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Exeter Advocate, 1904-10-13, Page 3y- TIRED AND DEPRESSED, The Condition o Many Young Women. in Shope and Qiiices. Thousands of young women have to depend upon their own efforts to gain a livlillood,and to these, Wlre- :ther behind the counter, in the office, ?the factory or the home, work mean's .close confin'emen't -often in badly ven- tilated roolns. There is a strain on tiro nerves; the blood becomes im- poverished, the cheeks pale; there aro.. frequent lieaciaclies; ;palpitation ,of the Heart and a constant tiredness. If the first symptoms aro neglected it may lead to a complete breakdown- perhaps consumption. What is need- ed to restore vim and energy and 'vitality is a tonic, and absolutely the best tame in the world is Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, They actually Snake new blood, and bring health and cheerful energy to tired and de- pressed girls and women, Miss Viola lfiliett, Robinson's Corners, N. S,, says: "T was a great sufferer from 9reaciaelies, heart palpitation and troubles that.. afflict my sex. My blood- seemed almost to have turned' to water, and the least exertion left me weak and dep'ossed. Z used sev- en bores of 1)r, Williams' Piril. Pills and they have made a remarkable change in my condition. I can trnly say that I feel like a newperson, and I strongly ,recommend these pills to all weak, ailing girls." These pills cure all forms of blood and nerve troubles, but you must get the genuine with the full name Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo- ple onthe wrapper around each box. Ask your druggist for them or- you can get them by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by writ ,ing the Dr. Williams Medicine Co Brockville, Ont. 4 -- THE "EVIL EYE." Strange Story Told at a Trial for Murder in France. THE TRAGEDY OF SEUAAN A BIT Oz' MILITARY I•IISTORY RECALLED, When the French Army Vne'ondi- tionally Surrendered to the Germans, The chorus of a nation\ceased four - and -thirty years ago. France chang- ed her war song of "On. to .Berlin" to wails of lamentation. Tee great- est tragedy' in all 'lies military . his- tory had overtakes' her. Napoleon III, had gone forth to place himself at the head of four .hundred thousalnd r Men, but, on his arrival at the front he found that his four hunched thou- sand were little more than half that number; their discipline and arra. anent beneath contempt. Enormous quantities of stores were placed where they could` not be got at; transport wagonswere concentrated, , their bod- ies in one district, their wheels in another and distant "one; their horses were non est. half a million G er- inans, had leaped, to arms, petty states had become galvanized into one great force. Tne array` of inva- cion which France had prepared was •1 theft.ns've u routset t,e front a the on its owl country. .And to -day France was to learnthe bitter truth. The woeful. 'tragedy . of Sedan was being enacted, and the sequel was in pro- cess of construction. In a mean little room, lighted only by tallow candles,' Moltke and•'King William had planned the campaign, the investment of the enemy's array at Metz, the formation of .the army for Sedan, of the third for Paris; And upon a hilltop overlooking Se- dan they, with Bls'marck sT]IIOTLY BUSINESS main;]. A man who has four marriageable daughters li€r,s posted the following rules in liis parlor in big type, iio that they will be read: - 1. Young non callers are expected to leave not later than ten o'clock. 2. Don't get nervous, for someone is liable to comp ilito the room at any moment, 3. Ito not .make a bluff about mar- riage ntless. you intend to hake the bluff good: 4.1. Young men who keep eoniliany with my daughters will confer a fa- vor by giving them to understand at the start whether they mean business or are calling merely to pass away the . time. ' In the latter event the girls can keep a look -out for some- one who means business. 5. Young men will please not con - Sider these rules offensive, as tlhey are meant kindly, and aro given as a. matter of justice to myself 'and family, The superstitious belief . in witch- craft and; sorcery is 'still far more prevalent in rural France than would be generally tliouglit. A bricklayer named Merest, living in the village of Saint George-sur-Moulons, was so firmly convinced that a neighbor had the "evil eye" . and had cast a spell over him that one day in April last, goaded into a • state of terror, lie could bear it no longer, and beat the presumed sorcerer to , death. Mer- ot was put on trial for murder. Tlie accused told the court that what exasperated hint most . was the nerve shattering influence •the deceas- ed possessed. The, dead man was