The Clinton New Era, 1906-03-30, Page 71.
11
Much 80* 1:906
YammirliA,_00.0,000„ ler"
,q Tr.& n: C c e-'
)fl
rearSt"
rroo„
Conspicuously a winner.
Oz Pric'e - 40
•
I- A Court ot Fine altentnere,
• At the court of Marie Antoinette an
.9/notions and passions were veiled by It
'Meek of politeness, Even the children
Were taught to speak with wit and"tact
•and courtesy and to bear pain in• et -
knee. The little Dlic d'Angouleme,
eight years old, when the old Salibrun
entered his presence- unexpeetedlY,
said, touching the book in his hand:
"Ale monsieur, I am in the company
of Plutareh's men. You could not
come at a moment, more apropos." The,
Count de -Pailanee; beheaded in. hie
tenth year, stood erect and valea in the
'cart until he reached the guillotine.
Theheadsman lifted his tang eurls.
"Monsieur," said the boy, ;with a bow
and a smile. The next moment his
head rolled in dust. The man or wo-
man who showed any signs of pretete4
tion or self conceit was not received at
court. Profound deference was shown
to women- and to the aged. Well bred'
tnen heard ef their own mite yqp„)fi
bontriot and wet out to fidift each
Other to the death with such grace and
courtesy that the duel seemed' a sacra -
anent of friendship. •
. Coins of 'Enormous luxe.
When the area and square inches of
surface are taken into consideration,
the largest coins ever issued by any
government on the globe were those put
into circulation by .Sweden during the
sixteenth century, These mammoth
pieces are neither round, square, oval •
nor octagon in shape, but are greatir-
regular slabs of copper described as
"resembling pieces of a boiler after an
explosion." The smallest piece issued
under the law which ittlithorited this gi-
gantie coinage was an 'irregular rectan-
gular slab of. about twelve square ineb-
es .of surface and about half an inch
thick. It was worth 30 cents. The lar-
gest of the same. series WIIS about a
foot square and lied n 'feee value of $4,
Each of these copper slabs is Sten:wed
lit several places on the face; the. vari-
ous inscriptions giving the date, denorie
Ination, ete. The four dollar piece men -
toned last above is nearly an inch in
thickness and weighs tour pounds, laelt
ing a fraction.
To Dream, .Eat
A theory •of the 'occult world wisiela
evidently -had. its.•foundation in the old
Iidea of the connection- petereen Welsh..
rarebits and dreams is just interesting
ss London. Mr. 13. A. Cochrane,. Whts, is
,r- an authority on the suliject of dreants,
said:
"I have discovered that no clear'
dream is possible on the ordinary diet.
tio meat, or simile/1y 'heavy food: or -
anything containing rilcohol,' must be
ta7ken, if the rigbt kind 'of dream- is to
, come.
-
"Fruit is the best kind of food' fess
the perfect dreamer. S.- diet will
enable people to get ifito real touce
with the spirit world, and they -win
able to recollect their dreams on -
awakening Coffee and lobe cbo etirP7
absolutely be abelished if one is -Tee;•
have perfect. dreams.
"Every night I put tinder -my boleter
a plain card and a pencil and the in-
Atant I awakej write down n summate'
of what 1 have dreamed. After.breae-
fast I write it mit fully. Thus I have
a record of my dreams for the past lee
years."
,
•
Stretching Lace Cinirirtins.
In 'stretching lac* 'curtains .on:
stretcher on the floor always pia .on' the
wide border 'first nnd then 'draw the
curtain Own and faeten. on the outside
edge: In stretching this wey you allow
that part of the curtain -namely, the
narrow border, where the least SIM and
dirt strike thene which. is :the ruin pf
all curtains - to bear the strain of the
stretching. Curtains done vp In ibis
way can be used Much longer. ..Wlieb
curtains begiu to show small holes get
a very fine net, moisten ,fhe. eurtaill
slightly after ft has been stretched,
place the net over the holes and press
with a medium hot iron. I effone neat
• ly it will look far better than if sewed
together. Of course it is aleveyg ail-
vleable to get the net as melt like the
' body of the curtain as possible.
111.=1•
• Inviting
Prospect
NorhinE
better 'for
you -noth-
ing moro
inviting
than a
meal of
Mooney's Perfection
Cream Sodas
Mooney's Biscuits are an evenly
balanced, wholesome,nouristling
food, equally good for young and
old. Made from Canada's &lest
wheat flour, rich cream and pure
butter. Baked by the Mooney
baker in.the Mooney way.
