HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-3-29, Page 7'JUL)'ROAD TO MAIM!.
Ides Through the Loch, Red Bleed Dr.
William' fink: Pills actually Make,_
Commonpills Miran the bowels. Dr;
Williams' fink Pills make new nett
blood. Purging pills gallep through .1.e
towels• gtearleg the tissues, irritating
the organs and weakening the whale
system, Dr, Williams' 'fink Pills do not
pure, at: rill. They're tonic pills, sooth-
ing pills, stre'ngthening pills, blood -
building pills. Dr. Williams' fink Pills
actually make new blood, That is why
they are the only seientitio cure for all.
tdocd .dtsoasf;s. that is why they cure
'kead'nchesand backaches; kidney trou-
bles, indigestion, neuralgia,, rheumalisne,
heart troubles, and the special ail-
rnents of• growing girls and mature wo-
men. t;?urginje pills act only on the
symptoms of disease; Dr. Williams' Pink
ills go straight to the root, of to tivu-
l'te in tate blood and cure. Mr, John
Burke, Elmdale, P.E,t., says: "I think
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills the best medi-
` eine in the world. I had an attack of
pneumonia which was followed by ex-
treme
xtreme nervousness and rheumatism. 1
tried some of our best doctors but got
nothing to help me until I began taking
Dr, Williams' Ptaik Pills. After, taking
tii,e pills some weeks I could, actually
feel the new blood they were making
•cursing through my veins, and in the
course Of a few weeks more I was com-
pletely restored to health." Remember
That it is only Dr. Williams' Pink. Pills
that can mane this' ne-ev, rich, health -
giving blood. Imitattor's and. (1 e • so-
called ",just as good" medicines never
cured nnyone; Insist on the genuine
with the full name, "Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills for Pale People," on thH wrapper
tri each box. :Sold by all medicine dea-
lers or by mail at 50 cents a box or six
loxes for 52.50, by writing The Dr,
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
' IN A LONDON BUS.
Mrs. John Lane's description of the
Inmates of a London 'bus makes a pretty
good picture of our own car types.
The two passengers- at the door, she
Nays in the Fortnightly Review, are ei-
ther good Samaritans or misanthropes
who rejoice when you stumble getting
M. Then there are the oblivious ladies
whe resent being mildly urged to "move
xp," the young person who doesn't know
where she is going, but has it written
on a piece of paper, which she can't find
and the suspicious female who studies
the list of fares with the intention of
catching the conductor•. cheating.
One 'is accustomed also to the woman
who has received too little change, and
who, just when the bus thinks it look
pretty bad for the conductor, finds a
elm shilling on her lap, whereupon she
looks more grim than. ever.
Of course, there is always a choleric
old gentleman, who is hauled in pant-
Mg, and threatens to report the conduc-
tor for inattention. That there are al-
ways innumerable people who are plat-
I}d1y proceeding in the opposite direction
from their destination goes without say-
lng. ,
In.bad weather there is always an Am-
erican inside with a handbag and an in-
iluiring mind, whose destination we are
et once told is either the. British Muse-
• uni or 'Westminster Abbey. She asks
,malty questions, but to her the bus heart
opens in overflowing sympathy; She
is not a foreigner; no, indeed. Infor-
-? &tion is showered on her.
Fatherly old gentlemen emerge from
/rotecting newspapers and volunteer
advice. Even the conductor, affected by
'This epidemic of benevolence, allows his
aus to come to a full stop as he helps
ber out and points out the right direc-
tion. Ah, yes, blood is thicker than
water!
There is the benevolent, party who
leaves his morning paper as a legacy to
the conductor. And one bitter winter
day I saw one dear soul give him his
warm gloves, for the man's thin, worn
bands were purple with the cold.
Of course, there is always the fond
. 'pother, usually without front teeth, who
hold's her ohnny in her lap ason a
throne. Johnny wears on his head a
white plush muffin. He is a friendly
little soul with but a lazy notion as to
the Masculine author of his being, for
be greets rapturously a very swagger
young man with a monocle and.other
liailinaxks of extreme fashion as, "da -da,"
to the young man's -unspeakable angu-
ish and the stony amusement of •the
' other passengers. ,
We have all come across the strenuous
woman who strides in and .clamors for
'fresh air. She boarded a bus In which.
