The Clinton New Era, 1906-04-20, Page 7•e•
kpra. 20* 114). TELE CLINTON SSW 404k
Everyone has his own lilms and dislikes 1
but; trora tbe way ,that SALAD& ineroses
its sales most people's likes must favor
131_000LETTI NO%
.1.1....!$$$$$T•
it 11 Stilt Reg 1 ii r tea to by IERR/tOrs Di
'Certain lammenentines,
Wren*letting, or o'veneentotIon," as. it
le known scientifka.11ys *as once the
1 , :or Marai 1 mo ne nt.D; wyttathotrn gntes:niydieveorf ifte,rriai
, the opinion of modern. 'medical authori-
ties, and Soon after Isle time there was '
a reactien against Veneseetion. Better 1
medicinal 'agents :accomplished white.
' ever benol3ts werenttributed to this lie-
. role treatment, end a better knowledge
a plItystology eoindenrmed the peletiee,
Veuesection, !however, is stilt e1•r.
ipled. in ecittain emergencies by the
-roost advanced practitioners. A. Gee.
CEYLON TErt.
The prices are such that they meet the needs of all and custe. !Man physics= tuts mane an extensive
:study ofthe subject, with clinical ex -
M
mers know they get what. they wish -their mperiments, nd reathes the conclusiononey's value. •
and lungs are engorged with blood
veneseeitria is permissible beeanse of
BOWS ANTIQUES. the Speedy relief it gives, often after
other reseurces have failed.
celleeters geoastaway on. Tamer Dna** Deadly toxins are also present in the
..Agginert. Pra,•ad. ploodnn some diseases, and venesection
Colleetels of antiques have to be nil reilimes them. The lost fluid is replaced
the time en...their guareteigaleaSt trend. with aft injection Of pale st;lutInn..
wed of vegetation. Consequently it is Even 'then they are often deceived. Bieetiletting effords relief to the livid'
Incapable of supporting any of those Artists exist who •mei mpose en the sterferer .from a distended heart Wien •
higher organisms which we know as :very elect, ,.A. well k•nown. to -fleeter bad • • every breath is a struggle:, tuft its use
living beings. Its surface is a vast a precious bo' et Tare enamel. He 'Wit Las been netheed. to au eittele seleth,e, •
desert. It is rough rather than smooth, It to Aricema to be tepaired, .andi,the in- suel it is leg:tree-1 In rnelnette eeit
mountains proper or to craters we are eu .it a new !lower part to
unn. remit elt. eteese -peso en_
Whether this rouamess be due to ge
, neses menace fitted It with -a • new e
too far away from it to be , able ; ttreotit'ginal ua.t. and two collectore were •
yet to say. • The latter is the raore. iiiadelhappy. • ,,,• - • •
probable. Over the greater part of its'• ,g,e•in cutter took a modern gold
surface change . either diurcnal or sea- breok ring, recut theeetone with an-
•sonai is unknown. Three-eighths .of its. intnelio of an important •subjeet, naa.de
surface Is steeped in perpetual- glue, a eftency swallow the ring mad after
three-eighths shrouded in perpetual ' 'sense time killed the tetricey. The rest-
gioone while the remaining quarter donee in the bird's ellop had endowed
niewly turns between the two. •Teo
planet itself, as a ,world, is dead. •
'Interesting as illeteury thus proves
to be, the interest as regaree the eau -
•et• itself is of a rather corpsellise -char-
acter. Less deterrent perhaps is the
interest it possesses as a pert Of the
life history of the solar ,eysthm, for
tidal friction, the closing a:ct in the
losmic drama, in> brougitt it where it
Is. The reettehlue hesetiti dewy.
Whether it ever supported-Mfg:epee its ,
surface or not, the power to do so:glass,
now forever passed away. Like Venire.
and for like cause, It is now a dead
World. And it was the tiret thus to !.
reach the end of Its eveeetioseree •ee. !.
reer, earlier to do • so there Venn's, in-
asmuch as tidal action 11%1S very intuit
greater upon it sthate on Venus and con-
sequently produced its effeet more.
quickie: Mercury has long been dead.
How long; measured be •eenturies,
cermet say, but praciesilly ;tor a vers
long time. Venus must have become
that in ceetain cases where the heart
THE 'PLANET MERCU
Like Venus andor Like Cause, It Zi
Now a Dead world.
Mercury is a body devoid, practical,
ly not absolutely, of dire of water
theegem -with all the marks ef ane.
