The Signal, 1906-8-16, Page 66 Tnuw,DAY August 16, 1106
Many Women have
Kidney Trouble
and don't know it They at-
tribute thea di -health to weak
new" Dragging pains in the
Lips, backache, nervousness,
tiredness, headache♦—are more
often caused by sack kidneys.
H your kidneys are not well.
the other delicate organs are
disturbed and inflamed, bnuging
on the horrors of female weak-
ness and the serious truubka
often attending pregnancy.
�'II-171
THE GENTLE KIDNEY PILL
cures these cases of "Female
Weakness" because they cure
the Kidneys, They promptly
restore the Kidneys to health,
allay inflammation. take away
the pains, and make the deli-
cate organs well and strong.
At dreggteta, or direct or receipt of once, pc.
Tug CLAILIP1 CHEMICAL CO. LIMITED
w)Meeo.. ONT.
NAVE YOU A BOAS? or ate pm l...lr-
peadeut • It you arc rnal.111( 111,411e) fur ems ane
else, qua sad snake money ha yourselft.et out
of slavery sod 1,. free Write C MaaOH.0 L
Co . London They wi'l show you the way They
have started thousands ou the 1 Dal to freedom.
Seven d,dlars a day. eve,y day m the year, is Ir -
mg made handling their gosl Write now
Time .. money
SUMMER
SUITS
IN -
Light -weight
Homespuns
Mails till in the • Latest
style of cut and finish
—AT --
DUNLOP'S
THE TAILOR
WEST ST., - GODERiCH
AMMER
GRAND TRUNK EM
TO THE FAiR
TORONTO
August 17th to Sept. 8111
$4.0a f (aaleeielr going
August ?Ph 1.'
September Sth.
going; August :belt
$2.95 :.. 1 YI N b I, aid !trpl et n-
Isa 1st,
1,1, tit
All tickets valid returning until
September xlth. tyo1.
Fey tickets and roll informati 0
call nn
1'. 1'. LAWRENCE
Town Agent.
Ofllee home: 11::01 a. tn. to
N:all p.m.
I J. 1). Mcnal 1. 1listrirl 1' u-
j o IIgryt)oAg. ilt.'I'.nnntu.
'PHONE 15 OR 24
w..rt hou-o 1er.'I,-t
When )out want ( and \'ah-.) i street and )
THF:Ith:�l' ,t U0.•k M. uta t1
COAL
ALL KINDS or Cr -IA
L
ALWAYS ON H A N DI
c...1111 tell weighed on 1110 ni:.rk.•t
niter*. you get :1111 Ilea. fora Ion.
WM. LEE.
(hdrt, left 0 1'. t•. LF:i: Hnnitntr sole
Kant side Squae, Prone idly attended to.
Ret:
SYNOPSIS OF
Canadian Northwest
Homestead Regulations,
An)- even foundered . I'II In of Dominion
Lands In Manitola, or the Neeh nest Pent Ines..
excepting And •1,14 not reser .4. nen 1.• 1 1r
•taut by any person who is the ode hr HI of �1
(anit1Y, 0I on y mole neer Is >rnF of age, In the
extent M one winder wet Inn of Inn nen•.• 11101.•
nr Ie' .
Fant rr need be made twersonnllt nl the meat
land otiler for the district In whi,h the bond
situate.
The homeslr;wler I. mote,' In Ic•rfnrnt 11.,
conditions connected lherew tilt nutlet one of
the following plans:
111 At Meet six month.' re.ldenee nlann and
cultivation of the hind ht sari )war for three
)-Mil'.
121 If the father Ins mother. If the father isdc
o.sWnh of the hen iestevuter reside., 111,4111 u
n form
in the stelnll t of theInnd entered or the re
tMrement- .a to residence lnni' he witl,lled
by sigh locum rr•.iding with the (other or
smother.
al 1f the settler hes Id+ permanent rmldrnre•
new ferning Innd owned by Mtn In the s lel,
tor of his hornestesti. the re.pdtement« as to
r,.Mlenoe may he s:dl•aed by residence neon
the said land.
ell month: notice iu writing sho,dd ha. given
to the Commissioner of Dominion Lands at
Ottawa M Intention to Apply for patent.
W.IW. CORY.
Deputy of the Minister of the Interior.
N. 11-1'nauthorisd pnbliration of fhb. ad
ysrtIsement will not he ;wad for.