I was the other day --a bitter cold day.
Without apology she flung open the
window, and her thin Roman nese
"gulped in with rapture great icy whiffs
.of a real hm•ricane. Then she sat down
• end said something :very impolite about
microbes to a companion.
She had a loud assertive voice, and.
she talked with a great display of white
teeth, like tombstones. Whereupon the
' whole bus felt humiliated at . having
been so oblivious to microbes.
Suddenly out of a corner there rose a
Kittle old lady like a mouse, and with a
netormination that was like cast iron,
but pleasantly covered by velvet, she
closed the offending window with a soft
thud. For a second the lady with the
Ilonian nose stared at the mouse, and
then she turned away with a toss of her
lieacl, but did not open the window
c gain.
A faint smile of triumph• flitted. across
the bus. • What 'right has anyone in a.
republic tai.•demand' fresh 'air at the point
of the bayonet? It • is really the most
humiliating insult. you can offer to any,
one. it puts you at once on a superior
social footing, for the lower you are in
the social scale the less you ,care what.
'you breathe.
4"
MOTHER AND BABY.
Every inother,.who has used Baby's
Own Tablets will tell you (hitt they are.
the bolt medicine in the world ,for the:
Cure of constipation, colic, sour stom
'ccli indigestion dirrahoea,: sleeplessness,
•. teething troubles,,and other ailments' 'if
4 hildren. You can give .these Tablets
ate a 4w -born baby with absolute
safe�Sy-thy always de good; they Cannot
Paestiy do barn): 1reir
use metros.
ealtlh for the child and comfort for the
J tier. Mrs. C: F. Kerr, 'Elgin, Ont,
,says: -•-"Baby's Own Tablets are the best
medicine ' 1 ever used for • stomach
and bowel troubles, and destroying,
worms. No mother should be without
n box ai•,`Fabless in the house.",:. Get
them'at:our dijgs by. i ts.or h ' mail from
y
n Vie • Dr', • Wilitatns'.: Medicine Co,+ lirockw,
inlet O1rt'at 25 cents. a bbd. • t'
TItIL TEIt1URLE POWER WJIIC[I TIIEY
POSSESS.
Living on Poison, Their Breath Becomes
' Fatal to ali Approaehind
Them,
Private Calcutta letters to England to
a member of the aristocracy tell of elab-
orate precautions taken by the Govern -
went to guard the [Tinct and i'rinoes
of Wales against "poison -girls and pop
sol, -men." These dangerous creatures,
which Nathaniel Hawthorne Inunortal-
ized in his "T3appacinis' Daughter," are
auposed to be able to kill a person by,
breath or touch, and the Indian Govern
went has no more succeeded in exter-
minating them than infant marriages
and other Indian peculiarities.
Indian medicine men and priests knew
long before Prof, Koch and other Euro-
peen aileriists that the persistent con-
sumption of poisons mattes the body int
mune against poisoning. Accordingly
potentates, priests and others who had
occasion to wish for the death of cer-
tain persons every little while kept on
hand a 'number- of poison -fed individu-
als to send to the persons that they wish-
ed to do away With. Both boys and girls
were trained for this murderous office,
principally girls. '
THEIR TRAINING.
The Indian 'princess caused bountiful
and healthy female children to be put
wider the care of physicians and medi-
cine men soon after : they were born.
The medicine men strewed the floor un-
der the baby's 'cradle with dried helmet
flower, or monk's hood, that is such
from which the deadly poison, aconite,,
had been partially extracted. After
a few months, unprepared monk's hood
was placed under the cradle and in vas-
es in baby's chamber. Later the fresh
flower was installed• and baby was al-
lowed to play with ft:, nd suck it.
Still later a mild solution of aconite
was added to baby's milk and other
food after a graduating scale, As the
little bodies became more and more
used to the poison, the doses were in-
creased, and usually when a girl was
ten or twelve she could eat aconite in
the same quantities as same arsenic eat-
ers devour that poison.