.'4x. scholar in a little. .knciten part Of
Dalmatia was seeking 'gold. Coins and
otinuments. of the old !Servian• dynasty. '
'Ai dealer estme bra With,* \beautiful-
•ity wrought exlitifle, Whieh he claimed
.1.:0• be a genuine 'antique.
!the article- with glass :.•the student
,ctune across It tiacy insoriptioe, and,
'llieuter versed .than the dealer gaveililm'
:credit for being, be Tend !Tat -
erose was made in 1893 by -S"egiving
tithe:Dame of the nialkerait said. ' The
'dealer steted-net'on the order of his gos,
Ingbut tett at !mace. . 7 •
Malay a /reputed:article:in its own un-
doing. At One time a ertnither !6f lead.
coins were wit on the :market as
threes. /t was diseovered 7 that • the
Arabic numerate With Weibel 'they were.
dated were of the !fashion' net' invented ,
at the supposed thne of theim
r aking.
• Collectere, yontgaiid,Old; trahled aud:
untrained', are tconsi•eittly' being taken
in. Even =sett= thereseteeeate ilot
so comparatively recently. Bothhow- free from, fekee.
!ever, now have finished their course
and have in a most Mcrae !gem:se:enter-
PUIVIME STOKE.
ed into their rest. . ••
The Pe**. Ittenittincomes Prom the !Ws
land of
•
We Often hear It renew:tea:, and pate,
Not to Know Thisl ad Xs Net lc, ticialarly after rthe..eruption Of a vO1(...a-
xnow Gree . .
no, that pumices Stoneotght ti lit' Toen,
' There are some lands s blab have ale tifal and Cheap, ag • till:realties Meet
ways laid a ,speit upon th mind, upon have 'beeia *jet:sled- dutirige thes voleanie
the imagintel upon thebeart. Greece, disturbance. ieeen marteleet fact,
aboNe all other eounteiesehaaontrance • -'•• te stone in e., 1-
„
the mind. The imagination has ever oral neels-sibtaineil!froxie:-.atetiveevplea.--
loved the east -Egypt, the Teediesi for-
gotten Asia, the almest as mysterious
Asia of today. For most of us the
home land is the count:L.7.ot the heart;
for many, it may be, It is Palestine,
where was lighted the fire at .which . The island is mountatherze in (Ammeter •
the hearts of incalculable millions' are! .and consists ofstuffe raid Ilexes anti of '
still vsarmed. Others are content to. . highly silideons.e/oleanic protlecte... The
say with Emerson in the eine essay 'elle district . where the stolle.eis found ' is..
called Campo Rlauco et :Monte Potato,.
1,500 feet above the level•Of the sea. •'
After riding :a..considerdbie distance,
Partly -along peecipitious !paths suill7
cieiatly dangerous to be interesting iihd
partly • through %Vineyards and over
grassy plains, one •almost ,thipes sud-
denly upon a seeMingly shoW clad Wil-
ley, inclosed by ikills Edge ,guite white,
• and the whole !glaringly bright on a
sunny • day. Into those hills workmen
are unceagingty •ffigging deep burrows, .
working within hy,eandlelight. In their
excavatiows they: comes across many
lumps of pniniceetone, Which are piec-
• ed in baskets, subeequently behig Con-
veyed alongthe valley to the seashore,
where .small boats are loaded' and sail
•to the seaport near by, where the stone
'tie sorted, peeked and shipped to dis-
tant parts either by way of Messina Or'
tLeghorn. • .•
noes. It cathes trotrethe deposits of tile ;
article discoveredfin one .00 two guar-
terkofs tibe .gle.be, .the beeteof which 15
at.present to be found:in the heend
Lipari, situated luellie'Tyrrhenian' gen.
"Heroism," "That country is the fairest
which Is inhabited by the noblest
minds." But, above all other lands,
there is one wilich hits at once impreee,
ed the inincl, the imagination and the
heart of western peoples. When a fa-
mous poet declared that on hie heart
would be found engraved the word
Italy the words voiced the emotion et
a multitude In every country of Eu-
rope and in the great northern •con-
tinent oversea.
To see Sicily, the old "card= of the
Sun," as the poets have loved to •call it,
is not to see Italy, though there may be
a measure of truth in Clothees remark
that not to know Sicily is not to lenovr
Italy. In a sense one might more tru-
ly say of Sicily that not to know it Is
not to know Greece. In another sense,
however, we have In this most beau-
tiful of islands the intensifieation of
Italy': Whatever is most Italian Is In
e'vidence here, though it is Italian ,of
the south and not of the north. Whet
" a gulf divides them is known only to
those familiar with the whole penin-
sula. -William Sharp in Century.
WELL KNOWN
• IN JARVIS, ONT.
