren't •
Yen can do without a thousand things,
but a 'ehevai glass or mirror of some
kind : that shows . your full ' length is a
necessity," ' - • ,
"My husband cans It vanity," put in •
thefriend as a sort of defense:
"It's exactly the opposite," was the
reply. "A mirror that enables us' to.
see ourselves as others see ustak•
es us
down a peg •or,two. just when we are -1•
most puffed up. ' It shows the trip in
- • .. Dead sea Fruit. • ' 1
"Did you have a' good Um* ' titE "the •
"Not ' very," replied gigs Passey, 47
got quite interested to ted in a
oa
y ltd' man
who seemed to' have just lovely ,mat-
nets, and reany ebut, oh, pshaw,
what's the use talking about It: .:After
THE -BOY'S PEN.
P
'AQi p
idea He ,
Ito l .
A
Cee tt+ta Slaking It Attractive
and
boys display muchleffePulty
nal Artistic
TEE
LIMN N W ERA
.rlt.. i 0
0 D
ai 13
teate
'
ofitting up their
�
dens"
with furniture w and decora#onal
from their own bands.
With the -necessary carpentering
tools, a few pots ot paint and furniture
stain, a few brushes, etc., the boy will
show. his room proudly to his parents
',and lkriende, who ha tura Will be not
only meek astonished but highly
u 7NrS Fps Tiro hors tome -
pleased with what he has 'accomplish-
ed there. And often the furniture be
builds is more 'serviceable, -as well ag
more artistic, than the cheaply put to- •
saber stuff that now hoods the market
and tills the homes. Besides this; his
"den" -is characteristic of. himself, and
he will feel a pride in lis originality..
A few rough . drawn desi s for odd
_pieces to, bely furnish ab
"den„
-are given -here,' In following -them -the
young cabinetmaker will begin to dis_-
eover poluts for: improvement, ' and
gradually he toil] become bis own de-
signer, as Weil •aft being skilled in the
use of tools
` No. 1 -shows a Convenient and area -
tie window bench with shelf for news-
Pers, etc. It is 'made of..eny kind' of
wood 'the boy finds athand and. may
be” simply painted to mateb' the color
of the woodwork.in'the room or stained
some pretty contrasting color.
:9T
with broomstick legs, a barrel 'end for
•
0,:2 Is
an' odd bit of a'.table' made
the top and a three cornered sheaf.:." pi'.
No. 3 is a `•'cross'legged. . ec-
essary 1 oy's den, ' It
is of cherry colored Wopd, with Padded
seat roverefi witfi'. hub lain.
FORESTRY PROGRESS.
Two Extensive Additions Made to Per-
.
'rnanent Forbs,s Reserves: '•
The annual report., of: the • Bureau of
Forestry -is Teeing.. circulated •by the
clerks of ,the Attorney -General's : De-
partment: •
The report, in reference to forestry
progress hi .Ontario, say the Etre rang..
leg system on. public lands under 11
cense continues to be an increasingly
useful institution •in the protection of
standing•' timber;' la whichboth the.
•lumbermen' and the province have
adirect and Iarge.tnancias intcrests..Thenumherof -rangers applied for
by lumbermen ;has been greater than
ever before.. This 'Is taken to indicate
an -appreciation' of the value of : the
serviceto the lumbering interests.
• During the past season 'the.depart-
ment has organized' a fire .protection
serdice for . the ' protection of • lands
along the Terniskaming Railway, ' the
building of which through 'a practical
ly unbroken forest presented unusual
dangers. The expense of the service,
whichroved t
p o be most efficient,.
was
borne jointly by the department and
the Railway Commission: A feature. cit
this service was the nee : of railways
veloeipede,s •by the rangers, enabling
them during' dryseasons to follow up
trains and etrtinguish at once any in-
cipient tires:
Two extensive additionshave been
made to :the permanent• forest re-
serves, amounting in all to 6,700
square miles, Or 4,288,000 acres, and
known, respectively as the Western
'.Cemagami reserve and the Mississaga
reserve, '
A number pf pictures 'of timber .lots
in Norfolk, s c .nHuron • and' I3rant coup•:'
tie
a o0
m
'
Pa Y the report; `.
t i •
, showing.
g�
.the possibilities of reforeatratioti, ,
It was` all I learned that 'be.,was . Fig Trees Grow on .Vancouver. '.
a
de
#ecti aIt
v who had:will
been hiredbe news.
to ' to
.many
horn
alt r,�
" .. • • tete. to' learn that lig trees ares to be
watch the presents."- g'made 5 O telt in canned
found growing wild `on Vancouver Is-
•
1 P
PIMPLE$ , any *A otbearwiit
roitfiful on
d ttttr*..