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS
Oepy of change of running advertise-
ments must be left at this office by
Monday noon to ensure insertion
in Issue of same week.
TNF '.1(:N, . t,tllti's'1(1I ONTARIO
v—seV-.wv •.
In the Smart
little Trap
By VIRGINIA LEILA WENTZ
Copyright, IMM, by 'tomer Sprague
"Aud be has the rummest looking
true you ever enw, Madge: It's cham-
pagne colored and u perfect love.
What do you let I don't land him, trap
and all, before the summer's tluwu by?"
Miss Irene Wardeu, a beauty (and
aware of It), was wrltiug to her1*
cbuw cuucerolue the bnchelur who bad
Just taken the big colonial house witls
the carriage road and hv0 archway
which ,for several sea.uus now• bud
ubauduued hope of usefulaees.
She was writing by au open window
when: the scent of the runes case up
(rum the trout gardeu. Beyond lay
the pretty tree lined road ever which
the bachelor and hit cbawpague cul
ored trap had Just dot' u by.
"Although I've told yuu bis wase Is
Horace Matlock," ran un Miss War-
den's peu, "1 Leveret told you what he
looks like. lie's an old wan, furty or
fifty, 1 should say. Ills uose is rather
too big. although people call hila baud
some, and he's a bit bald, but, thou, i
suppose most men who live Ill big
houses and drive smart traps bate big
noses. What?" Mies Warden snalc.I
a little soft smile luto the glass above
her dressiug table and then bent over
her portfolio again:
"Of course 1'd prefer dear old Tom.
He's young and stunutug and cines
11 a run w beautifully but, as
co eg Ifs
'you know. be baau't a red: Aud 1 real-
ly wast do something Ibis summer,
Madge. My already meager allowance
will be cut considerably in the autumn,
for la September pa's going to enter
the matrimonial game himself—a hor-
rid, designing widow too: So I must people do you suppose has taken the
'step lively,' In the parlance of street wind out of say Balls? Cynthia Thorn -
ear officials. ton. the old bookworm's daughter! Ile
"In point of tact, though," pursued had her out driving lu that little
the voluble pen, "it'll be pretty easy, beauty of a trap three times during the
plain sailing. 1 haven't n single good
looking rival up In this out of the way
place eleepr old Professor Thornton's
daughter, rand shay' the quietest poke
of a girl -a regular stay at home. And
as for dressing --well, Madge, you aud
I spud as much on our gloves and
YON, I reckon, as she dues on ber
whole outfit. That's what comes from
having a bookworm for n father."
The next week lu the little village
postomee a friend presented Mr. Hor-
ace Matlock to Miss Irene Warden.
Apparently the meettug was by acci-
dent, but ,!tins Wardeu felt her smootb
cheeks Ouch, and ber habitual com-
posure was rippled for a second, while,
for his part, Mr. Matlock scarcely look-
ed at her and, having passed a con-
ventional "glad to meet you;" lifted his
bat politely and walked oat to his
smart little trap.
"I had un my chic voile. the 'one
Auut Tessle sent me from Paris, you
know," wrote Miss Wurdcn to Madge.
"and my big white hat with Bopping
fuchsias. But It was all rank waste."
She couldn't understand it. Her
dreams hadn't euded that way at all.
One day in the tiny idle little inuk
Mr. Horace Matlock stopped short ns
be recognized o stooped, gaunt figure
with a patrician face.
"Why, it's Professor Thornton, isn't
It?" he cried, stepping up to him with
a cordially outstretched baud.
When Matlock years ago bad entered
Yule as a freshman Thornton bad been
tutoring, aud quite a friendship bad
sprung up betweeu them. Subsequent-
ly they had lost track of each other.
But the satisfaction of the younger
tnau lu meeting the older one again
was geuulne.
"Poor old professor: How thin aud
worn and aged he's become!" thought
Matlock as be drove the professor
home to his modest little cottage.