constantly predicting misfortunes that invariably betel him as foretold..Sev- eral times the prisoner declared the parish priest lutd tried to exorcise the evil spirit from lits neighbor, but without avail. One day, when Merot met liis victim, the latter said, "Hul- lo, not dead yet? You have only one more week to live." Flesli and blood, declared the accused, could stand these predictions no longer and 'lie there and'. then, it is said, des- patched his neighbor. To show his belief in the reputed sorcerer'spower was not due to mere imagination, Merot related a number • of instances which he declared afford- ed proof of the dead man's 'uncanny gifts. Thus one night, while in bed, Menet said, he was about to expec- torate on the floor, when the voice of the evil genius, wlio could not see, was Board from without to say: ""Spit on the right of the bed."' "How then,'' asked the accused, "could lie have known I was about to „spit?" On several occasions, as- serted the prisoner, the sorcerer had given him stomach aches, and twice he .had brought on partial paralysis. He afterwards carne and revelled in HIS GRAVEL WAS • SURELY • CcUREB - DODD'S . ItIDNE,Y PILLS RE- • WATOI ED THE BATTLE.. To -them about five o'clock in the af- ternoon conies a Bavarian officer to say the French desire to capitulate, and .that ,their unconditional surren- der has been demanded, "No ono Can negotiate this, matter :except my- self," says the King. "Tell the general . tnat the bearer of the flag, of truce must come ,to me.'.' ;,He : did: not. know then .that Louis Napoleon. was in Sedan. "That old fox has slipped back to Paris," Bismarck has said. But he was' there, and pre- sently there came a letter .in his own handwriting. But there were stron- ger men than • King William there .that day, and Bismarck, in .spite of his sovereign's . determination to conduct ,negotiations, took the mat- ter into his own hand, and did not Tet the two rulers meet until he and MbItkc had concluded the terms of the capitulation. "Sire, my brother," ran the letter of Napoleon to William, "not having been. able tl • diein the midst of my' troops, there is nothing left me but to render inysword into the hands of your majesty. T am your majes- ty's good brother, Napoleon. And to this William had replied : •"My brother, -While regretting • the cir- cumstances in which we meet, I ac- cept your, majesty's word, and re- quest that you will, appoint one of your officers, furnished with the ne- cessary powers, to treat for the cap- itulation ' of the -army which has fought so valiantly. under your com- mand. I, for my part, have ape auinted' General von Moltke to this ty.-Your loving brother, Wil- helm." At midnight Moltke and Bismarck 'net Wimpffen and others to arrange terms./ The UNCONDITIONAL SURRENDER of. the French army' was demanded. Wimef en stipulated' for the honor- able retreat of his army, conditional- ly upon their taking no further part in the war. Moltke would have none of it, and Wimpffen was for re- suming the fight. "Very well," said Moltke, "I will see that 'ring is re- sumed at four o'clock." - Then he pointed out that the French : were MOVED THE STONES. And now Reuben, Draper is ,, Well and Strong After His Long Suf- fering. Bristol, . Que., Oct. 10 --(Special).- a Reuben Draper, a well known. resident here, keeps the proof right with him that Dodd's Iiidney Pills will 'surely cure the much' dreaded Gravel. The proof consists of two stones, one the size of a small bean and the other as bigas a grain of barley. He passed these stones and was relieved of all the terrible pains they caused after using Dodd's Kidney Pills for a short time. Mr. Draper is confident that Docld's Kidney Pills and nothing else caused his ` cure, as he tried tavo doctors without getting help, and. was fast getting weak and despondent when he. stopped all other treatment ' . and started to take Dodd's Kidney Pills. In a week he passed the large stone and four days later the smaller one. This cure 'causes a feeling of relief over people in these parts as it shows those terrible operations, long. thought to be unavoidable in case of Gravel, are no longer necessary. PARIS EXECUTIONER DEAD. One of the Most Noted Figures in the French Capital his (Merot's) sufferings. Several oil- but 50,000 strong, the Clemens were lagers of Saint George-sur-Moulons, three times that number; that the were called as witnesses, and, in re- French were without provisions,' and ,Sponse to the judg's question as to covered' by five hundred guns. their opinion of the deceased, declar- ed that while they had not "abso- lute'' belief in the dead man's power of evil, they were none too sure that lie liad not the evil eye. The jury were so greatly impressed by