1 BLOTCHES toe sic
ye r «miy
i 'ERUPTIONS'Blotoher f.'irn t..
. FL,ESI+iil!ORMSaBna et ""a744-.
`wopfix-
nanora, ana a'aui-
HUMORS OILS other` blood ails.
Their �freeence 1t a eouros of embarru..
i hent to hose t icted, ar'areIl ata q and
re et to their triendr:
Many a cheek and. brow -.curt ata,
niould of aoeand besuiy'..,.b yA been'
+ defaced, teir attraotivenera, lost, sad tb
posseeaor rendered wmhappy for yews,
a Why, then, consent to ,rest under tido
' aloud of emb
atralasznei>rt f •
Thalia a n effectual remedy torah time
defoots, it fe,
BURDOCK
BLOOD BITTERS
Thin remedy wilt drive out all the iuipnrl,
ties froth the blood and leave the oom,
;flexion healthy, and clear.
Miss Annie Tobin, Medea, Ont.,' write. s
Hi take" great pleasure in recommending
your Burdock Blood Bitters to any one who
may be troubled with pimples on the face,
7 paid out money to doctors, but could not
get °tired, and war; almost discouraged, and
despaired of ever ,getting rid of them. ]f
thought I would give B.B.B. a trial, so got
two bottles, and before I had taken theme
•I was completely cured and have had no
sign of pimples since."
uidoek Blood Bitters has been manu-
factured by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
for over 30 years, and has cured tbousanda
in that time. Do not accept a substitute
which uns crupuloua dealers say is " juaat,ae
good."It calat ba,.
' WHERE IS OLD-TIME
Where js'the'grand old wiuttt
. The winter of'long 'ago
•
Whets round the loud arul }ca, Ing f'1
We "
heaped the hissing hck<
t
y t
h_..
While up the stormy ndi t n ' a
t.
'here --gleamed fry might that'nel horse -b
day.
A wilderness of snow? .
Those were 'the gold 'old winters
That men canne''er forget, "
' When, 'all ''day long' the saw•r:tilis hum -
Teed,. •
When all night long. the fiddles strum-.
When strum-
med,
neath the moon the, mon and
maids ' -
'Went tumbling down the snowy glades,
Wbene'er the sleighs. upset.
Those were the good old winter3 -
Whose sa:w}og :days enthral;
The happy days of flannel fr„dca,
Of spinning -wheels and h me -made '
socks; •
Of "forty rives” and heel•-andrtoN •
Pafernella, 'Around' you go'
And. "Swing your pardners,' ail!",:
•Where is the grand •old winter,
With its' noisy chopping bee,
Tts� kissin` games,. an' hapPY grcetingg,
?.n a hull' six weeks' of protracted
• n:leetings, •
is Iiiaying shinney ea the pool,
An' taking the girls to•singin' school?
It'sgineaway from me! '
Where'` is the old time Christmas? ..
it's: said a long adieu.:
When after a :sleigh ride they gave a
body
Arstrearning bowl of good -hot toddy,
When iS:hiskee- was, fifteen 'cents a
quart, ua
f
Atiyour head was on good terms: with :.
your heart,
And you had a•stetnaeh;• tort,
•
THE ART Or TEA MAKING.
Thera •424 dtlatapr+ Miami Beside" the
quality of the ilevearatre•
TO make goon tea is one thing; to
maim:tea gracefully is a Whofiy differ -
eat thing. Zee blrenebjvoznau luau::es
tea 'gracefully, whether the cup is goad
'Pr not.
The rarelnal prilidipal in tea tnakiug
lei to be at your ease. Seem to enjoy
yourself. If You do tot enjoy yourself
You znay be sure that there will be lit
41e enjoyment tor your guests. The
spectacle o! a. tired hostess is •a fa-.
miliar one and a never pleasant one.
Think over the hgatesses you• .know, I!