Out in tbe cottage'. side yard by the
hollyhocks a girl was pleklug a great
buuch of sweet peas for the lunch
table. Wbeu she heard' the smart lit-
tle trap stop at the gate sbe looked
quickly up from the blossoming vines
and wondered. Who was the -distin-
guished looking stranger? And where
had he picked up dear daddy? •
A few days later MaUor'k drove up to
the cottage again. It was only decent,
be told himself, that be should show.
the professor some attention and take
him driving now and then. Perhaps
some day also he would take the pro-
fessor's daughter. He liked her. He
liked the natural, unabashed way In
which she had acknowledged her fa-
ther's presentation of him, with her
sleeves rolled up and her arms Intl of
sweet peas; he Irked the width between
her eyes, the breadth of ber brow, the
(lues of ber mouth. She was less pret
ty than many young girls, but there
was about her a freshness, a sweet-
uess, that pleased him, and be had no-
ticed that her figure in her simple lit-
tle gown was well molded and slim.
One ereuing toward twilight, when
out In the open lawn bats were whirl-
ing aimlessly and tirelessly, Matlock
dropped In upon the professor to make
him a little call. He bad fetched bim
his nfternouu mall as pretext. While
they were sitting out on the porch from
the shadowy little parlor came the
first chords of Beetbuveu's beautiful
"MoonllghttSonata."
"That's Cynthia," said Professor
Thornton In answer to his guest's start
of surprise. "She', uever too tired, no
matter bow bard or long the day has
been, to play that sonata for Inc In tbe
evening. I love It above all other writ
ten mask, and she never forgets."
Thou while the tree toady droned
their harmonies be told'' Matlock a lit-
tle about his danghter-- how four years
ago he had authored a,panlyac stroke
and she had been obliged t0 leave
school In her sradltat ng year ■ltd
n urse bim night andtday with unttrtng
swev'tnemot tom, wtien,ttleir slender in-
come was w:baastsd a year hack, she
bad began to mete gest, of her msurlcal
skill and glee teMtons on the piano.
And when the protnmlorltDld of 1lyn-
thia'a triweekly trips to Adams, the
nearest town, his *Vermeil bawl west
down on hl, coat sleeve. sort In
gloaming bethe bonayane&i.,
two men were silent.
Premartly'they amused their wrest el -
gars and laddged in timer 'mimed eine•
verrstemt -a.wspaper mom tthooped
floe by Individual nide/nut, a good dad
of polities, a tittle of artea d DAMMI ..
Lashef all, ('ynthts nam emt-
' ielegelted"' Rh. aw1d, a1D=
tr '5--
"While Yon 1 : leave t • ••1 goMaq,lua is tautly Tan.
I've beau rewewberiug your weaku.tas
for tea and have drawu you a cup.
Will you come In, or shall we have It
out here?"
They went lu. Near the little fern
screened ♦replace :waa a tea table.
dainty to Its array of polished silver
and thin china. The banging luuip
shed We rich, sof glow of olive oil,
aud there was an air of intimate home -
likeness about everything. Metla'k
bad been a stranger to that sort of
tblug for so long Lbw it sent n klud of
thrill shivering thrlkoth his. After all,
to have a cozy tea" table aud a slim
white hand to inclose lu your.--CyU-
thla'■ Lauda were slim and w•htla
enough as they moved among the china
la the half light. lie pulled a chair
close tor the professor, and then sat
down himself.
Before Mr. Horace Matlock went to
led that night be remembered that on
the morrow Cyutbla Thurutun was to
drive with him in his champagne col-
ored trap. How It would harwa'dze
with her wit bair before the ambitious
sun touched it to god' What a deer,
womanly little treasure of girlish
brightness she was, anybow!
Cynthia ouly returned from Adams
the next day a half hour before Ler
drive and was, consequently, a bit
tired. She was not one to make con-
versatlun, and the quiet and beauty
of tbe scenes stretched out before her
made her very silent. Matlock, as he
handled the reins, watcherl troth her
sad the luudscape. There was u cer-
tain peace about them both. Aud
peace was, above all things, what bo
wanted.
The next day Miss Warden tt rote to
her girt chum again:
"In the beginning of the summer,
Madge, dear, 1 wrote you that a cer-
tain matrimonial venture would he
'easy, plain Balling.' Alas! I'm afraid
I shall never find port not, at least,
with my bachelor up ou the hill. And
In the name of wonders, who of all
last week to my knowledge: I'm
afraid Cupid isn't very kind to me.
You'll find I'll die nu old maid after all,
rule Tom"- -
At this point Miss Warden's pretty
teeth absently caughttopher
bar tly gls the f c o
penholder, while she looked dreamily
toward the sunny, tree lined Street.
Then she began to hum.