the evident sincerity .of both the prisoners .and his peasant witnesses, that they • eventually brought in a verdict of acquittal. CRYING BABIES. Babies clo not cry unless there is some good reason for it. The cry of a baby isnature's warning signal that there is something wrong. If the fretfulness and crying are not caused by exterior Sources, it is con- clusive evidence that the crying baby is ill. The only safe and judicious thing to do is to -give Baby's,. Own Tablets without delay. For indiges- tion, colic, teething troubles, con- stipation, diarrhoea, worms and sins,, •pie fevers, these marvellous' little Tablets have givers relief in theu- sands of cases and saved many pre- cious lives. They are guaranteed to contain no harmful drug. Mrs. John 'Dobie, Sr. Andrew's East, : Que.., nays : "Baby's Oren Tablets are a splendid medicine for the cure of constipation and other ills that af- flirt children, I consider it my duty to recommend them to all who have little ones." The Tablets:' aresold; at 25 cents abox by all druggists, or may be had by mail h,y writing- 'rho riting'rho ]')r. William's 'tiledioine Co., Brockville, Ont. zLI,TIST.fATING THE, MEANING. Teacher -"Have you looked up the meaning of the word 'imbibes," Fan- ny?" canny -"Yes, ma'am." Teacher -"Well, What mean? clbes Fanny -"To take in, Teacher -""Yes; noW. give a seutenee nsing the word." ;Canny --"My aunt imbibes board - it Newlywed -"Why, I never thought of sawing until I got married.'' Bachelor -•-"And do yeti •tow?" New. lyKred-"Oh, yes, indeed! I'm ; ton- tlnualiy tMittcing hoar aitch I 'night save if -I WW1' t, married." Between six and seven in the morn- ing, thirty-four years ,ago, there -.was that historic meeting between Bis- niarcic and the ,. emperor. They re- paired to the weavers'. cottage ata hundred paces from the 'Meuse Bridge, to an upper clianibor- furnished. With only a dirty table and • two rush= bottomed chairs. There could be no easing of the terms propounded: by Moltke and both knew' it. "Our con- versation . was a difficult thing," Bismarck said afterwards, "wanting, as I did, to avoid touching on topics which could not but painfully affect themail whom God's mighty hand had cast down. 'After sitting for nearly an' hour opposite Napoleon I felt precisely, as I had . done once when a young man at a ball after engaging a .partner for a Cotillon, to whom I could not say a single word,, and of whom„ no- one would relieve ine," It t the end of that distress- ing hour, there came up to the little house a company of Prussian cuiras siers, who surrounded the emperor, and Obeyed` the sharp command of their officer to "DRAW SWORDS!" There are very few cleans- ing operations jii which Sunlight Soap cannot be used to advant- age: It makes the home bright 'ad clean. IR WAS BU,IED AI,IVE. Gruesome Story Told by a Rus- sian Sergeant. 'A sergeant nainecl Kruiloff .. has given an interviewer an astonishing story of, his narrow escape from death after the battle of Wafangtien, "I was knocked over," said Krui-. lot," by a shell, when the battlewas practically over, and we were in re- treat, A spoilt of flame seemed to risk out of the ground and shoot me. headlong against something hard. My last thought was, I mde d .' gI woke after what seemed to me weeks, and ' began to cough ; and choke. The air was suffocating anii. everything was dark. I said to, m; , self; `I must; be in hospital,' and then I stretched out my handy, It wont only a few inches and stack' into soft' clay. I realized that,I lied been 'buried alive. There was a smell of sweat and, coagulated blood. I put out my hand again, and this time it inpign eel . on something soft and clammy like indas rubber thrusting my hand, upward, I found it over a stubby chin. "I, was too weak at first to strug- gle' much, but when I could stretch xny aria, I came across uniforms and hirrnan flesh, and a heavy thing ly- ing across my stomach. T fo'o'd was a mans leg. "Then feeling better 1 made a groat effort.•and- pushed. upwards. A let of loose rubble -came 'rattling roundmy head, and I thought I was done for, but the next time I pushed I. came across several loose bombs, which gave way and let me in the blessed daylight. • . • . "I had been • buried in a : trench with about fifty other men, and in 'order to fill. it up, the Japs hstd, i came across several loose boards, which hacl formed a sort of arch. There was only about. six inches of earth on top of me." Louis Deibler, who retired from, the post of public executioner some years ago, died lately in Paris. He lived with his son and successor in the .Brie. de' Villancourt, where many of his friends, who were not afraid of the, fierce -looking bulldogs that were on guard inthe courtyard, dropped