Raldimand County Councillor tells
how Psychine cured his
Lung Troubles
"1 contracted a series of colds from the
changing weather," says Mr. Bryce Allen,
a well-known resident of Jarvis, Ont., and
a member of Haldimand County Council
for his district, "and gradually my lungs
became affected. I tried medicine and
doctors prescribed for Me, but got I no
relief. With lungs and stomach diseased,
nervous, weak and wasted, I began to use
Psychine. With two months' treatment I
regained my health. To -day I am as
sound as a bell, and give all the credit to
Psychine?'
There is a proof of what Psychine does.
It not only cures Colds and kills the germs
of LaGrippe, Pneumonia and Consumption,
but it helps the stomach, makes pure rich
blood and spreads general health dower
the body. YOU will never have Coneurnp-
dot? if you use JA
,PSYCHIN
(Protiourteni.S14een)
, Adirondack. ' '
The 'word s'Adirondeek" .comes to us '
trent the language of the Mohawks.
With them it was, HA-scle4on-daelt and
:Meant wood eaters. This term was
:applied in derision to a few mbmbers
elf it once powerful branch �fthe Al-
genquins, who were defeated by the
Iroquois and, forced to seek refuge in a
:fastness of the mountains. They Were
•in great distress, and it is said they .
sent messengers to theirVictors asking
them to Make no farther war upon
them, as they were reduced to the ne-
cessity ofeating roots and the bark of
trees. ' A. few of them finally escaped
to the north, and o'thers were eaPtured
and'held in slavery by the Mohawks.
The Giant Of Lobsters.
The largest lobster ever catight
the coast a America was taken by a
Belfast (Me.) fisherman in 1891. 11
weighed twenty-three pounds and
measured thirty-seven inches from the
end of Its tail to the tip of the 1611g
front claws. The monster was too
large to enter a common lobster trap,
bet ne the trap was being drawn up it
wits canglit in the -netting and safely
tat:lett Many years ago a 161381e1!
we141111g twentv.two pounds wag cap-
itlrod. near' the game plate, mid the
event was eonskierect to be of enough
importance to be given a place in. W11.
liaison's glisten, of Belfast."
teacet. nitee.
The. London Lancet remarke: eelitne
peeple do not .knOW' NM.' easily they
eun protect the1W4elve,; and their chi!,
Iron against the bites of gnats and
other Insects, Week •earbotic acid
:Tonged in the Hien ;nut hair and in
s eine eases teething 'wilt ti rive away
the whole tribe. , We liaie no doubt
Oc. Pero .att e ,,.., ft. ,tho ArtVWay ftirom thee, which
thre hersee 11114 entile collet be proteet-
5 '1 110:11' 14
100100 &Steil 1111 arid 62,..eill dikigyitliktit
Ns V. A. KOOK limItatljoroota
earatively restrieted group of.,allinents..-•
The Ale ; t ;••Itt(11.; " ,L1 1 -
ministered• by the ,Cornerharber as meet
ea every physician, have diseppeaved.
111,t2 the. east. -
DON'T CODDLE YOURSELF.
Paoltield to the
• Oven'. Mouth.
•We do things right at
the Mooney bakery..
Crackers are packed piping
hot from the ovens. The
moisture -proof paper and
air -tight tins retain all the
freshness and crispness, no
v.../;44.1Sate
matter here or vvhdn
you buy them.
;) They -come to Your ta,
' ble *just as inviting and de-
licious as .though you ate
them at the ovens in the J
bakery, At all grocers in in
air -tight packages,
,joicatiszeiedearse
V,. ,...
Natortnosnienumaarmaiatmormap
SUPERFICIAL SENTIMENt.
SAV EO BY COURAGE.
•
An Reciting Adventure With Mood. t. Backache,
Chieftain.
litte,the author of "Notes
From My South Seat Log." tells of his lessees
tutor, who scented to 1.11131 the mt put"
herele man Itt the world because be. I
had been. through the first Maorl Warh,
and tbeeenee of an adventure whic
there befell him, and which is given AS
follows: • •
Poor Guy• -such was the tutor's name
-wee lieetenant. and he and two
corapanies were captured .by the
••.$$$ .44,, s Se 4. $e •..,.‚. the
etockade, and the chief, ittklug up one
()Celle captured seamen's cutlasses, .felt
ite teese .„1 keen eyes
on the young officer's fates
• "I Nhall not berm ee two men ct
yours," he said slowly. ' "They shell p
safely back to your lines if"- He
paused, and grim smile. distorted bis
tattootel face.
"If W1111 t r asked Guy. -ealmly.