The pleasantest places to visit aye tee
places where the Hostess. has a good )
tithe herself. She smiles °and ,is glad I
to see you, and you feel that you .are' i
making"ber bappy,
It is said, that n woman wlieliter kept' 1
Her figure is sweetest at forty, Atiy' 1
way she can make elle best cup' of tea, 1
' ]ler p1easeaj, half ameded manner • les i
she makeae it IS delightful; so also Is {
the pretty way sae bolds. the cup to-
ward you; so also le the. ,manner be
' which the makes' and sips' ber own cup 1
while you are taking, yours.. Almost i
imperceptibly she refills your cup, I
There is a sentiment in keeping the ,
.ensue .cup while She pours, some - fresh
tea Into it, And so the tea hour passes.
It is a delightful thing.
The Hostess who does not acquire the
.art of making a eup of aftwation tea
calmly and' well is • tirehostess who.
knows little or nothing about finesse,
...tela tice the art ot tea• malting wben
you are all aloe. Take a cup of tea
And' pass it across the table, See if
you can de it vat/tout forgetting any-
thing and without upsetting it; .thee
try to do. it and to listen at the same
time. Pretend you are holding- a coli'
'versation... Don't look at' the cup too.
steadily: ` Practice tea • making until
you can do #t_ without'fnore'than elan-
in•g at the cup. It is easy. And whew-
•o
y ti have
learned it -ire you rich' or
Poor, a great hostesri or; a small' one-
you-zvill-�Itave ,ticgpi ed --a' pretty' arta�'
which will serve you In good'steaa all
your life.-Brocic}yn Eagle.
*OLDING .DOOR SETTEE, .
1.t Is Artistic and Adder
>< 1a" to life ilEooms'a
Appearance,> olding doors between cozninunicat- r
ing rooms. we seldom closed. 'An oral-
nary, chair' within a few feet of the 1
space never looks well' It shows its
hack to one, room or the other and is ':
hi the way. Tile settee illustrated ,here
1
•
Wheed are th1)ee go^d' 015 wn ?
i ter(.
In history they i` - t. •
"Behold,'1. T no :'A.id, ° I'..make all thin c.
i'Tn r'^d 'Flo kept til, word; ain't you ^,
f er`. ,e4 cry:h tai , ; said and done,
tT `• '' it �L .). i t', •
L:: •f,.I,•ti '-'n\t.
Fat. C re•1'. i -. ,':s for the hest.
- T, -hen, ....
..err 9ye.
om m► LIPE"
—That's what a prominent
druggist: Said .of Scott's'
Emulsion' a s h o r t time
ago... As a rule We • don't•
Use or ref °
er
totestimonials
addressing the public,
but the above remark
and
d
similar : expressions are
o f•
'Busy.
•
Ityker-I-hear you have left:the bank
in 'which you Were formerly..em Io ed.
i? y
Pyker-Yes; three. weeks ago. •I'm.1ts
businees for myself, Hyker--So?
What are you doing?. Pyker--.Looking
for another job.. . , •
net DRY,' ansisingh.. •
"Beil'eve me, dearest, 3 Love .you bet,
ter every day,." • "
"Oh, Jack, why aren't there more
Bayer -Lite. .
Petah Becoming Scarce.
The Salting season of 1905 w111 be re -
timbered by anglers as the worst we
-ever had for the perch fishery, • nays
The Gederich Star. It in claimed 'that
the.flah are getting scarce and that the
disturbance to the water' by the work
on the breakwater drove the ash away,
and It le probable that the reasons giv-
en Were the cause of the small catchall
the past
A season,
,
•r
land. '
•
Some little time ago 'Ma Parker 'Vali
.:r
(lams, M. P. P., sent some leaves to,
Mr. R. Anderson, "Deputy Minister of
Agriculture, for identification, says The
Vancouver World • the . trees from
which they were obtained, Mr. W11 -
Ilexes said, were about two nines apart
and seemed to pe: seedlings of figs. The
trees were. described as being about
six feet in height and making a vigor
cus growth. • After examining • the
leaves .the Deputy Minister replied to
Mr. Williams giving his opinion ghat
the Speeirnens certainly resembled the
Smyrna fig, and believed, it to be of
that variety. The lig, Whilst it does
well and produces good fruit. in Cafe
province, is not Indigenous,
Mr. Anderson referred the specimens
to Tar. '5'letcher-of Ottawa, who oain-
olded with the Deputy Minister as to
the variety, and said:
"ICU remarkab}e•that these fig trees
should °(lave. established tbeiiisetves in
British. Columbia, but 1 suppose if the
tree would stand the winter, there is
no reason whthey
Y sheaf d not be. in-
troduced, because age, as put up far
market, are enol treated with hoat,yso
*,:believe the seeds would grow."