in to enjoy a hand at whist with the genial executioner. Deibler was a small, timid, nervous. man, always dressed in a frock coat and silk hat, and looked like a small tradesman. He was very me- thodical in his work, and invariably superintended the erection of the guil- lotine in person. During his • career he executed many Well-known criminals, always with- out ahitch. Deibler started life as a carpenter and cabinetmaker, but as he did not prosper in that trade he etnigrtted to Algiers, where he was appointed assistant executioner in 1858. Five years later his father, who was exe- cutioner at Rennes, retired from the. office, and young Deibler succeeded. Provincial executioners were abol- ished in 1871, so Deibler then came to Paris as assistant to Roch, whom he succeeded eight years .later. He was possessed of many excellent social qualities, and was 'ouch liked by liis immediate friends. During the forty years that he followed his pro- fession, itis estimated, Deiblersmnst Have launched into eternity nearly five hundred criin]nais. CAN DRINK BAUBLE. When Bismarck left to go and; see his sovereign, 'there crept jhto, . the. emperor's . little' room, the humble woman beneath whose roof the shat tered idol was sheltering. "Can I do anything for ,your majesty?' she said With tender solicitude: "Only to pull down the blinds," he said, without raising his hea.cl from his hands. As he left the house he Plac- ed in her hands four twenty -franc pieces. "This probably is the last hospitality T shall receive in ]!'Since'. ho said in a broken voice. Three of the coins Were those of the time Louis .Phillippe; the fourth was one of his own. Arid that poor soul still loved her fallen monarch sufli- ciexitly to have that piece bearing, his itiage' buried with her. The . three Others .purchased the grave in which she and it wore buried. Napoleon had spoken. prophetically. It was the last hospitality lie Was to receive hi Franco. A prisoner he enterer] Germany, the Germany he was to have penetrated enetrated as a cbnqueror, "I like people who ]seep their prom- isee rom- ises." "I don't. Fattier peornised nee a licl'in' if x went fishin' to-dayl" Potatoes,PouLtrYEggs, Apples Let us have your consignment of any of these articles and, we will get you' good prices. �iq/��p,��a tM ON 0 Limited THE L30A.a�if7a7 f4 COM �SS� �/ ! .. 0A. 0W. West •Mavkot and Colborne Sts, 'TORONTO. EU 912)141rY x° .t, �'• ! � ai*� tic " -t.f �v :y 4.a •8 ,tv.t Stanstead Junction, P. Q., 12th Aug., 1898. Messrs.' C. C. Richards & Co. Gentlemen, -I fell from the bridge leading from a platform to a load- ed car while assisting my men in unloading a load of grain. The bridge went down as well as the load on my back and I struck on the ends of the sleepers, ' causing a serious in- jury to my leg. Only for its being very fleshy would have broken it, In an lioiir coti]d not walk a step. Com- menced using MTNARD'S LINIMENT and the third day went to Montreal nearly well. I can sincerely recom- on business and got about well by the use of a cane. In ten days was mend it as the best Liniment that I know of in use. Yours truly, C. H. GORDON. That's one Way to Get It ,Although they won't admit, it many people who suffer from sick headaches and other ails get them straight from the coffee they drink and; it is easily . proved if they're not afraid to leave it to a test as in the case of a lady in Connellsviile. sick "I had been a sufferer from headaches ,for' twenty-five years and anyone who has ever had a bad. sick headache knows what I suffered. Sometimes three days in the. week I would have to remain in bed,at other times I couldn't lie down the pain `would be so great. My life was a torture and if I went away from home for a day I always came back more dead than alive. "One day I was; telling a woman my troubles and she told me she knew that it was probably coffee caused it. She said she had been cured by 'stopping coffee and using Postum Foocl Coffee and urged me to try this food drink. "''hat's how I carne to send out and get some Postum and from that time I've never been without' if for it suits Soy taste and has entirely cured all of my old. troubles, All I 'did was to leave off the coffee and tea and drink well made Posture in its place, This change has done me more good t 3. � than ever >thi else pit together. "Our house was like a drug store for Illy husband bought everything he heard of to help me without do- ing any good but when I began on the Postum my headaches ceased and the other troubles quickly disappear- ed, I have a, friend who had an ex- perience just like mine and Postum cured her just aS it did rile. "Postuin. not 00137 cured the head- aches but my general health has been improved and I am Munch str ong'a_ than before, I now enjoy delicious Little James -"Father, what are follies?'