As She started on the fourth bar of
her song a champagne colored trap
skimmed by. lu 1t was the charming
bachelor. and by 1114 side was Cynthia
Thornton.
A Maasulmu'■ Ideas.
A respectable aud honest Mussutman
—aud of course there are millions of
Mussulmaus entitled to that descrip-
tion --will not swallow alcohol if he
knows it, even- fur We good of his
health; will not Ilft "the harem veli,"
even If lilting it Is essential to the l�fef
of Ills wife or daughter; will not take
out an insurance, eve% when failure
to do so is r luons to him to ■ busi-
ness competition, and will not In a
country ruled by Mussalmaus from
any motive whatever short of n neces-
sity such as destroys freedom of will
accord equality to men of any other
faith. In these respects he is n "fanat-
ic"- that is, be will act upon the pre-
cepts of his creed as interpreted by its
doctors without reference to any other
cooslderatloo, and especially without
reference to conveulence or to the opin-
ions', moral or otherwise, of men of
any otber faith. A Mussulmau's creed
is for him the operative law, as cus-
tom is for a Chinaman, or a caste rule
for n Illndoo, or duty for a good Eng-
lishman, or that which Is convenient
fur a respectable Frenchmen, aud,
though there are points upon which be
will break the law, especially for gain,
there are nlso points, especially those
we have meutloued, upon which he
will not—rather will be chopped lu
pieces or chop you and take all con-
sequences serenely. -- London Specta-
tor.
1n■ Toe Thoughtful Wife.
Several physicians were relating bow
carefully their wives looked after their
Interests and how diplomatic they were
In saving them from doing unneces-
wirynlght work.. One doctor gave an
Instance demonstrating how the best
laid plans of men and mice oft mis-
carry.
"When I got home this morning at 3
o'clock, dead tired from attending to
n try tug ease," be remarked, "I almost
dreaded to look nt the hall table, upon
which my wile always leaves a note
when there Is au urgent call. I was
naturally delighted to find that I did
not have another tali to make and at
once harried to my bedroom and, with-
out lighting the gas, undressed 1n the
dnrk and tumbled Into ted.
"My head touched something on the
pWow. I lighted the gas to Investi-
gate and found that my thougbtt'tl
wife had pinned there s note, so that
1 should not fail to are It, Informing
ILP flet i wns wanted at once without
1,11 to call on n distant petlent et soon
1t i nrrivttl hnme, nn matter nt what
hour" \'••w' York Prean
Doll Furniture.
F'uruilure lievomee dull not 110(xs11a-
rily from wear and tour, but from the
action of gases whit•Il are in the air at
all tithes. This dullness ns well as
ecratrhrs, bruises and like ryroti mel
be dole nwny with., After washing
and dry -Ing take Iinmeed oil and ttrpeeu'
tine in equal parts, mix thoroughly and
apply very apnringly nn n notit reg,
rnl,bing the sputa or one 1P114111 rat a
time nutll the origihnl color le restored,
after which you oast Int swre'to wipes
off wills another ,entlrcly clean rng, for
1f the turpentine anti nit he allowed t1)
remain they will omelette:de with the
varnish nisi end in blotches'.
*awls.
Borax nett be teed et(aringly at a
water .ofteninp• ngent. 1 t Ill extremely
drying Quito 1110 trout dellghtftd
Issatllier for the purpose of ftnftening
the bathing water It Intender lotion.
If you etc It nitre you will feel that you
nowt a1wnJo hare It. The formula I.
moat .ample: Four ounces of alcohol,
one half miner, of nntnontn, one dram
of oil of Iarciticr. This alcohol d6
Wee the ammonia and mnkee it Rafe
to ase, while the lavender gine' a moot
Both—MuttBoth-Mutt fragrance to the hath.
The elymplada rnneiaiod alternately
of forty-nlae and lit, months,
' The may err of our of the (JWti. lll:et
of Augers lutd oik're.I it gliutkrrper
and a botcher to tale it mudwnu wised
i.rz,ralul to the St. 1it't ilu'a lunatic
naylum.. On the way the t;nuekt-cper
noticed that their churee was lit nue of
Ills lucid luterrals and c.1111Udcd that
he would never consent to he heeded
over to the authorities. 1t was dt.dcd,
therefore, to make him tlrtluk, uud nil
three adjourned to the nearest lou. • he-
grand
o-grand took ht. IIgIlor kindly. 133 did the
othero. And w•heu the trio arrival rat
the asylum the governor cold uot
make head or toll of their story. Ile
therefore wired to the Mayor, asking
hint which was the nt:ul who was to
1.e detained. The uwyor replied 1.e-
graud, but We telegraphist spelled It lu
tw'o words, "I.e grand" (the tail nue).