INSTRUMENTS OF DEATH.
It .is, a fact, though, that few human
natures' canstand the aconite treat-
ment, We are told of an Indian prince
who succeeded only in, raising one poi-
son girl net of more than a hundred. But
girl was so venomous that
nd nothing could live in the
hour,.: bile inhabited, both human beings
and animals dying from breathingthe
same air as she.
This particular poison girl whom na-
ture had endowed with all the graces.
liable to capture a man's heart, was
used by the .Indian prince at various
times to murder pretenders by a single
kiss, to rob his enemy's army. of its
leader, to.. kill off inconvenient relatives
and officials.
GIVES .TWO REAL
GOOD REASONS
FOR BELIEVING DODD'S KIDNEY
PILLS CURE ALL KIDNEY AIL-
MENTS.
Cured His Backache of Twenty -Five
Years Standing and Satisfied Every-
one He Recommended Them to.
Economy Point, N.S., March • 19 -
(Special} --George S.' McLaughlin, of tfiis
place, gives two splendid reasons Jor
bis belief that Dodd's Kidney Pills are -
the one remedy for Kidney ailments.
Here are the two reasons in his own
evens:
I. was troubled with lame back for
25 years or more, sometimes so severe
that I could not turn myself in bed.. One
lex of Dodd's. Kidney Pills cured Mei
and I have had no return of the trouble.
since.
- "1 have. recommended' Dodd's Kidney.
Pills to a nuniber of persons who had
Kidney Trouble. All who have used
them have been benefited or cured."
Dodd's Kidney. Pills not only relieve
ab Kidney Diseases, from Backache to
Bright's Disease, but they absohitely
cure therm. But sometimes where one
or two boxes relieve it takes more' to
make a. complete cure.
PAPER IIANDKERC•HIEFS.
Several leading London physicians
now are advocating the use of handker-
chiefs made of paper. This is not only
with the idea of combating the spread
of Consumption, but a myriad of dis-
eases. 1t is argued that a linen hand-
kerchief which is carried in the pocket
and becomes heated is necessarily a dis-
seminator of undesirable germs and,
with the aid of laundries, the constant
circulation of deadly organisms is kept
up. It is customary in many English
sanatoria to provide patients with paper
handkerchiefs, which after use are placed
In 'receptacles, where they -are ;imme-
diately cremated, • Most of the handker-
chiefsusedin sanatoria are of ,Japanese
make. The English make have not come
into great favor on account of their be-
ing flinch harder in texture than the
Japanese.
•
••••-
CHANCELLOR AT 'TWENTY-THREE..
Pitt was only 23 years when he inn
cepted the post of•Chancellor of the) x-.
chequer under Lord Shelburne, having
refused an. office in the previous Gov -
ointment of less than Cabinet ,conk. Be -
fon he "had reached • his :44th year the
Premiership was offered him by the
Ring, with full authority to name his
colleagues, an offer which lie had wis-
dom and self-restraint enough to decline.
But at 25 Pitt was Prime 141inist•er and
master of England, as no man had ever
been before --surely san example of early
lance that is quite unparalleled.
"Did I see . you kissing au hies.
it ,e Y r � m Y,d I5 r
sirfi I really, deli„t know, err, 1. was
teal mr4bl►'- ucCrlp d' at ;:. the” timo `'to nod'
�liL`6.ia .a
tins
•
Dash oilcloths
® and linoleums with
warm water and
Sunlight Soap, rinse clears and wipe
dry. The colors will be preserved
and the surface unharmed.
Common soaps fade the colors and
injure the surface. Sunlight Soap cleans, freshens and preserves,
oilcloths and linoleums.
i
Sunlight Soap washes clothes white withoutinjury jury to the most
delicate fabrics, ` or to the hands, for it contains nothing that can
injure either clothes or hands.
Sunlight Soap is better
than other soaps, but is best
when used in the Sunlight
way (foLow directions).
Equally good with hard
or soft water.
LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, Toronto
CUDDLE DOON.
The bairnies cuddle. doon at nicht
Wi' mucicle taught an' din;
"Oh, try and sleep, ye waukrife rogues,
Your faither's corrin' in." ..
They never heed a word I speak
I try to gie a froon;
But aye I hap them up an' cry,
"Oh, bairnies, cuddle doonl"
Wee Jamie nil' the curly held,
Ile aye sleeps next the wa',
Bangs up an'. cries, "1 want a piecef"
The rascal starts them a'.
I ria an' fetch them pieces, drinks,
They stop awee the soun',
Then draw the blankets up an' cry,
"Noo, weenies, cuddle doonl"
But ere five minutes gang. wee Rab
- Cries cot, frac 'neath the cines,
"hither, mak' Tam gie ower at once,
Ile's kittlin' wi' his saes!
The mischief's in that. Tam for Welts,
He'd bother half the toon; •
Bat aye I hap them up and cry,
"Qh, bairnies, cuddle doonl"
•
,At length they hear their father's fit,
An' as -he steeks the door
.They turn. their faces- to • the wa ,-
While Tam pretends to snore.
"liana' the weans been guid?" he asks
As he •puts• aff his shoon;
"The bairnies, John, are in their beds,
An' Lang since cuddled doon."
Art' just afore we bed morsel's,
We look at oor wee lambs,
'Iam has his arm roun' wee Rab's neck,
An' Bab his airm round Tam's.
I Iift wee Jamie up the bed,
And as I straik each croon
I whisper, till my heart fills up,
"Oh, bairnies, cuddle doom!"
The Iiair'nies cuddle doon at nicht
Wi' mirth that's dear to me;
But soon the big wart's cark an' care
Will quaten doom their glee.
Yet, come what will to like ane,
May IIe who rules aboon
Aye whisper, though their pows be bald
"Oh, bairnies, cuddle dont"'
Tom----
FUNERAL THAT COST $14,000.
A remarkable story is published of the
eccentric will left by a wealthy lady who
died in Paris. When her will was open.
'ec, the relatives were astounded, for it
• set forth that out of her fortune 70,000
fr. (814;000) had to be 'spent on her fun,
era]. The executors,`• however, consci-
entiously carried out this order. Several
doctors were engaged to embalm the
body,, and the coffin was the best and
most expensive that could be obtained
The funeral was a sight.lo.. see. For an
hourthe bells of St: Sulpice-Church
rang. , Both inside Wand outside the
church there were black hangings, edg•
cci with silver. The coffin was literally
covered with rare and costly flowers.
♦.
GRAND TO LIVE
And the Last Laugh is Always the Best
"Six months ago I would have laughed
at the idea that there could be anything
better for a table beverage than coffee,"
writes an Ohio woman—"now I laugh
k• know there is.",
"Since childhood I drank coffee as
freely as any other member of the
family. The result was a puny, sickly
girl, and as I grew into womanhood 1
did not gain in health, but was afflicted
with heart trouble, a weak and disorder-
ed stomach, wrecked nerves and a gen-
eral Freaking down, tin last winter at
the age of •38 I seemed to be on the verge
et consumption-, My -friends greeted me
with '7'low bad 'you look! What a ter-
rible color!' and this was not very corn-
fcrting.
The doctors and patent medicines slid
me absolutely no. good. I was thorougfi.
ly discouraged..
"Then I gave up coffee and cern-
•mencod Post.un;'oTfeee. At, first
i didn't like it, but after a few trialla and
following the d'ir'ections P'en.ctly, it was
gra" It was refreshing "ail satisfy -
nen
ing. In a couple of weeks I noticed a
f;a eat change. T became stronger, my
Drain grew clearer; I we's not troubled
with forgetfulness as in coffee times,
my power of endurance was More than
deubied. The heart trouble and indiges-
tion disappeare'ki and my nerves betaine
E14'ady and strong.