. Father -"Amusements that we have grown tired of, my son." 'A Pleasant Medicine. -There are some pills which have no other purpose o i- dently than to beget painful internal disturbances .in the patient, adding 10 his troubles and perplexities rather than diminishing them. One might as wed swallow some corrosive material Par - melee's Vegetable Pills have not this disagreeable and injurious prop.rty. They are easy to take, are not unmet• sant to the :taste, and their action is mild and soothing-, ,rA trial- of them will prove' this. They' offer peace lo the dyspeptic.. A •lot of men are unable to prove that the world owes them a living: Any Flrct.0 ase Grocer Can Supply YOU. INSIST ON GETTING EDDY'S. s«-+ +•. ;a., ,:a _..,y..,�ib,L,r7^r•.�,^. !JSE— "SLA D Cr4Y" HOUSE AND FLOOR PAINTS Will Lary in S Hours. On Sale at all Hardware Donlon P. D. QO� dS & CD. Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver. .••.es»: .,.r..:r �.-.,na.. r_c,.s, ra.v., x. +v:, 4 Ocie -half the world knows how the other -half lives, but it doesn't care. Mioard's Liniment for sale everywhere The waves, like some men, arrive at the sea shore in grand style -and likewise go away broke. South American Kidney Curo is the only kidney treatment that has proven equal to correct all the evils that are likely to • befall these physical regula tors. Hundreds of testimonials to prove the curative merits ,of this liquid kidney specific in cases of. Bright's dis- ease, diabetes, irritation of the bladder, inilaniniation, dropsical tendency. Don't delay. -22 Heart relief In halfan hour:- A. lady in New York State, writing of her cure by Dr. Agnew's Cure for the lleart, says:. "I feel like one brought back from'' the dead, so great was my suffering from heart trouble and so al- most: miraculous my recovery through the agency of this powerful treatment._ I owe my life to it." -19' Sleep; is said: to be -healthful, and no one seems to know it better than the hired girl. Lifebuoy Soap - disinfectant - is strongly recommended by the medical profession as a safeguard against 2 in- fectious diseases. 2 Ask a man to describe a gentleman and lie will invariably describe him- self. Piles Cured in 3 to B nights.— One ap- plication gives relief. Dr. Agnew's Oint- ment is a boon for Itching Piles, or Blind, Bleeding Piles. It relieves quick- ly and permanently. In skin eruptions it stands without a rival. Thousands of testimonials if you want evidence. 85 cents. -28 A hog with bristles has and thick skin. Some .persons have periodical attacks of Canadian cholera, 'dysentry or diar- rhoet, and have to use great Precau- tions- to avoid the disease. Change of water, cooking, and green fruit, is euro to bring on the attacks. To such per, sons we would recommend Dr. I eliogg's Dysentery Cordial as being the best medicine in the market for all summer complaints. 11 a few drops are taken in water whenthe,syniptoms are noticed no further trouble will be ex- perienced. .,The firsttime a man is nominated for a back township office he thinks it is ,up to him ato save the country from ruin. Croat Things From Little Causes Grow. -.It takes very little to derange the stornaoh. . The cause may be slight, a cont' something eaten or drunk, anxi- ety, worry., or some other simple cause. But if precautions be not taken, this simple cause may have most serious consequences. Many a chronicallydebil- itated itated constitution to -day owes its de struction to simple causes not dealt with in time. Keep the digestive rtp- paratus ti lion It5,, ,oiiditic n and all tvill be well. Parinelee's Vegetable Pills are 'better than any other for the pur- pose. When a Poor girl is said to be pretty she is positively handsome. To Starve is a Fallacy. --Tho dictum. to . stop eating because you have indi- gestioit has . long since been exploded. Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablets in- troduce .a new era In the treatment of stomach'. troubles. It has proved that one may eat his fill of everything and everything he relishes, and one tablet taken alter the ,inept will aid the -stom- ach in doing . its work, • 60 in a box, 85 cents, -2' ' Miusrd's Liniment Cures Burns, .etc, The Duke of File is the only total abstainer among the dukes, Death or lunacy seemed the only alter- native for a well-knoh'n artcl highly re. reacted lady of Wingharn, Ont., who had isavellncl over two continents in e eirr searrin 'or a cure for nervous de- 'Postum more than I ever did coffee,." away 'anti d 'sasesla. A eased reran_ 1\Tanre liven by Postum Co,, Rattle mended Sloetli ,Ainerlean Nervine, fine bottle hotrod, six bottles aired, and lief Creek, Ail ch. „, own