The governor. on exawlulug the three
meu, saw that nue nes much taller
than, the others, Bo he pnmIptly chtppeel
him foto a strait maisteaast and sent
the other two away. 1t was three days
Inter before the error was discovered.
ialemerck F
Bismarck could forgive, but Ile
wished to do It after 'orbiter solicita-
tion. At the beginning of the IInlllalt
war Field Marshal 11'r:utiel, who w•a't
at the head of tbe I'r,ssiau troops, was
exceedingly auuoyed at one point to
be telegraphed not to adeauce farther,
and he returned a message telling
King Willtaw that "thee. diplomatists
who spoil the moat successful opera-
tions deserve the gallows " After that
Bismarck Ignored hint cuntpletely, and
nue day they met at the king's table,
where It was especially- awkward to
preserve a culduess. \\'ruugel called
everybody "du," and prescutly he
turned to Bismarck, 'who was seated
next him, uud said, "My sou, eanst
thou not forget?" "No." was the curt
reply. .tfter a pause ll'rltugel ie'gnu
n;;:tln, "My sou, coast thou . put for-
give?" "With all my heart,' said Bls-
learck, and' the breach woo healed,
The Redwood.
Redwood forests are practically un-
harmed by forest Ores. and It is com-
mon practice for the heebertnen to fell
the Irees aud peel the Lark from them
uud wt1Pu the dry 11e11,)11 14 011 set Ore
to the felled timber and burn the
brtutcbct and bark and other wreckage
evlthont practical injury to the saw
log", which procedure welsh" mean dis-
aster to any other wood. Itedwoad
coutaluS 110 resin or turpenttue of any
kind, and. owing to Its great registaut
wieldiest In aware clitnnti,• conditions,
it fns from erneking or .l••eny, where
e:ndels inert lodge :aid start fires.
When bnrnine. it In easily extingnishe'd
with a Swale quantity of water. It has
the appearalue of buret eork and Is
harder to ignite n second time than at
hest.—Scientific American.
Paris' Seeoadbard Market.
There is a curlons old market near
aril in which everything Is sold at
aced hand. Working girls can fit
111 es/4%1;401U there from head to foot.
At t writer Says, "Mimi can sell her
old It bat and bay a straw one, ex-
eha• her old dress fur a new one
nisi". 1 she likes. buy a steak aud a
salad 'r her dinner, a paler bag of
fried po Uses. sweets and some dow-
ers, for he window. Ick unoerncy It king
here, and .o more attention it paid to
the million re who M looking for some-
thing marve .us which he may pick up
r heap than to the man with the wooden
leg who wan . a new left boot In ex -
e hauge for a . ozen sardine tint, five
gloves nut is .tp •king."
Lord Kele ■'a s
Lonl Kelvin once rformed a dating
experiment before clams of etndeuts.
In the course of his I ture he said that
while a voltage of 3, 11 or so world be
'fatal to a man a sults of souse 300.-
000 would be harmless, He was going
to give n practical Illnst 'tion on htpi-
self, but the ahtdrntt
crI out, "Try it
ou n dog"' Lord Kelvin a a look of
reproaeh at bit clam. "Did 't I figure
it out myself?" be said gnie l•, as he
wniked to the apparatus an lately
turned the treweudous volts e Into
'Oneself.
Cki.ese Cologne.
The Chinese ladies have an odd nd
of eologue—that le to say, they
stantly have neon their person a ems
bag of sweet smelling gum siwilnr to
that which was used by the ancient
Ft ypit.tn women. Numerous costly
Jars recently unearthed at I'yrawida
contain the coshteti('s nod perfumes
which were used by Egyptian prin-
t -owes, all of which bear o resemblance
lo those In vogue today among Chiuese
ladles of the highest rank.
11e woke.
IIP--i'd like to know what enjoyment
you eau find In going from *tore to
store looking at things you haven't the
hetet idea of baying. She -1 kuow I
can't buy them, but there is a sort of
inelnnt•holy pleasure 111 thinking that I
could have bought them 1f I had mar-
ried George Scads when I had the
chance, Instead of taking you,
Coldly Described.