"If yoo will stretch out your right
hand that l. may cut • it off at the.
wrist swiftly, no 'further harm shall
• come to you, and yon, too r shall go
;free." •• :
you 'Iteep your vc,-ord?"
• "Aye. . 1, TA 'Attut Went; ata no liar,"
Guy nodded, .quietly took Off his coat
and held out his left hand. •
"Steen," lie• reel.
The' ebief again smiled.. `,`,Thou art
'as ell -meter es thee nit brave. •I said
the eight band."
Guy let fail his left and'extended his
riche .arra. Te Atua Were stepped
• back a pace-, reiseff the cutlass -and
struck tfie' point of it into the ground.
.Thea he bent forwardand gravely
. • secret or Power Lies In IntensitY. of ralibed lieges with -Guy.•
Fessiaess • About. Health 'Does More Emotion.
,
• "elo," he said, "bin come back no
•
Harm Than Good.
.Wben ohe thinks of the .neweitegled
ideas about health and sees:people on
every hand hunting for disease geniis
in water,inlUl, meat; fruit. and the at-
Mosphere,analyeine everything, dread-
ing swallowing and in •earistant fear
with every etiouttifel they reat, one al-
most wowed'swhether or • not •lite
eyelike living. If we are nirible to be
made the victims of ttene..eielthoupands •
of enemies which are in and around
ovekything, in all liquids arki ell solidi
alike, we are in just abott the same
eoadetion to enjey life as -was one of
the .olden tangs who . liveJd in mortal
terrorthat everybody was trying be
person hint. All his food and drinks,
everything, had 63 be tasted and tested
by some trusted. raember orb's benne-
hold. before be dared to ,totich it him-
self. ' • . • -
If there is'n (Meet in the
world it is a Peretea =Who has become
Salmi' 'about his bealth, who lives in
terror of germ a and mutt exenaine and
.anctlyze everything hemita or drinks,,
looking for infection. .
It ▪ 'Van :moot to,onetsCr'eatede•te go
'throw:et life whinitik, .complaining and
fearing, in morbid, terror that a thou -
%send enemies are combined to Vobone
of comfort, IstieapPinese and of health.
Man Was made'to holdmp his head,. te
• walk erect, with bolduesr;fearlessnesa
and coelidetece.Suceess. ' ' •
•
PINEAPPLES'.
- -
The Way They "Grow -and How the
Plants .Iteproduee. . '
Pineapples do not grow. on trees: Ime •
aghte a . plant tour feet in extreme
• height from the groundetonthe tip -of -
leaven. A single stalk at the surface,
but dividing at once into swordlike
blades or leaves, :fifteen -in .number„
..frOnt the eenter •of 'whieh appears.. a
stiff; upright stem at .the top of Which'
. • -
Is the fruit This stein is short, and the
_crown of the fruit when fully grown:
. is a foot or xaore doelo.w.A# p.etnte of
the leaves. At the end df .a year and
a half frcim 'planting •ettele plant pro-
duces a single-freiteeven as a cabbage -
Want produces a single head. But the
pineapple does not die .atter fruiting.. •
once. .Down on the item gelow the
fruit 'and among the long, narrow
leaves-auncker appears...If allowed to
remain this will soon become the head
of the plant, and within' axtother year . •
it. will yield another fruit: 'This process •
may go. on for a term of years. In the
meantime,, however, other zockers willmake their- appearance.
These are, broken . off, slide/then stuck
into the ground they put out roots and
become other . plants. Thus . 'single
•pineapple Want may produee a dozen
op more. ptherg white it is yielding fruit
• frOm year to year.
superficial Sentiment is without vital eptnad.e So Guy and the .twe sailors
influence. The secret of power lies 1/2 were- allowed to. return to Despard's
the intensity of emetion, but especially: , intharmed.
So in poetry, art and literature. BY no
litmus pocus can artists .and writers .
adequately depict what they do not •
feel. There should be a thermometer.
of teMperament as well as for temper-. ;
. Feeling and ein0tioil -haVetheir
degrees. We are serene When our feel-
ings are in the temperate zone,
'tient whee we pass eighty-three, furi-
ous when we reach blood heat, mad at
boiling petite When, feeling falls be-, .
lemv .50 we become ieditterente .and
whoit reaches freezer, point we are
heartless. An emotion' that does •net
attath the seventy-sietie degree is hind-.
ty wortherecording. At Summer heat
the rarest flowers' begin to hloorn and
itatere becomes Poetic: While thetem-
iierate is • the proper sphore for pure
reason and scientificobservation,. it is.