Say Mooney'aeto your grOelf,
. •
Wire* the State Fixed Nagel Prinerlo
Retorts, during and for a time after
The Revolutionary war the courts Of
the cOmmonWealtle Wiled to 11X the
Prices of tavern board and liquor, ea
When the sojourning stranger from
gear struck Richmond he could pretty
nearly know whet "horse feed and
breakfast" cost, There was alSo an
assize of bread as well as of drink.
The price of bread was regulated by
the priee of wheal: A fourpenny white
loaf, a twopenny white loaf, a four
-
penny brick loaf and a fourpenny
brown loaf bad each to weigh so much,
tiecortling as they had other ingredi-
ents mixed with flonr. .In those days
a "Beston biseuit" costlitis l' cent nal
to weigh six ounces and two drams
and So on. The centection between a
loaf of bread • and sixty pound a of
wheat at so much per bushel has
grown beyond the grasp of the modern
mind. Hoivever, in. the old time in
Virginia the custom of regulating •the
price, oreesetber, the weight, of a loaf
of bread by the Padce of the wheat ss,
which it wae made Was. universal. Soe,e,ie
far as liguenewas concerned, the courts;
Used to fix not -onlye'es• -pace a a sin.
gle drinka emelt or a gallon of the
stuff, but 'else "a goruni of _punch."
,IISIF.r."1•••••••••••••
A Most unuettal inuident s tportea
from Cambridge, During the univers-
ity polling Mr. F. K. Pelle recorded his
vote where hie father, the master et
Cheat's College, was presiding officer.
Next day the father voted in the bor-
ough election. where Mr. Pence .Yr., was
mresidtng officer,
••/•••,••••••
Some unusual methods were emPiole-
ed in Sunderland. The "olarY Sone
of the Alexander -Torrey mission 'wee
Used to howl down Mr. Reggie (thelee*
ist). At one of Prof. Stuart's meetings,
some person turned the gus off at the
Meter, an a pante was narrowly
averted. •
Sir U. Campbell-Bannerman's vote at
Cambridge University was rejected, as
he had not complied with the instruc-
tions for filling up the papere as is re-
quired in the proxy votes,
-es-. •
A flowery orator, contesting a county
in which his family possessed heredi-
tary acres,. implored sppport en th,e
ground that he. had been. "personally
connected with the district for more
than six centuries."
- IN •
"Enthusiasm is getting Very hot
when some people are actualle on fire'
eaid the chairmen of an enthesiastic
meeting in support of the Hoke Ivor
Guest at Cardiff, when is was discover-
ed that smoltewas issuing from the
coal -tail pocket of the candidate on the
platform.
• •
"Are you in favor of the- Deceased
Wife's Sister Bill?" Sir Theodore An-
gier was asked at Gateshead. Sir
' heedere waved his hand towards, his
wife, and his slater, wile:were on the
platform, and a beatific smitesefitteele
across his face as he' replied, "Certain-
ly."
T.11S CLINTON gtiVir
SED MEN AT THE OFFICE
up WOMEN IN THE HOME
AND e7,07,11serzDeeRd71,4AttTiliSweeeHk0,0,41.
Theomen end
yoar
IRED w children fecl 111
OUTused tip and tired out.
The strata of Wetness, the
cares of home and social life
and the task of study MUM terrible eat:fere
ing from heart and nerve troubles. The
efforts put forth to keep up to the modern
"high preleture" mode of life in this lige
soon wears out the strongest system,
shatters the nervell and weakens the heart.
Thousande find Iife a burden and others
an early grave. The strain on the system
causes nervousnese palpitation of the heart,
nervous prostration, sleeplessness, faint
and dizzy spells, skip beats, weak and
irregular pulse, Smothering and sitiking
spode, etc. The blood becomes weak and
watery and eventually causes decline.
IMilburrs's -
Heart and Nerve
Pills
•
are indicated for all diseases arising from
a weak and debilitated condition of the
heart or of the nerve eentres, Mrs. Thos.
' lia,11,,Kelclon, Ont., writs; "]'or the past
• two or three years I have been troubled
' With nervousness and heart Whim and
the doctors' failed to give me any relief. I
decided at last to give Milburn's Heart and
t Nerve Pills a trial, and 1 would not now
be without them if they cost twice ea
mech. 1 have recommended them to tny
neighbors and friends.