° A Canedien Turk. •
It, 1T, Peckham, who is now the. coni -
I mantihig admiral of, the Turkish navy, t
. at Canadian by birth, is weft known in
Windsor. Ile ran' away from home
n'hen a, boy, and sailed' the lakes, say.
'T'he Arnh"rst}ntrg Reho, I,ate4' he was
adopted and eiluclated by Capt. D(liott,
now, residing in Romeo, Mitch. Later
l he bcearno one of the most, trusted em-
'ployee of the big Cramp shipyard,
.I''hiladelphia. When th -Turkish Go'w-
, ornnbent bought a tnafi-of•wnr front
the Orainps, Tera'kltaarn wars Soleeted to
'
• sail It. •• Oit,..arrtv(na at Constantinople
' • he was offered a con'tmIssion in the
Turkish navy, and quickly rode to but
t>resent position,
tion with Scott's Em; on
that they are pro y of
occasional not e From
infancy to old age tt's
:Emulsion,offers .a 'reliable
means of remedying im-
proper and weak develop-
ment, restoring lost flesh
and vitality, and repairing
waste. The 'act >R o ,n of
Scott's Emulsion is no
more of a secret than the
composition of the Emul-
sign itself. What it does
it does . through nourish-.
anent -the kind of nourish-
ment that cannot be ob-
tained, in 'ordinary - food.
No system is too -weak or
delicate . to retain Scott's
Emulsion and gather goad
from it.
ire will send you it'
;vs r_ 'i • Sample free.
Pedurc that thispleture in the
Bran of a Abel is ala the wrapper
of every haute of Ernuinien you
•A CONVNISNT gs45,..
is an addition to -any decorative ar-.
I turrnment of -either room "It does not
interfere nith8auy :giaceful draper"'
that way be arranged y
ted 'at the .door. It
Is decidedly' useful, convenient' and
give't a certain tout of the unusual
and 'elegant :to the. room.. Of •cour a it
Is readily roiled to some outer position, .
when it is desircd'to'Close the sliding
doors. '.. settee of this kind is not dif-
ficult to fashion; and. a.very pretty one
•ouh
4 de'tsi ..
1
y b
e made and upholstered
at home
Yon often have' heard ti' .r'arrler iti-
geons'and the part they pray iu war,
bitt how 'dally boys and . girls ever
heard of carrier bees?' i
These little boney:gatbei ess have such
a sense' of direction that they can al -
'ways fly straight to their hives, even
frombefore; .places they have never 'visited
We • are told that 'a few years•ago. a
beekeeper trained some of his insects
as message carriers. ' Knowing .fife
g y
will •always fly,home frons any' point
In'a range -eV four or five miles, be tied
tiny notes for his little daughters on
the bees and set them loose: in' a total.'
ly unfamiliar place. In •a` very short
time they were back at their, own haves,
messages and 'all.
Sone people think bees , might 1*
Macre very useful In war times, and
even now experiments are.;being made
to see lust how far' and bow directly
they Will fly; •
Some Bolls.
Most dolls are Tern in Thuringia, a
' • province of Germany. Thuringia is '
sometime called puppet land On thie
aCeount. Almost the .entire population
is employed making some parts of the
dolls .which . are sent to every country
In the world except India. The little
Hindoes aresaid to be the only doll -
less children in the world, ail ecus•
tries baying. something which. the little
girl can roik,to sleep and love. That
the, Annerieaa,girls love dolls, one hag
only to read that last year over $5,000,,
1. 000 worth • of dollies came Into this
eountir, and nearly •alt of them from
xlturilagla.
Why should a Housekeeper never put.'
the Letter M into her refrigerator? Be
cause It will change lce,lnto naive. "`
Why Is bread- like the Suitt geeftusti •
it rises from the yeast,
'What is the cheapest feature of the
:flee? • Nostrils, two for a scent (cent).