• rarely, if -ever, proper for the highest
achievement in apy art., In. the World
.of art iniaginaeion arid feeling are not
eoeteue with a serenity that touches
the' borders. of ...indifferteten Tb ciea
tire ..instinct is never effective -firilasS-_
at e. certain pitch Of 'eufhusiesfir.-Tt
the sharti, clear, brilliant cereeetea.,
thought that -electrifies the brein. But •
en idea zs worthieeg unless we can find
ea, form to hold it In the hest work..
idea, eorm and:feeling' appear to the
:beholder as One. An electilc bolt seethe
ke of liebthing
an ordinary •fiee would esiesixine in :an
Grierson
How Is
our Cold?
• Every place you go you hear the same
question asked.
Do you know that there is nothing 10
dangerous as a neglected cold?
, Doyou know that a neglected cold will
i •
tarn into Chronic Bronchitiii, Pneumonia,
disgusting Catarrh and the most deadly of
all, the "White Plagne;m•Consumption.
Many a Life history would read different
if, on the firet appearance of a (muskets
had been remedied with
Dr. Wood's
Norway
Pine'Syrup
1
• 11 ' 1 • 1.
•
•
GETTING -THE 'NEWS.
seethed Adopted at the Outbreak of
•' the Revolutionary War, •
In Contrast to the workiugs ,of the
newspaper of the, dae and of the• rap-
id transmission of. tidings without the
d f wi t nide •the
• sage is a document printed in the;Berfc;.
shire.:Courier at the beginning -.of the
Revolutionary war. But evidently pee -
:pie were as eager then as now to •hear
the news. • • • ,
"For the Purpose of gettingBpeedy
and Certain' Intelligence . from the
Ariny at Boston. We the Subscribers
hereby pronaise and agree to Ride from
this town -to Tyringbam Sheffield
by. Tutus so its to bring Intefigence
from thence each Day (the Sabbetn ek-
cepted) and to Report the game at the
House of Mt Josiah Smith -And in
Case no regular. method is come into •
for bringing,the News to Said 'eyeing.
ham We promise to bear our proper-
tiona.ble part Of the Expense in pro-
curing Inteligence irem Springfield
twice in each, Week -Witness ..our.
hands this 3rd Day of May 1775.".
Following this agreement is a listtof •
days, With the names of the citizens.
who were to be riders. Jacob Van
Deugen, who agreed to be the 'first
. man Co ride to Tyringham or Sheffield,
was 'to go for it on Monday, May
and Mark Hopkins was to follow On
Wednesday, the service from that time
on alternating, eecept ae to the 'Sab-
bath, which cempelled a no news 1117
tercel Of two days the week.'
.al o eve
n a re o g .
SHORT LIVED DOCTORS.
Wises Whieh Are Most Deadly to
• the 3n:c1itest Profession..
. The diseases. Nvietel claim the moot
.vititene among physiciansAelatimelY to
all males are gout enW diabetes, ena -
there is a bigh relative mortality froth
diseases of the nue 011e system, eireu1a-
tory.system and kidney:4, says the See
entifie American'. • -
' From- the • nature of his • habite the
physician .is 'not subjeet to accieents, •
and, tbough Is brought. into =tact
With infection to a greater extent than
other' .teens, his preventit7e means are
••eueecsefel erid hie mortality from in-
feetion is very low. Freedom from
leveed Meseular strains andligh blood .
• teneionappareatly ses'es him from
• art erieselereels, but stickle' 'claims
many and do the .drug,...habits* h•e-
,•enired. lir the neetously ekliairsted. • it
4
-S•letettleiff 111 1 Ile users ere phYsicians.
Itsesof - 4-10.rysiicianneeedely
k :clean .fiVklellitly eeelf.10Ve.,ller-V,-
I. ..eXiiePti11.11.re, Melia:tient reg t • and
defectiee nutritem, ineeparatile free.]
Las with its beetehand restr:et-
; '.ea elm), iTegn linurs of Work,' rest
d ri
. an.Tctils int:1 worry 'whn elives de.
-.pent" upon. iffiejudginent and the lack
11111 beets. eaki, that. tlii•ee1
-`, .6 • 1.1 o
f
MI • •
1 1 1 • 1
- week. The -pity sieia se,:s
tients every .day in tire week. -Month
after month, and cannot learn to forget
them when he home merely luurns
the candle at. Istetirikde. tie violetes
the law 'observed by every animal, that
'there shall be short pernels of
• ate exertion leterrepted by longer peri-,
, -Yds of rest N.Vlien .rePair:; .tire made. ' It
is not too much WOrk as -a role, but
,scattered work, a-tech:prevents' reet.