"So you don't envy any of the world's
men of genlut?"
"Nn" answered Mr. f umrox. "i ad-
mire them, bat I don't envy 'etn. A
gentile le a man who gets a monument
after he's dead Instead of three square
meal's day while he's IlvinI."
She Was Stout,
"1h- yon remember how you used to
put ;emir arras round toy waist when we
were engaged, ten years+ ago? Y•rlt
never do It now."
"Ni; my arm hat not grown any
longer." — —
The average Engll.hman does u,.t
want hit wife or Motet to be nnytbiug
lout dui:. A beautiful and amiable
Miert le hen Weal of feminine perfee-
Cem.--{,SANS' Fields
Are You Subjeetto Stiffness?
Perhaps It bt in the nook or allied -
(lei o. Firat thing le w greet rub wish
Nervililtc. No more ais'edv 10111rdy
enn be adopplad. When applied to the
insee'lee Nervlline gives !hent flexi-
bility and vigor: in1111nunati'm, atrre-
nesd lend atitime* disnpiNear. "WI's,' h.
et in the ched or them( nothing cnn
ourpae, Nervilinc," write, O. B. hen -
ten, Kimber merchant at Oak 'inv. N.
R. "Robbed on M. night trouble i,
gene by morning. I have proved
Nerviline a Krnat. mptlirine."Every-
one Kept the ,ante, and N,'rvtline *I-
wurys 1a111kea Rtssl. 25t', rattles sold
everywhere.
rTHE WOMAN WHO SPENDS.
Dutasa Which oho Owes to the Nom.
an Who Werke,
Mn. Frederick Nathan of New York,
a woman of wealth, who works aloug
philanthropic (lues, speaking of the
'duties the women who spends owes to
the wowau w•ho works, says;
The womeu who spend are In large
measure respousible for .such of the
existing distress uud evil surrounding
the women Who work. Fur centuries
wumeu'have worked, but uut as wage
earners. They used to work In cot-
tages, autrouuded by pleuty of sun-
shine and air. Today, through the in-
veutlon of cumbersome machinery,
murk has beeu taken out of the home
and put into factories aud workshops.
Work for womeu lu this new euvlron-
ment hat become more mouutouous,
and the nervous strain Is terrible.
Now, in what way eau the women
who spend alleviate the conditions sur-
rouudlug the womeu who work? There
seems to be little uecessity to expound
las. FREDERIC/ NATLa.
upon the economic tnttho relating to
the love of supply and demand. All
modern economists agree that there Is
nere•r a supply of anything nutil the
dc•waud of the purchasers be felt.
Therefore let the women who 'mead
(and wows% are largely the purchasers
of the hou.eholdl iheist that whatever
they bite be made under conditions
wholesome to both the purchaser and
the producer.
If the women who emend patronize
stores where women who work receive
uotoriousiy low wages, are uot paid
for overtime work, are gireu no vace-
tious with pay and no half holiday In
summer and are not even permitted to
alt down wbeu not o'e•upied, then they
are helping to keep dowu the staudard
of competition to a low level and are
discouraging those mrrchauts who are
trylug to raise the standard.
Many philanthropic women who have
larger Weenies Chau they care to.pend
on theptselves will give away large
sums of money In order to provide
feuds for working girls who have bro-
ken dowu physirally, mentally and
morally, yet bad these women in pro-
viding for their owu wants taken the
precaution to spend their mouey in
moll a way as to create favorable eon-
dltioue for working girls the workers
in all probability would nut have bro-
ken down and would not have required
any ald.
Instead of organizlug working girls'
vacation societies let us give workiug
girls vacations with pay. If there were
no cruelty enacted towurd bnimals uud
children there would be no necessity
t
for the formation of Ielletre•
o to
p
vent cruelty. It there were no lnlu.
tir'e dealt to the pour and helpless there
would be no work for the Legal Aid
society. We should hang our beads lu
very shame bemuse of onr need fur so
mauy charitable institutions; we shonld
not feel that they are a commendable
source of pride.—New York Herald.
Don't save rank.
It Is a mtttake to try to "save" a taf-
feta silk petticoat. Many women of
moderate means will buy such a silk
kirt and then keep It to be worn on
eclat or rare oeeattons, but they
m •bt Ju't as well w0at it often, for
th silk will wear out just the name
ban tug to the eloget or lying to the
bun- i drawer as It will when worn.