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills 60 et&
per box or 3 for $1.25, all dealers or The
littiltiMm Co., Limited, Toronto: Onts
When Oriends Are Eaetnies..•
"One of our greatest troubles is to
prevent patients from being killed by
kindness," said a trained' nurse in orie
cif the public hospitals. "On visiting
• difys, when relations or friends are ad•
-
mitted. we have in many cases to exer-
else extreme vigilance. The amount of
iMproper.• even .dangerous, food -which
one ablebOdied relative. can snuggle in
under over of a satchel or a volumi-
nous cloak is almost incredible.
• "Only n---few-weeks ago I captived
end carried asay, froth fike bed . of a.
convaleseept typhoid casetispaStel3oare
belt containing two big 'green pickles
and a piece of exceptionally rich'eecoa-
Mit cake.
It-' the boy's Mother
-
who brought the dainties, and Presum-
able •sbe did -not wish to shorten her
son's days in the land.
"This sort pf thing is .of frequent oc-
currence in a hospital. It is strangely •
filasteative of how little' the aPerege
men or Weinan understands the den-
tate niechaataut of the eternaeh and
toniacIile disease." • : •••• •
' The' Oren,* Eastern:. '
• The GreatRestent wit.980 teet long,
83 feet heath, 28 feet draft when Iodide
ed, .23,000; ammage; paddle enginee,
000,..itersepowe1• notainal.; serew en-
gines, 1,700 liorsepowqr noMinal; . She
was eoninienced to be built afelillwall
in the epritee of 1854 and was launch-
ed 'after Many difficulties on San. 30,.
4858. •The history of the Great Eastern
Was from the first, financially an un-
fertunate qne-. b -lade several yoy-
'(% -fe's :at a great
.4Wiaa5gfiar owe raj but -17'1S05 and 186G
ohe semen( redeemed her character
y,euccessit ly laying the Atlantic ca
ble. Subset ently,. owing to her vast
size, she was instrumental in laying
most of the impertaeteables' acitossthe
Atlaptie, in_the alealterranean, through
the Red sea, ete 1n 1888 she was sold
at auction in Liverpool to be breken,
up, bringingthe sum of $280,720. -Lon-
don Globe.. • • '
The liftman Body's Tireless Organs.
Man has'altbin him a stationary en-
gine called his heart, which, with its
veins and arteries,constitutes a per-
fect • system ef hydraulics, Compared
with which man's-beSt work Is clumsy,
intricate and Wasteful . The lunge are
a wOrking tlfe Most. perfect
method of sanitary ventilation. The
etomach is a working vat of.marvelOus
perfection. The brain -is a wondrous
condenser, ,and dile Skin is a great
working evaporator, with reserve auto -
male appliances, ready for extra work
in moments or need: All these are In
action. ae an times, day:and night, tire -
,less, 'unceasing, self avieding and re-
pairing, for seventy years er more.
Drantatie Deaths..
• ' What -is a dramatic death? -Of course
Abe most dramatic death evr recorded
Wits that oe-Pittenti-who-drePPeiA-ead
payieg.ai hill. Tben there', was
the death of Pa.bins, who was Choked
by a hair in seine milk; thet of LOUIS
Who met his ddom because a pig
ran tinder his horse and caused him
th Stumble: that of Saufelus,. who was
poisoned by the albtunen in a soft boil-
ed, egg, and that of Zeutis, who died
from laughter at sight tif it hag he had
painted.
• Bar Vett Tod.
"That new saleslady," said the blond
at the ribbon counter, "bas false hair
and teeth," • •
• -"Yes," replied 'the brunette, 'tit() con-
deseended to sell handkerchiefs occa-
sionally, "and it seenis that's net the
Only thing.. I heard her eoMplaining
that she badn't had a chance to get off
tier feet all day." •
She",yrorlts liolne,
Illeks-1 understand Mrs, Bine' has
learned how to keep her husband at
home. WickSe-NonSenSel Rine 15 out
With "the boys" nearly every night,
/dicks -40u Iniaonderstand me. I Mean
the work she does at home keeps hint,
She's a dressmaker, you know. •
Ilunentilnie Pursuit/
"Don't be so sweeping In yottr judge
tuente. There's that prOthinent Man
mentioned Pet now, whO I am sure
has alwaye pursued an 'upright life."
"That may be, but he'e neeer'eaught
np with it.'
At one of Ur. Henry Norman's meet-
ings in South 'Wolverhampton he was
accornpa.nied. by his son, not yet nine
years of age. In a clear voice the boy
tole an audience of a thousand people
that he did not know how to make a
speech, "but I think that as my father
has been suck a goofather to me, he•
would make a. very good member of
Parliament or you."