This wonderful cough and cold medicine
writable all those very pine prime Ida
which make the pine woods so valitab 0 in
the treatment of lung affeetions.
Combined with atie ere Wild Cheery •
Park and the soothing, healing and ex-
Poetorarit Propertied of other pectoral
herb" and bark&
Tor Cough& Clad& Devinehitis,Pain in
the Ohest„ Asthma, Crimp, Whooping
Dough, Hoarseness or any affection ofIlee
Throat or Lungs. .You will find a sure
sure in Dr. Wood's Norway Tine Syrup.
Mrs. O. N. Loome& Derwiels,,
writes s "I have used Dr. Wood'a Norway
Tine Syrup for coughs sad colds, and have
always found it to OS instant relief. I
also rtootainended hie one of my n
bore and she was mow that pleeeed wLth
Oa results."
Wood's Norway Mae Syrup fig ote. •
per bottle at all &alma. Put up in yells*
"roper, and three piss trees the trade
mark. Refuse subetitsds& nor. is oullo
oar Norway Ms Op* sad WA oas
Pr, lino& e.
64.
•
A C0,111111.031 House Fly Travelis a Mine'
. In Thirty-three Seconds;
It is the popular•belief thet the flight
of the birds .is mechseelfter then that
-
Of the insects,ebut a number ot, natural-
. isG.' Who have been making a study 'of
the matter ehink ' that .sach,is not the
va8e.
A. Minionhouse fly, .for extemple, is
not, very rapid In its flight . but ite
wfugs make • 800 -beats • a second. and,
:tend it through the air twenty-five feet,.
thicier eirditiary eircuinstances,, in that
rpace �f time., When the insect is
alarmed, however, it has been found
that it can increase its rate Of speed by •
over 100 feet per Second.: Ie It cottld
pontinfielimeh repel flightetOra mile in
a straight line, it would eover thet dis
lance in exactly thirty-three seconds.
It is not an uncommon thing whert
teaseling by tale in the summer time to
seek a bee or wasp keeping up with the
train and trying to get in at One Of the
windows. A. swallow is eOnsidered 0116
of„the swiftest of -dying birds, and it
was formerly thought that no insect
colaid escape it. '
A. naturalist, however, told of an ex-
eiting those he SAW between a Avealloie
and a dragon fly, which is among the
swiftest of inseete. The insect flee,
with incredible ,speed and wheeled and
dodged with such ease that the swal-
low, despite Its utmost 'erforta, tom-
pletely failed to Orertalte 114
SPEED OF INSECTS.
N
•$•`• ••••••••••
"The 13lues"
Symptoms of Organic) Derangenienv in Iliromes-
• -Thousands of Sufferers Find Relief. '
finite RAigeNcirnee
.....,-.0
• ! How often do we bear women say': 4 'It for. me. I suffered with irregularities, 1)eels-
rp.."...7-07..r"."7,noowtmompo
5
seems as though nik back Would brtcak„' mile znid severe pains allehrough my teteeee
tind es 4 very \1 V\ and blue. ,1 thir,t1c. •
or "Don't Speak to 100, 1 ant all put of
I meti a e: wet Ile:urea eines of ineee l'e...e. • • •
sorts?" These significant remarke prove
. tele- ..- . re, el 17, tie, (even- and Pi`-..... ,'''-•
that the system requires attention, enbi:;,•11,,,cd. by' friends, but tele bottle ..,,r
Backache and "the bluee" ere ilireet Vegetalee competent was worth more to
symptoms of au ineVard teens 4- whit.ii etc , e...: zel les et ;Lie ze. eivines put tee ssete,
-will sooner yr later deelare itself. It • '..
el' es- •••.1 i• el.:s keen 10 ielerove es ienne
may be caused by cliseased kidneys or " 11".:11.,1 to 11';'0 tlfilfectly-well (t°Irse• -.el'', °nil" la
the., weees 1 wee a perseethe-ter •
!Some derangement of the organs, Nature • • 1', le a seenen are treubled with isner-.
requires assistance and at once, and Ly- Wee seensessed or painful periods, weans- •• . • '
dia E. Piuktianes Vegetable Compound ness, displacements or ulceration.,, tlint.;‘•••
instantly asserts its curative Powers in bearmes-down feeling, inflammateint, of .
all those peculiar ailments pf women. It the felled() oreeee, backache, il)kateriA- '
has been the standby' Uf intelligent (or14 at alense ), e• !nerel debit:keys.. itelie
American Women' for twenty yeas and ".(sti°11 end izerveue prostratIoni or are '
the ablett judges agree that it is the ..v..-'ne
eee.te. Fti. h sviaptseee h,,. dereineys,
most universally enecessful rentede for faintneee •laseitude., exeitability,-irritabi-
woman's ills known to medicine. • . ' lity,. nervousness, sleeplessness, meterte ..