"i began to tette en int.oreat in things
cibout me. -Housework and home -making
bewail a plt'i1'uu'e. My friends hsve
Marveled et Vic change and when they
onquite what betweht it about, t meninx
Toenail. Food Coffee, ;'find nothing else
the world,'" Nome Riven by I'ostitin
f,.frr" IHCttt.tta. (')XOt A•Ii(;ll.
t .i•, ,.i li:viir , i`ha.r . ra ci ifi
ul 't17t e
ion'
,
"The to' Velivilt„”'n kg .
She "Do you know what I' ddo if you
should ley to kiss me?" I -Ie -"No.
Why?" "Oh, nothing; only you dont
seem to have any curiosity."
Bad (Heart — Could Not Lie Down for
Eighteen Months."1 was unable to lie.
down in my bed for eighteen months,
owing to smothering spells caused by
Heart Disease. One bottle of Dr. .' g-
new's Cure for the heart: removed -the
trouble, and to -day 1 ant as well as ever
1 was."—L. W. Law, Toronto Junction.
—123.
Dauber—"Look here, old fellow; I'm
painting a picture and want to study
the expression of surprise—utter, entire,
unbounded surprise. How am I to
achieve it?" Friend—"Oh, I know; go and
pay some of the people you are owing
money to,"
" A Little Coll'Yon Know," will become
a great danger if it bo allowed to reach the lungs.
Nip the peril intim bud with Allen's Lung Sal-
oom, a sure remedy containing no opiates.
A story is told of a German shoemak- I
er who, having made a pair of boots for
a gentleman of whose financial integrity :
he had considerable doubt, made.l•he fol-'
lowing reply to him when he called for
the articles:—"Der pouts ish not quite'
done, but der heel is made elft."
Thomas Hoskin' Nerves.—Mr. Itos-
'kins, a resident of Durham, Ont., for a
score of years, was a martyr to stomach
and nerve disorders. Schooled to preju•
dice against "patent medicines," he start•
ed using South American .Nervine as,
he says, "a last resort," but six bottles
of this great remedy proved to be his
salvation physically. It can be yours.
—124.
The Creditor—"When are you going
to pay me? I can't go to your place
every day, trying to make you settle
up. I've got other things to 'do." The
Debtor' "Are you at liberty on Satur-
day afternoons? Come every Saturday."
A Pleasant Feeling of relief from pain is ex-
perienced the minute you put •' The D & 1'," Men-
tha- Plaster on°a lame back, a rheninatie joint,
neuralgia, sciatica, er pain in the side.
"I say, I'd give anything to be as
strong and healthyas you are," remark-
ed the lazy lean. "What do you live
on?" "Nothing but fruit, answered the
other. "What kind of fruit?" "The fruit
of industry," was the brief but signifi-
cant reply.
Gammon Sense and Modern Medical
Science havereversedthe almost univer
sill belief that Rheumatism cannot be
cured. The great South. American Rheu
niatnc Cure bps turned the tables and
has, given to sufferers a tried, safe; sim-
ple' mind permanent cure. Thousands
Italie testified that it has' cured them in
three days. -122.
Nagg—"When a man and his wife
think the same thing simultaneously, it
is a sign that they are exceedigiy con-
genial," Wagg—"Well, then, my wife
and i• are very congenial, for the other
night, when she said that she wonder-
ed why I'd ever been such a fool as to
marry her, I had been sitting there for
half an hour quietly wondering over
that very point."
Put east the the in a hot, itching, unhealthy
skin with Weaver's Cerate. Use it for eczema,
nettle rash, totter and salt rheum
NEWS BY PIPE LiNE.
London and Glasgow Connected by Un-
derground Cabic.
The underground cable system be-
tween London and ; Glasgow, on which
the Post Office Department has been at
work since 1S96, is practically completed
and in a few weeks will be Opened to
the public.•
The object of this underground cable
has been to insure the steadiness of the
telegraph system between London and
Scotland, which has been frequently
Corrupted by storms. The Post Office
Department showed a considerable
amotint of common sense hi putting all
wires underground in a conduit. As a
section was finiebed it was opened to
public Ilse. London to Birmingham
was tate first section, and since then the
title has been gradually extended north -
words, connecting all thn principle cities
and towns on er near the route.