(rue rl had a very henutiful pink
skirt p sente'd to her aud, not wishing
to wear t Just nt the time, put it nwny
until ap ng. At the end of three
mouths eh: took out her skirt for wear
with a new frock and found it full of
tiny holes a crack'•.. As It It impos-
sible to preve t this, even to the beat
silk, the most 'nslble plan is to wait
nntll you need a effete skirt and, once
bought, get the its out of it at tome.
('nretully Hoed, It will Inst through a
season. -New York 'refs.
The r'Flt" of Clothes.
More aud more 1t le corning abso-
lutely essential in only to be well
gowned, flays ilarper's zer, to have
every detail of dregs atte,ded to, no
matter how simple or Ines' nsls-e the
material... Flrgt of nil, the g,wu must
fit well, and here is one ren. )n why
the Frenchwoman is better reseed
than the American. Every art'. le of
her lingerie fits well. Of roar.. lin-
gerie It let. expensive to Frames t nn
In Amotien, but even here It ran
made at home at much leos cost the
'1f ',might at the shops. With n good
pattern and the expenditure of some
lime the best results enn lir• obtnintrl at
very 'mall rest.
Te Develop the Neek,
Yotr will notice thnt when your shoul-
ders an stooped and brought forward
Health for Run-down Women,
From the experience rat Nem. Jane
Pnnke. Mnsknt. alt, 1itr111ingt 1' 11.1 10,1
with leryt,2onc. "At. 1' 's I, wns
confined 10 my bed 11011 couldn't do
:thy work. I inn. enn down In flesh.
brit sttu'ngth, my epppo0tito' failed, nay
,'
et10use pallid. Weer', end rest
down, it 'seeped 1 reuldn't peter rap.
Ferrozone started n ern• kind of life
in my blood, built 011' tap. vital-
ized and strengthened my nerves,.
sed
and flnnlly cur)ray heart, and
.(•'tont•
h wits.." Fel-F. 07one is a telwtiklei
that `sm, sle'etal virtue in fmnale
nlente. )old evrrywhete in .der.
tonere; try Fetsnaone,
The average family in Canada nese about �6
pounds of tea per year, If Red Rose Tea were
used entirely, not more than 20 pounds would
be required. You save real money when you
use Red Rose Tea.
"is good tea"
T. H. ESTAOROOKS, Sr. JOHN, N B. WINNIPaa.
TORONTO, • Waet.nsyon 91 , a.
Parnell's
Broad
Made by machinery, enables
the maniere housewife to
have superior and mon.
wb,,I..oane bread. with-
out any of the trouble and
worry baking day ca-
•. .,I her mother.
lad It Costa Lass TMs to him
P. T Dh:AN
SOUK POPULAR tit(04 ER, MIEN
ee
Coal ! Coal !
Very Low Prices
for Coal for
Next Year's Supply
For Cash
ROBERT ELLIOTT
'Phone 70
25c
THE
N ORDER25
SIGNAL
which it i, not elf e;t(ly taken,
I
TO
INTRODUCE
in 11(11111'. 111
we will semi it for the, remainder of the
year 1901; to new subscriberssubscribers f01' the
small sural of '
25 CENTS PAiD iN ADVANCE.
blot: over this list of special oiler's to
new. !,111).rrilotrs and take your choice :
THE SIGNAL, to January Ist, 1907, only 25c.
THE SiGNAL and
THE MONTREAL FAMILY HERALD
and WEEKLY STAR
to January 1st, 1907, only 50 cents.
THE SIGNAL and
THE TORONTO WEEKLY GLOBE
to January 1st. 1907, only 50 cents.
THE SiGNAL and
THE TORONTO WEEKLY
MAiL AND EMPIRE
to January 1st, 07, only 50 cents.
THE SIGNAL and
THE TORONTO WEEKLY SUN
to January Ist, 1907, only 50 cents
THE SiGNAL and
THE TORONTO WEEKLY GLOBE
to January Ist, 1908, for the two papers
only $1.75,
Any of the above otters good for any address
in Canada, the United States or (treat Britain.
Send your order at once, so as to get
whole benefit of the offer. Address
Vanalter & a (nberlson
110THE SIONA � ERICH, ONT.
1
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