An amusing conversation wits over-
heard in a remote district of the North
Wilts constituency. Two • agricultural
laborers were • engaged in a political
discussion, arid one asked 'the other
•what the 0scal question was. "Oh,"
came the explanation, "they be gone
to tax food to make passive registers
he vaccinated!"
. .
•
eine of 'Mr:Claude Hay's motors fool(
a •paralyzed voter •to the Shore -each
Town Hall. - Heelemsereeried into the
polling booth. ane' was
supported by the presiding officer while'
he ineordeci. his vote.... • • • .
When Sir A. Conan Doyle Wes
. .;
dressing a meeting, in Galashiels he wae
interrupted -in the needleof his argu-
ment by a man who rose in the body of
tee, hall, flourishing a pan. loaf ;on the
end,;of a walking. fek, ...And cried,
an -east laughter and 'cheers,"Aitswer
this.", •
'At' a meeting in the Doeset,
a Speaker said, ampleased' to 'se.o
before . Some then • wild have • laid
down their liv6s for their coufftry." •
• At a Liberal meeting at Peterborough
brie .0f the principal speakers •ealti:
-"The Tories keen draggingethis Home
•Rule. red hereing across. our path, but
it misses fire every time!" •
Canvassing. an artisan diatrict of
•Sunderiand, a 'Ind.Y; eftii cliattering
:pleasantly with housewife, 114rnaci her
attentionto the three little one. "What
sweet little darlings," she eitolairned,
kissing each in turn, and then glancing
towards a Man seated by the kitcheri
are, she 'added, "And how like 'their
father!" But unfoitunately for her;
he was the -lodger. •Shaleft without the
promise of a vote. • •
•
At a Tory meeting in the Spalding
division, the chairman, In relating his
Canvassing experience, said lie called
•at a house, and etiw the voter's wife.
• He inquired as to the. politics of her
.husbane. she. replied, "when he
goes too a Liberal meeting he es a Lib-
eral, ited when hagoes to a Tery Meet -
leg he is a Tory." "Rut," queried the
canvasser, "What is he when he is at
• home?" And the lady gave the unex-
pected ;reply, "When he is at home he
is a nuisance."
CWIlon Tea
• Mountain Grown
GrancHvIcigul-Teals-u-
produd of the sunniest
mountain tops in Ceylon.
• Prepared by machinery
• from plantation to tea-
pot; it is. the beverage
of hygiene.
1:1 No exposure to store
• dtist or microbest-the pack-
• ages 'lined with .Nit -tight
paper bring it to-Nou in the
nicest possiblo condition.
Insist on you, Jealer sup-
plying you with this, the •
best possible 4fend of the
finest and tioRst teas. Dis.
criminating housekeepers
• prefer it tto bulk teas of
doubtful uohte.
Grand Mogul
Teo
Sold 014 itt pages at krta
304 40e end Sile per pound, W.
divide mit adowithille APProfttitapel
wide you by putting entrellito saw
pies• in wit, pad** 4 "
A16.11411.111111144.410001111011111111111404114111.104014001410110444
Cormorants are filPs.gtlie.-largeSt and
rtn*.striking; lp appearalteo Of our emu
-
men English sea fowl. A nude cor-
rnorent 18 a yard long and very strong
and heavy, and,, tlaough more quelut
than beautiful. Whether dlying, diteng
Or Sittiug on the revise or huoyS,. it Is
a far more interesting erea Uwe •than
the sea gull -e' woederful instance, of
adaptation of form to. Slcial needs and
of- permanence of typo enduring; from
remote agog, :for thefassil cormorant
hardly Myers frouh. alma. whielt are
now fielling from the 'tents in welch
their Petrified • ancestors are ine
Our ,eantreou "great black cOrniordn't"
'the inost rein'eSt'lltatite type
of his 'faintly. but 11 'with the in-
lelletauts"of the Ii !1v sea's' et' both
the 'old • anti evw worles, l- found
theaggeout 'Europe.. in 'north • Afrioa.
Vgypt. met' 1 ifege•ti 1 r Pare of., 'Asia,in
• eestern Nertit •Aine-eva • and.el little
e'hanged by (list:mote '12w %oil land
'aryl Itu4ra1la. • Lastly ne 1 the nety
biid•exteeit- th.e.-•lie wk.:. and, ,
• Which tealned to eeelet man in Alio .
cepture hving 7prQs, 1a1 in tbisvo-
• catian..1.e. ,1„1. . all ' by. getISC:
Mowery' fiel el:Atte len, if leoniPara hie •
the beet -eolith-1i •Stieetabm
:
Tltc.