About IO0 miles of pipe have been
laid, and 40,0)0 miles of wire have been
run through it.
As a truly polite nation. the French
undoubtedly lead the world., >,The other
day a famous Palis'denlirt's• servaxit op
ened'the door to a woebegone patient,
"And.-w.tto''n'etch,". e,Y lrerricil; with' 4ett.•
'.':, w
..� . i! flail-. lid.'C`the m1 ` r , , : .
der r id?r .,> a s . tL ..r "line y t,f
dnnonn'cln&t •
Designs suitable for all classes of work Such''es Churches, 'Schools; Stores,
Ila?]s: Also special designs for houses, I(ilehens, 13ining-Boonts, eta, No
thing has ever been devised to equal Pedlar's Steel Ceilings for farirt housed,
Cheap as lath and plaster and will never crack er face off.
Avoid Accidents by Using
Pedlar's Steel Ceilings.
Made to 01 any size room and can be nailed on by any nicohaNc. Ship-
ped from our warehouses painted alt ready to apply.
Our Catalogue, No., i4c describes many designs. Write for It, It tests
you nothing. Write to -day.
THS• PEDLAR.PmP1.4
MONTREAL; QUE.
787 Craig Gt-
OTTA'NA, 81IT, . TORONTO, ONT. LONDON, [NT, WINNIPEG VANCOttVEN.
Santee R.S.'
423 Susses at. 11 Colborne St .' 50 Rane St, TO $t 615 Ponder Rt.
witani Yowl. Pii.Aiusr 0voucit,
head Office and. Works,
Oshawa, Ont.,-Ganmda
Farms and B1ooks of Land
In Sizes to (wit purchasers. froth ISO mores upwards, situate*
on or near railways in the. famous wheat growing districts or
MANITOBA, SASKAT& EW N and ALBERTA
! so OENER 5153 and N'_ .Pr:1/L that every Industrious man may emu a
G1�ii1J�FJW pROFITAD E and 8014FCN1TASt.E Farm Nome
The Character and Purpose o•" our Cemgrtn,,, whims to organized UNDER THE
WSPSGS8 OF THE IN ISCIOSLLT sauEa. OF FOiiESTErs, may be described as STROLLS
RELIABLE, NELPFUL, PATRIOTIC.
porIntormation and Prices, apply to F. � ODSt
)dANAGLR LAND MZPAiaTMBNT,
The Union Trust Company, Limited,
TEMPLE BUILDING, TORONTO,.
When Writing Mention This Paper
ALEWTS
WANTED
EVERY WHERE.
Next Summer's Vacation
Plan now on seeing Yellowstone Park, Wonderland of the World.
The. finest coaching trip in America. The greatest of Nature's wonder-
ful phenomena on every band. Geysers, mud pools, tinted terraces,
magnificent mountains and bracing and invigorating mountain air.
The best of hotels and accommodations. Write for " Wonderland
1906," six cents. It tells about the Great Northwest arid Yellowstone Park.
Go via GARDINER GATEWAY, the Official Entrance,
AND THE
Northern Pacific;
Railway
St. Paul and Minneapolis to the Pacific Northwest.
Write for particulars to
A. M. CLELAND, W. H. MASON, D.P.A
General Passenger Agent, 75 Yonge St.,
St. Paul, Minn. Toronto, -- Can.
•
Foi BALs — SUST ARRIVED AND FORR HI E U AT 1 S
sate 24 imported Clydesdale stallions and
1111
b Hackneys; farm 21 mires from end of street car,
line.—O. SORRY, Guelph, Ont.
Rheumatism Glared.
Why do you suffer—Stares Magi cItheume tism
Cure will relieve the worst cases of acute,
chronic, or inflammatory rhotunatism in 24
hours. Every bottle has a positive guarantee
to cure. Hundreds of marvelous cures have
boon made in alt parts of Canada. If your
druggist cannot give yon Starr's, take no other,
seed direct to us',- Er:oo per bottle.