writiien 'testimony closes with. "There's a reason, and it's' Worth these ee words. "It has. saved my life,— finding :out. a coarse Few Clouds, are as look. thick s they OINTMENT Cures Blood Poison, filo Amputations, Sores and Skin Diseases, Burns. Largo Sample FREE. Address Foster M'#',g Coll, Toronto We_ Pay a Good Salary To Ladies and Gentlemen. Perman- ent ermanent position, rapid advancement; sal- ary and expenses. Clean desirable business. The J. L. Nichols Co.; Limited, Toronto. (Mention this paper.) i lriard's Unbent Cures Baodr % , A local paper prints the following singular card of thanks:- . "Mr. and Mrs. Heays hereby wish to express their- thanks to the friends and neigh- -hors wlio so kindly assisted at the burning of their' house last Monday evening." - To prove to yeattiai Dr, ��eC d sas utnet rio aooret y and every form oritching. bleeding rind protruding piles, 1io manufacturers have guaranteed it. Seo fes. Imonials in the daily press and ask your note* tors what they think of it, You can use it and tot tour money back it not cured. 60e a box, al tll dealers or T¢nnesesetanaa'us& Co.. Toronto Dr. Chases 4.1. .Intriband UNFORTUNATE REMARK. Artist's Friend -"My clear Harold, I like your picture 'eery much, only T fancy the original doesn't look quite so red as you have painted Him. He hasn't a ruddy complexion; quite tHC reverse." Impressionist Artist --"Whom earth are you talking about?" Artist's Friend -"Why, your uncle, of .course." Impressionist Artist y... '`Gracious, Scant bttt that isn't my uncle -it's a, sunset i'' Her 3, Father -Il is that young man of a saving tendency?" Eva - "Oh, yes, indeed, papa! Why, When he rings the boll in the evening, if his cigarette is Snot entirely consam- cd,, he pinches off the and and saves it until he goes, boatel' on There never was, and never will be a universal panacea, in one remedy, for ail ins to which flesh is heir -the very_ nature of . many curatives being such?" that were the germs of other and dif- ferently seated diseases rooted in the system of the patient -what would re- lieve ono ill, in turn would aggravate the other.. We have, however, in Quin- ine Wine, when obtainable in a sound unadulterated state, a remedy for many and grevious ills. By its gradual and judicious use, the frailest systems are led into convalscence and strength, by the influence which Quinine exerts on Nature's own restoratives. It relieves the drooping spirits of those with whom a chronic state of morbid des- pondency and lack of interest in life is a disease, and, by tranquilizing the nerves, disposes to sound and refreshing sleep -imparts vigor to the action of the blood, which being stimulated, courses throughout the veins, strength- ening the healthy animal functions of the system, thereby making activity a necessary result, strengthening the frame, and giving life to the digestive organs. which naturally demand in- creased substance -result. improved ap- petite. Northrop & Lyman of 'Boron. to, have given to the public their su- perior Quinine Wine at the usual rate, and, gauged by the opinion of sclen- tists, this wine approaches nearest per- fection s 11 any in the market. All drug - Any fool may talk, but it takes a wise guy to get listened to. For Over Sixty Years afar. WINSLOW'SSOOTHING STAG? bee kerb:' eeealtil millions of mothers for their children whdd 'teething. Iteoothes the child, softens the gums, allays pain, cures wind collo rogiilatee theatomach and bowels, and le the hestremed'yfor Diarrheas. Twontj-five Dents a bottle Bold bsdruggiats throughout the world. Be cure Sad ask for " Mee.'wINaLOw'a Soornis0 SYRUP." 22--0& In fifty years suicide has increased in Great Britain by 200 per cent. Minard's Liniment Beiieves neuralgia Many a timid man gives another credit for his own ideas because he isn't quite sure of their merit. Always a Goocl Friend. -In health and happiness we need no friends, but when pain and prostration come we look for 'friendly aid front sympathetic hands. These hands can serge us no better than in rubbing in 'T1r. Thomas' Ecieetric 011, for when the Oil is in the pain is out. it has brought relief to thousands who without it would be indeed friendless. "Mydear Miss Biliilnorc," . sadly wrotyoung Hmnkinson, "I return ,your kind note, in which you accept my offer of marriage. You will Ob- serve that it begins `Dear George. I do not know who George is, but my name, es you know, is William," When you think yeti have cured a cough or cold, but find a dry, hacking cough remains; there is clanger. Take hfl o Sir's Consumption Cur The ic i :un i Ton at once. It will strengthen the lungs end stop the cough. Prices: S. C. ' Watts & Co. 305' 25e See $11 Roy, N.Y., Toronto, Cate. T XTY ISSUE NO.,41T-O4 501