;Read. -the convincing testimonials' .o1
Mrs. Oakes and :qrs. 'Alec:Ye:nee. .. ' . choly, "el letrenti":' and ,"want-to-berea-.,"::: -
Mono" fie flees,. 1,1e- e :eel ho,...',...1...ssnet:N4
Mrs. J. P. Oakes of Trineof Wales they; sIeoue, needer. there is .unt.,•trtiee ^
.r-Tlel. tree. newly. Lvdie I,e Pinicharsee
Hotel, Mad of St. 111.argeret's Rey...neer
: Ealifax, tialifax' .Coltnly, ,NeVa. ;Scotia, eseeeteele Coineounic at epee removes..
• Canada, writes : ' • . • .
SUPo'tlo.'t11)3e)rie8rnedieine. bas awn a recant"
• Dear Mrs. Pinkliam :-
"After What yotir Veeetable Compelled of ell'N'S Of female treubles. . 'go other' '
(lid for me,..,I mutt tirm believer that•it e e inedivinu in the world has received thin,
wonderful reedicint , zied that any .wonmn widespreel and unqualified elidorsetnent..
wile is trouletel with nee of fhe ills we nefriso ti 1:ray 1...n.v eebetitute,
stiffer from shouldetry it and she will stem
be convinced or itt4 Werth. - Six bottles - FRE ADVICE TO \IVO -MEN'
• Remember, every woinan is ecirdialler. ,
elleoged me 'from e i.e. viell, &see:eh:et,
sickly; ailingvennan te a sweetestepere.cl, invited to write to. Mrs. 'Pink:ham ai
- healthy ono who etrely- ever jit.4 a Pain there' is anything, about' her eymptcalties
-now, arel who belle° was ro.cllwIthout
ie ei
9110. Ai a r2gtluq)r..strenetherler and rh'denanderand. .r. ree
tonii blink it lg pe stperor tenl Ilmn is the &tighter -n -law Of Lyda
certanly endorseit.' s .
. . • ' l'inhinuti, her assiutant before her deco:tens •
• Mrs. Anna it MacNeenee el corner tine (or tweety-five years since her advice.
QueenandelVellineeeni Streets, .Kingstone flee been freely end .clieerfully given Id .
every -• ailingeWomaii ' who asks for at.
• Ont . -writes: " ..•
..Do"er MiPi1111)02 -l: ',. '...;
C11 Iler sulvietmid.Med1,icine have . AreciSdt-o0,temrt
Lyda E1;1ni9h"althhinturco161V0211pri
ponad haslmal: t.egeo1 1.1 11t 1, ( ,
IX1111, Xr,ll'S. • . . . .. . .
' A* ilirIl. Pirikhara's•AllvizC-ti ilroinan. BtA tbnletAatids. a Wetaaa'sik-
• Long Speeches:
Much nterriiiient has b'e eused
'the discovery that hi the Ptian
"Book 'of the Dead": an ancient tleciaied
he had not inflicted long leetures" on
bis hearers!, .but this is curimudy match-
ed by a plea for his soul uttered by
Hugh Grove (Loyalist) et his execution
May Bite; (Vol: 3, '.thurioe's Col-
lectioeste "(100(1 people, i was never .•
guilty of 'much thethrick, nor ever loved
long epeeches in my life, therfere yet
cannot expect either of: them at iny
death. I desire is your hearty
prayers- for my soul," etc.
In view of the Egyptian discovery
;this seems a 'very close second for Eng-
land. -London Notes and QUeriegs
1 .
sure P;or itypocnontara...
A. yams lady of Cardiff who feneied.
nbe was ailing went to the surgery lef
the family doctor and comtheteed the
Interview with,. "Doctor, I'm dying."
•"Oh, indeed, I can recomMend a very
:resPectable undertaker," blandly re-
sponded the doctor. She felt quite well
•after that,
Our -Surroundfitga. 4
Even the strongest of Is are net bee
yond the Ara of our environment.
,Nti matter how independent, strong
willed and determined our nature, we
are constantly being modified by our
'surroundings.
-•• • iverything Returned.
"kre you beginning to get any re -
terns from your litertny work?"
"Yes, .indeed. I'm net getting ally.
thing Om"
Oil, what Mendare do, what men
may do, what men daily do,' not know-
ing what they doe -Shakespeare.
lit
I
LORE'
eay.7,sTsurse.geriekorszecnii
fit
;111'
A
1•.