„es -nes or, Beasts ot
The • pa nth Mt the Ma . of • rata..
. gouia gebt neer a .lite:d of pal:maces
• as it 000, thou liorapv,-n. hohlna a bush
• on its baek.. t putt; 900 pittr tip in the '•
air... then neother, then, the thirdeaud
fourth and- lifter 'a •bit :le...four et once,
That 'swine eerlope to • the gnenttees
, and they ceme close to ineestigate.
jpems the .0anibor and • lights' on -the
tearest
one back feel hrealts its neck.
• A. fox' Pp in :eove Scotia comes down •
• to:the bay of Vuntly atel g.es jumping •
• eking the betich a coteac of rwis• and
hack again, risin,g on its hind, legs at
• each about fade. mid, waving. its .
tail in the. nie The little fleckeof •tonr.
ae five fe.atieda geese outem .the water.
;begin to wouder what can be theinat-•
'ter. with the fox: Tito, swim up hito
• the shallowwater to .investigate, when
dashes --the :fox • end grabs one be
the neck... Tile men 'twee taken advane
tage.ef thli trick and have trained dogs
le do Oa the to does. For lack .0
deg Men themselves have ambled about
•en their handouud knees to attract the
birds. • • ' .• • • • •
•
•
,
• parr: 1r,•1,-.81owinan-N' evert Ile
-HOUSEHOLD HIN.TS.
Okl.ineandesCent gas inantelte Make
a splendid polish for silverware. Crash. '
;e4.111‘1.tetrl.e on a soft (blister and rub on the I •
NeMeene Will roneve ink atalUS and- .
ftsh paint, while nothing takes Out
blood Oahu; better than wild soapsuds
to whieh haresene has been addea.
A labor savingdevice, tbotrgh not es-
pecially new, Is the dustPatu with a
long% perpendicular handle. Its use
raves many a click hi the muscles of •
the back.
The 130St covers for tumblers In a
sickroom- ore retinae of thin white yard. -
board. They are inexpeneiree clean,
noiseless and caa,he eesilTrephieed as .
soon as they become stained and an. .
sightly.
.
04 iron wfll prevent water from I
becoming putrid. Sheet iron or Iron
trimaiings are the beet. Tbe ofteusive.
Kneel of water le 1.10e0 • of flowers
would be avoided by putting a few
small uails, in -the 'bottom of the vases,. '
To linstriemi cavitm,
It is not •Whitt you speuti on .clothee,
but bow -you event' It, that comas with
nuaneand there is no use in our try-
ing to evade the 'smite Suiteble clotbes
count tremeudously in this bare fought
genie earning our dally bread, Vint -1
often bonn arpn Fay, "It takes money
10 make money."Yele -and it take;
good:clothes to cominand at 'good sadary
if you are a woman wage earner; Per-
haps it Is not fair to Elizabeth Jones or
yore or ine-this etern demand for well
dressed women in business. Perbaps
• we deed the money •for Whet we con-
sider inOre important things, but sa
long no the yoliug bolds goad it is wl.
• to ps to make the most of Our nioney
we spend for clothes, to get the lamest
returns from the least expenditure. set 1
ti • de not mean baunther bargain
Sal r either, but baying, things that
.1t.st and ,.coW.4:Ittlelphiat. PresS.
- •ei . .
- Enrique St -01-14,V Jit Hey. •
' E4gliiiih traveler .
Mir found in practice tneae a- Wheel-
reetaod of putting fodder 'op for win.'
ter use, The country lies in a valley
otruotig tho Himalayae.. TIM elder in-
asestsy of tha 'people cylisistS in raising
• tine apd in total:Ina this into fate
i'lt' wlileh bave .earried the IMMO or
the country all over the world. A en-
'ridas eastom in "some. plak:wa is that of
'banking -or IMY ep nutting,
the' beiniebes J-11:es, why It. .w'ns
deep was Mere than 1 eould,geess, till-
iny grnde lefertoed tl: tt lu!-Wiuter
the snow ties. fiVe- and six yards ht.
depth and ilia efhts N1111111,0 Or 1.4,
Which new FoOli only 'tte if they Were.'
. Meant Or eattelcpards, are then 'easily
reached by the toelts of' sheep. whisAi
abound' there. '
eireanistance. • .
reeeutly advitheed.
the lieut.!: had:a.criminal plaeed befere•
acuiieti.'of some very. moaest-v)o-
latIon orthe law; Of ceurse fiat benne •
.-knew (he •peisotter iie heard the
• charge st a Led, :
. 'John, mate' Ian ...sorry:to -see yeti
it ere. .;a7;e'll jfast.fine yen halewcrown."