Osborn5Remody:Co.. 175 tongs St,Toronio, Ont
Billington: "I suppose that old Mill-
yun's troubles are at an end now that he
has got ,thatdaughter 'of his off his
ahands?" Willington: "Not at alit Ile
will "soon find that he will have .to put-
her husband on his feeW"
The Happiness of Reafth. Exhilara-
tion is the ripple and laughter of pure
Wood as it courses through the veins.
South American Kidney Cure drives out
alt impurities and insures the richness
and purity that is essential to perfect
health—successful because it merits it—
popular because it fulfils every promise
—a Kidney 'medicine solely and purely.
It nevem fails. -126
A good umbrella means a frequent
change of owners.
Regain Your Strength by taking'Perroviin."
It's the
compounded. It nnurishea
and strengthens tonic
system..
"I can't decide," she said, "wheteher
to take the hat or not. But it i$ just the
dearest thing I have seen this season."
"The dearest?" asked the husband, with
a sardonic laugh. "Then it's certain
that you'll take it."
Onsugflt wasp !M setter Insn outer soaps,
batt is beat when need 3a the 8nnlight way.
Any sanlight Soap and follow directions.
THE LION'S SHARE.
Two brothers got on none too well
with each ether, for reasons which will
be plain to"all.
"Here," said thew mother to the older
cif them one day, here is a• banana. Di-
vide it with your tittle brother, and see
that, he gets the lion's share."
The younger child a few minutes Int"
er set up ar great bawlingr. ,
"li'lamrira, Ile shrieked, ",Tenn hasn't
given me any bananas
"Wlist's this?" ingilired'°' the tnotller,
ifurrying� ill;
.Why, explained ih i eld `' boys. Notre
don't eat bananas.".
"My dedr Jane," said the mistress et
d .household, "you have served us now
faithfully for twenty -0W years. 'We
' • l a1l.hencefortb; alI'ek s cite as ai : merle-
'beth of cur fa)nilx,v Yeu will' receive ne
wages!r'
in any form and cold perspiring feet positively
cured within 80 days, by our newly pateuted
'Magnetic Discs or money prompptly iefu.,ded.
Diai,ed anywhere 31.Ou. Write. for dedo.iptive
booklet. Agents wanted. MA'GhNlTIC ItuiiU•
]1STISM GORE CO., Sherbrooke, Queues, Canada
•
APPLE TREE&o
Before buying write us, or see our
agent •near you, for' prices. We havie
the largest stock of fruit trees to .ta
found in Canada. We pay the freight.
Brown Brothers Company,
Nurserymen, Limited,
Brown's Nurseries, Ont.
Western Canada Land Co
HEAD OFFICE, 38 NINTH STREET.
s. BOX 88. Brandian, Main"
Improved farms and unimproved
wheat and ranch lands, wholesale and
retail, in Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Al-
berta and fruit lands in Southern Oka-
nagon Valley, B. C.,
Wheat lands on Saskatchewan Plains
at 87.10 per acre, easy terms till June
1st to make selections, the finest wheal.
lands in the world.
Homesteads located. Selections made.
Write or call for any information de-
sired.
TOWN OF MARBL,E.
The town of Carrara, near the famous
quarries of that naine'Is literally built
cf the white statuary marble. The
paving stones are reimposed of this ma-
tcr•ial' and wbere these are not used the
roadway is made up and covered with
marble chips. '1'he population of the
town is about 12,000, and its adult male
inhabitants are practically ail employed
in connection with the adjoining quar-
ries, which furnish to sculptors the fin-
est statuary stone in the world.
Cash or Cure
if Shifoh'a t tltsum Lion Cute failp to cats,
our Cold ar Co ; ou back all .oat
y
,
y ee.
id for it. You ata sure 4 a. Cure er
ipaid
a (lath.
If it wasn't a tun cure, this ego would
not tic .Made.
Can anything he fairer
if you have: n Grid, Cofe1 err aey diseaute
,of the titre" Lamp or Au Powaya,'by
8H, on
■+rte
113.
iwttle. . All. oaten nt.
11.1
ISStitf'lltd' tto