N.K.W.6.1%.**Atidtv KI
The Leading Specialists. of America. 25 Years in Dstroit. Bank Security.
Niue out of every- tett mon be been guilty ot eraingression against nature in
their youth. Nature never excuses, no matter how young, thOughtless or ignorant
4te may be. 'The puntslithent and suffering corresponds with the crime. The only
escape from its ruinous results is proper scientific treatment to counteract its effects.
The nnAnes, either.by nightly losses, br secretly through the urine, must be
'eft Eaves mustbe Vain 11 • and invigorated, the blood must be purified,
K. the s- U
gxAT„,Qi,s a
aqNmost be vita tze u eve op •• •• •
lietirialied".--, Our NeWittethcid Treatnieht 'provides ati:these-requirernents.-17nder
its influeute the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that all pimples,
Lot blotches and ulcers disappear; the nerves became strong aS eiteel; so that nervous-
ness, bashfulness and "despendency disappear; the eye; become bright, .the face
K tents are invigorated; all drains cease -no more vital waste from the m
e syste. The
full awl clear, energv return to the.body, and ihe itsorai, physical ad seetiat &vs
The VadOttS organs become natural and manly. We invite all the afflicted to caIl
and consult us confidentially and tree of charge. Cures Guaranteed or no
KPay. We treat and cure: Varicoccle, Blood Diseases, Stricture.
Glect, Eininsions. Urinary Drains, Spermatorrhosa, Unnatu-
ral Discharges, Kidney and Bladder Diseases. •
ot CORSULTAILTION FREE. BOOKS
• H unable to tall, write for a QUESTION BLANK for Rottie Treatment;
K DRS.' KENNEDY 84 ,KERGAN•
' 148 SHELBY ST., DETROIT,' MICH..
K K & ‘1°Ck A:44W &KK& KK
1906 TO 16144.0Rf40?-'77-,
111". jogplop olfe,
J.-. • alp
imil010
0006.00x
Iriage",
•
•
The first cost may be tip:ire-but the first cost is the only cost. .
Suppose one fence costs pm, and lasts, say, for 8 years, That fence costs you us
Supp..Ise the same length of rrost Bence costs Ps. But the Prost pence -made cat
High Carbon Steel Wire and locked with the, 14 Prost Leek -lasts for 55 yeari.-at
Isn't the Brost the cheapest ylite can buy? Prost /taxes are for sale hi
..
FENCE
...
FROST
is the cheapest you `r
can buy '-^LA•
906 70 1,94110e5fir
DUNCAN McDONALD, Blytku• ,
3. W. HILL, Summerlai
'rfol/ti J. ItIOORE, Benntiller
W. H. STOGDILL, co Varna
t.34]
THE
BISSELL 3 MiSTEEL ROLLER
Has Draught Bracket giving low down
hitch and removing all neck weight. Solid
Pressed Steel Heads of especial shape irt
all the Drums. Fine Large Anti-Frictiost
liellere IlSed in Bearings. • No centre
bearing to cut, squeal or grind. None
genuine without the narne "BISSELL."
.Inquire of your Agent oraddress
T. E•. BISSELL., ELORA, 0 N'Ti
Write for Booklet "E."
011••••••
1•seeesi,
1,
1.4p4C
•
T. T. MURPHY. _Iota Agebt. (1.1.11$11
f
•••••••••••••••••••• **To., ••• 1.•t, •••••,4o•t•••t•••
1 •••410
The new i Package Dye
• DYNONLA is something entirely ifterentefrom :any
s., •
' other package dye
i;dbeviAvev, 0,4, 1 elites'
g all We*, IterrOws, Rodent,
.410 Spreaders. !trainers.
(ar etbdrrows. Ewe lett.
Neel Us nail von not eaudorts.
dnsihgh Go
.1 a 11
M 11180
.1.1141A
•17
Thein kers guatailtee it fully, astpir the follewing ,statt.
ar mono'? iifut
. .
Each package will eolorEwoOl, cotton, silk or mixielt geods.
otogie
DY-O-LA.,,Will color more goods,gpackage for peke than
,
any other:dye.
DY -O -LA does not contain any poison or acid, and ',can ;be
used with sefety on the most delicate fabrics,
IV2'-04A colors ate fast and beautiiul.
DY -0 -LA is simple to use and give perfeet„satisfactign,
•40•40 •
j. 13. t10VEY0 Dispensing Chemist •
and Druggist
e4.46414....440.44114,44•401444004••••114110041440644. 044.40.4041.
.1
',1•7