What 18 the smallest .room 'in the
World? Mushroom.
A Littler Problem.
'two 'fnen find In a cellar an eight
lion cask, full of wtuc; slides ars enap..
five gallon and an empty three gal -
n ensk, 'They wL ih taa Measures Out
Mo kite of four gallons each. Blow
they do it? • Figure it mit. it 'II ; l
bt io hod.
..1..
The institutions of the National
Sanitarium .�•A�ig4�#iMi,�y Jt#a1i1'
the Muskoka Cottage sanatorium and the *W okat,.Fre.i
pital for Gonsulnpttves, are under the distinguished patronagi
of Nis Excellency Earl Grey, Coverngr tfeneral of Capada„ •ani
Couattess.: Grey.
Q
of this announcement 'will be glad is flow that (.Readers
there has been an encouraging: response to oafs" regitest. fol' ..,
help for the�.�,
Muskoka Free llospit
for Consumptives
FREE N�C?SPITAT _� r;1%;r�r„ �f;'
t'OR CCN'UMPTiVE
rtpati CRAVENItUR �y
'ONTARIO �'"�
cif Since this institution was opened; a little more re than three
years ago, 360 patients have been eared. f
or. Over 2,000
patients' have been treated in our two Muskoka homes
within- the past' seven years.
"---Not a Mollie applicant has ever
-=--ilt_ein._. >+efuaeci..-•admisstuln_ to - --the.-:.
^--.-Muskoka Free Hospital' for .Con-
,- sumptives because. _ of lib; or
-her poverty - . ',..
E( Our
`.' pleafor help isthat`tie Muskoka FreeHa's
italfor Consumptives cares for patients:that•'all °rhec hospitals
refuse.If the needed money is forthdoming,'this
dread
disease . triight be . stamped out.
-nit, T.:G. Rnnntce, an, eminent .pphysician. of Montreal,.„,
ex•presicient of the Canadian• Medical • Association, ensile
ex -president of the British Medic ul Association; ,stated at• �'
a meeting, of the Montreal League for the Prev8ntion of
Tube rnnk)sis, Itis tirin belief that in twenty five -years;
prOV iced proper means are adopted, a case of consumption..
• :would hu at euriesitj'.
•
.Within the month. the 'accommodation has been Increased
by twenty fide;;beds, addin g�' -to the'burdens of Il'1SiIttL'ilaitCf3y
c:but in the faith that a generous .public•:will come: to:the-aid.
of :the trustees.
• Conteilltit,„ tiS;,;niay -•he sent to 'Stn .Wilt R. Mybtn.rns'ii,''•Kee
Qsgooclo ii ill, Toicinto, or \v:; 7: (at ,'Esq,, 54 front t""GV.
4
ifit'V'•1 t3r5,-„..,r
r'ay's
of mea
prtic
GOltri
Cures Coughs
• GRAY'S SYRUP does that one things
• and does it well. ;It's no.”cure-a11," bat
a CURR•for all throat and lung;troublen
GI:tAY'S' SYRUP Oi RED SPRUCIt
- GtUM stops the irritating 'tickle -= tomes
away the Soreness -soothe and: heals the -
throat eaand CTJRES COUGHS to stays
t•nrdA
None
the he
fess
effective e
v beu
pleasant to take. �, se it is
2� Cts. bottle,.
nl
ipummaiNumor
ItIiNot Test Books
• but
xhe.'irts
instructors orsb behind d them that make: a school.
While the ". Forest City Business and Shorthand College • '
publishes a text on bookkeeping that -is used in the best colleges,
from Halifax. to the Great West and has- a standing reputation
far pubiishing''practical••text books, only the best and: highest ,•
salaried teachers in Canada are on the staff:
Without a' good teaching staff '• good text books would be
• wasted; Our courses include Bookkeeping, Gregg Shorthand, •
Accounting, etc., as well at Touch-tyi3eiwriting,•
' Catalogue free' for the asking. 5
g chaos tartn--Sept, tilt faun
inclusive.'•
• J. VO". WES''ERVEt.i , IR. C. A. Bldg„
Principal ' LONDON, ON's''..
•
SCOTT it. $0'VVIV :� ga
Chemists ty
• Toronto, Ont: to
hos., sad $li ilii alfa can
h
k
1
..