3 •The'eldiet here iiiterVened. • '
'• the elainge. Is not yet preyed.;
Inti-c.net heard the- evidence." •
.' Then the lallignal.t
woil, elm, my. •nami,. as the
:.•harge 10 .1101: ]e.oveil we'll plat Tilie -yen
'ae'aigailevepenee,"- Landon Tel egm ph.
. •
•
•
r5stud A•Itt. - •
.11! Mgr:: 8 ali•Zattarti riairet the same
prop..trt Ion ef 'life tight which •falls upon
1! o' ettafiteie tho snialler aml
tti.olot jietnet v,ellei • look three tlines
• :et . 11righ s thee:nut-1i Ettore diatant
ae.1 tnieet larger Steitiree .1,5 a matter
.ar.faCtrittore ie. no .great cliffvrenee he ---
'3 woott'the two. It is.inforred• from this.
feet. that. .1 lie eurfaco. of Saturn
•
u1. .t' of <1 alto Since lite surface, of
and ieitter weeld reffect so much.
- ee :hat pienet gives. '
'tie is neiteerate.
Mrs. SparkS-Yner tita4nuid is a very
,;(eiherate inn», istet frit.; SloW-
i10an-ei11dee,1 he i. . .Mrs. Sparks -4m
you. ever know Tem to-do tutythiug,- 113
'The Wonders of TranspoSition. '
The Word, -"time", admits 9f 'it very
peeuliar arrangement of its letters,
The fain- letters of the averdtransposed
33nd road, backward and forward and
'1,11) auddown gi*ei four Perfect English*
tind Latin words. It is said to be the
Only; word. la .our la tigu age tbht will ad-
les,t of 'biro many traitspositionSAnd,
• raegetneats. • Note tlie oddity of the•
.eqUare. below:*•
•• TIME
•. ITEM
• T I
• El hi 1 T
enins evesy Movement with the u ,most
.e.elifieritient find lingers ettullonsneever
• f,rers dolt if. 1 have often thought that
..:f bo evr,I. dies veldt -Willy it will be an
wl'ul sittelt to . . • ' •
•
•
eut .tio Very roespeot ed.
dearest Ada, will you be
• olin6?" .
('Intrles, this is so unexpected. ,
You must give me 0 little time:"
"flow long, darling?. . •
f w ill just call tnamma. She is
waiting In the belt roem." .
•
•
• The above words in- English as Welt
as In Latin are all complete, and the
-en-ribirs part -er ltT teat madam them
backward eind forward ..aua pp and
tIbudi gives the same result tliat trans-
posing thelettere in the original word
(these Their significatioe as Latin worde
is as follows: Time, fear thou; item,
likewise; well, to be measured; emit,
he buys,
• Clarions Facto:About the Eye, •
. A very Curiae) facets thoimposeibil-
itY'of ;noting your eye while etanalii-
• ing the reflectien of that organ hi a
nnrrar, It Is really the Most movable
'part or the etee, Yet if you hold your
•.hetten fixed a lid try' to move.your eye
whilk watching it yoocannot do ft-,-
• even the one thousandth of an Inch: Of
env:4e Ityea look. itt the reflection of
(110 nose dr any other part of your face
your eye noist move to 800 it, nut the
rtrange Oleg is that the inotuent you
enaleavor to pereolve the, illation the
• eyo 1.4 -fixed. This Is ono of the reasons
• why a porsoit'S expression an 800.71 by
blinsolf In a 7.71atss Is. quite different
from what it is when seen by others.
AtirrPeth, Preto tier eaweer.
• Timothy. Coffin,. who wee prominent ,
at the Bristol comitv bar In the Ind
century, ence seemed the aequittal of
Mt old hash woman. aceused oe stealing
pteee'of- pork. AS She Wet.; leaving
tho. eetirtroOin she pet her hand to her
Mouth and in an ardible whisper said:
"?Jr.• Carib, t do with flys
Itor-rult?" •
Quiekly came the retort; "Eat it, you
fool. 'The ;lodge says you -didn't Steal
• 7:C15W, .began fhp phliosopher,-"ta'ke
the life of your neighbor, for initances
• '
•
lo it in a. tninute," interrupted
the practical man,' "If the law Would
not- interfere. learning to play
the eoruet."
DOES YOUR 11. EAD
reel As Though It Was Being
Hammered?
A.s. Though It Would .Crack Open?
AS Though a Milhion. Sparki Were
Plying Out of Your Byes?
Horrible Sickness of Your Stomach?
Then You Have Sick Headache i
BURDOCK
BLOOD
BITTERS
•
erfli efford relief from headaehes to matter
whether dolt, nervOns, spasmodic, eeriodioal •m
bilious. it owes by removing the cause.
Mr. Samuel J. 'Mod, SellevIlle, Ont.,
writes: "Leat sPfing Xwss Teti ,poorly, my
supetlie falleirme, 1 felt weak and nervous, bid
rick headaehm, was tired all the that mid sot
able to "work. 1 saw Burdoek blood bitten °
swoons:tended for lust owl 10, nails AS sane Sad
1 1101i tWO bottles of it, sed found it to tps as
skodlent blood medicine. You 'nay tOle
sow is 1 think that °them ehould know at the
wonderful perks of Durdoeleillood Dieters."
•
Who Gets the Most
Out ofLife?
• Not the wealthiest, not the most' learned, nor the jeer -but The ,
Man who has 'good health and works for his living. This truth is
trite, but not trivial. •
Every man should guard his health as his mot valnable posses-
sion. The more so because health is easier to retain than regain.
Keep your gripon 1)001111 by regtliar exercise, reasonable' tare' ;
in eating and requisite sleep. Take BeechatTeS Pills Occasion:11y,
to tone the stomach and keep the liver and bowels in goed wotking
• order. And don',V worry.
Observe these simple rules and you will agree that the one who '
gets the yeast from life is
The ManWho Use.
BEECHAM'S PILLS
Prepared only by the proprIetor,"Tbomas Beecham, St. Belem, Lancashire, Bag.
' Sold everywhere in Canada and 11, S. America. In boxes 25 cents..
..rwearrsormsroarrost•rrocamoarkawarommal
K .1CfseiK K K 154.K 'Pt& K
Dits.KENN EDY& KERGAN
Specialists in the Treatment of Nervous, Blood, Private and Sexual Bleral si!trinel
lien and women, gs venni In Detroit,
*No Names used without Written Consent. Cures thiaranteed• .
Thousand/1'0f young and middleaged men are annualtpsweirt
to a nremature grave thrbugh early almeeor later excesses-. ebaS•
Anderson Vali One of the victims, but was rescued its time- Re
sa,ys: "X learned an evil habit. A change soon came ewer e.e.
• i could feel it; my friends itiniCed it. I. hecame nervous, &million -
Cent, gloomy, had no A mbit ion , easily tired, ern foreboeserare,
poor circulation, p1 03310:; Olt dace, back weak, dreams and ;Cis Zi3146
at night, tired and wealemontings, bu riling' sen sation. Aro awthe
matters kwseor irl
ber:Amer eitless on d contracted alWoea' dbiswase.l tried man otos and medieal firmar-ali failed ll Drs. gen,
nedy dKeran ole my case. In one weekI felt better,andlaafew wee, was tirely cured.. They are he ony relilesuit
. honest Spcialist itt he country."
,IREADER-we giakantee t I care you or no pax. You rau scc
flair, We have a reputation and business at slake+. BeVtali^ et
frauds and it:dimmers. We trill pay $1,000 for any case we take. teat Inc /tEW
ItiTHOD TRBATMENT will tii4 cure, • '
We treat and cure Nervous Debility', Yericocete, Strigure. Weak Parts, neer."
and Bladder Diseases. Cousultation free, Books free, call or wr).te f .r 1st:went-di
ist for Horne Tteatinent: . .
*lira. 1111ED1' Y a li R N Car: Michigan 'Ave Shrby :Cit.
Detroit, Mich,
-
8K.K:.,:kArs-Ky
____AmerirmerrAciossritarr
"41111441114411,411114441144101,41411/411P
Frost: reiraes
Are Strong' All Arounil
• The laterals -or a Prost, Vence are Nigh Carbon nerd Steel Cared 1,V.
thoroukbly alvanize.ci-:that Can't be broken until the strain re:101es' from .19013
' The stays Ole 740. 7 OS 1111S Same ro 9 wire.
And the twn wiles pre lockedfwith the Prost Locks.
• That braces the fence in 'all directions -up down ,aud diagonally. use
• e
•
We are o;sure that itrost Fences ate the strongest aud best await:it rausWtstee
lo repair, 1'1(.6 er charge, ati'y' fence that goes wrong. That's fair, isn3 it? •
• Prost:Wile ttenees are for sale by
DU1VCAN Nc1)1;10NALD.4 Blytht
J. W. HII44.4,SunimerIval
,f,rd`tc J. J.. SboRt,
• 17:''w H STOGDILLO Vai7a17._.
(ma
Wage
tea
WIE3IM
Sized for 2,3,
and 4 horses.
33 M rs.a.
has made a great record througeout ell
Carnada. Thom are -good reausates widaythis
is 80.. Ititlaneed night Map
up. improved Plate -Cuts ax.(.5 erorrossoll
over. tit tebeeWeit Back ehateght.
This tilsk has several Imitative• betwo. •
eeraal. None genuine without. tee -oame
• BISSELL." For l3ale by ag,etate.Mium-
facTtill.redE.bBr ISSELL. , ELoSiX, Otter..
[.31]' • • Ask for Booklet,eil."
T. • 1. , 111111v., otIo 4ILVI.011‘,..
Rie.E., •
•
The oTrhigeln°rolfg.ltnite9res7t7STIPat13.1.."Wina..
oTrven
whieh is. used when elle wishes . . • • .
.
to refer to a' streak of good buck dates. No. .2.3, James. -St., Set 4411
back to the time of William •the eon- • . • '
',the R: •C. Cilli re
queror.' At that time it was 11. 'eri mine)
.offense fer cut timber in the British for-
ests without royal ronsene • All that
Could be gathered rOr fuel or other
purposes S10.1. the wind
should happento break andcast to tile
ground:. On this neeonnt the' peisants.
hailed great windstorm ns a bless.,
Mg, because it was apt to cast enough
of "windfalls" for winter erewootl:
From this old lime. forestry Custom
°ernes' the modern application' of the
expression. 'At one thee it tvas decreed
that only .such limbe and whple trees
as should fall cluringthe three summer
nednthe could bp used's arewood, but '•IifienSp
W W
the unjustness of the act was so plain-
ly. 'apparent that no attempt was ever !
made to enforce it. a
,
muzzied Wesnen ef Stument, •
• 1
Women of -the-better class in Muscat r
ell wear nuizzles, which barely •allow
thein to open the mouth or see with
the eye or -sneeze. If there happens to
be,a OlPopatra in Muscat she will ner• •
er fascinate any Antony by the beauty
of I3er well shaped nose, for it is kept
in a specially made, ugly ease, in whicb.
it is leaposeible to tell its shape, lint '
With all its fatiltS ells is a far better
system than that of 'cutting off the nose,
NIMENS' CAFE
: EPR 110T -.LUNCHES-
1 • ' SOFT DRINKS
iOysters and Frait in KfliS011
fligh.ehtss Oen fectiOnery,adcs SART
Pastry, and Bakers' and 'Boni -e-
•
l made Bread.
.AgelIS. for Melagania. Tea .
as men in the liangra district In India
are wont to do, when any of their THE "LORNE"
speuses have proved too &winking.-
Aibert:St., Clinton.
0 G S
Andlleadatillonsw lcd
H ighest. Prices paid. EJ logg
especially. required
STAPLETON S414 r 11741111(S.
11. & J, RANSFORD
' Curlens Mistletoe.
• Very curious Is the mentoti of fishing
followed by the chtnesoIn -the strait
of Malacca. The fisherman lots dOwn
froth the side of the boat it screen of
White canvas stretehed on wood. The
0081 of fish mistake this for Some
floating obetrnetion and try to leap
over it, with the result that the fish
junto into the boat and inc thus elm -
tura Thla method is emoilyea by
Malays in their Waters. ,
1St the ruble,.
Ventriloquism, •white) Is deseribed as
"speaking from the beily," has its first
historic mention, as far no we are
ttnetre,.'in Isaiah Vire, 4,' ".tno thou
shalt be brougbt down and shall speak
Out of the ground, ,and thy speech Multi
he low out of the dust, and thy voice.
Shall he as oho that hath 11 familiar
out of the ground, and 'thy
speech she)) u hisper oat of the dust."
Et E IVI EN! 13 ER
, W. build beside.% geed wager
Ptikteihs ell kinds, thienswee
• Manure Spreaders, Stattlero-,
Wheelbeirrewiso Etc., Etta
Always pleased to mail yo r our coal/so*
• The Wilkinson Plough Coo'
.7 Unit -rep'
TORONTO •BIWA
FIE:ADACI1E
Ne.d„... and NICOCalideSS cs**,
AJAX PferIlietargst
rikomrgt. °11-19F4'
7ittitt.o. *oil
tstrt,
llsws
,r Urr I