HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-9-6, Page 3ri.
sx heti 441
•
$q 000 REWARD wits
W . be paid to any
person who proves that
Sunlight Soap contains any
injurious chemicals or any
fornr of adulteration.
Sunlight
So
is better than other soaps,.
but is bestwhen used in
the Sunlight way.
Sunlight Soap contains
no injurious chemicals.
Sunlight Soap is pyre
soap, scientifically made.
Every step in its manu-
facture is watched by an
expert chemist.
Sunlight Soap saves
labor,and the wear of
rubbing which common
soaps requirein washing
fabrics.
Your honey refunded by
the dealer from whom you buy
Sunlight Soap if you find any cause
for complaint.
Lever Brothers Limited. Toronto
s1
A
16=Pearl
Brooch
Does it strike you
as i" almost too good
to be true? " It is
only one instance of
the price attractive-
ness of Diamond Hall's
stock— backed by its
half century reputation
for quality.
This Brooch (cata-
logue No. 31683) con-
sists of a 1 K. inch
crescent of soli d 14 kt.
gold, supporting a lily -
of -valley spray set with
i6 Pearls. •
It is sent post free in
dainty satin -lined case.
Ryrie Bros
LIMITED
134138 Yonge Street.
BUYS' A
Oil TIOME
Fera Yare No you wad L. s 1
booed len in Denver for 1)00
tit whi.h wise mod dorm 'rebid'
'›J ki.i 135.00D. ynr rest.
Deemer hu. population of 100,000,
`. , 1. five yon the p..l.ti.s w.V resat.
'G tie hd4nitlioe 'nevi&..
Orel,..rs residence lots i. dLtretle anti., lM+-
I.ted bre./ Irmo 3750 to *4.000 ads.
V i AIM LAYING OUT A N$M• Abn<TION
\Washingtoli- Heights
i The hlehut ..d .art riasdy .deities is (Inmost t
eurt.eh . p..4.rt.•iew. of pied• Pool sod L.
'
1Lob Deay Mo..tuoe N. t d..s.reo ,/' 70 mole..
$. O.erb.he.e,we.he./tn. pork. As idol .},t '
te25x125Feet
A
!) CAM
!W KR Menne ?ION ftf
et THESE L. eve 6.41i (I Me.. .rolratt
Jeet,6 .iw...r.r.ir 9 r.r .. .. 1,.. • w
roe ee..... e.i Nei. IN. m.ru...ue..""'"".
•'..le.IM., uy a fie.....v W fi ad:......e.
. ..ei u wi wen sail 14 44.6 Lw. 044 ew.
TiIE CENTURY LOAiN AND TRUST co,
n. c_.o, e.si:, d .. n Dona, 04I..4r
0, sew b•foott /•steIII li.wu..rl.e r
HE HAD TO f3U'1'TON THEM.'
They took him to the sanitarium
Moaning feebly: "Thirty-nine, thirty-
nine," be whispered.
"Whet does he mean by that?" the
attendant enquired.
"nee the number of buttons on the
been tie his wife's new ~rook," the 'fam-
ily doctor explained.
SOME DREAM WARNINGS
DEATHS IIAVE BEEN TOLD IN nu
-
MAKABLE ABLE WAYS.
Bazaar Dire in Paris Was roseseen by
an Invalid Ludy—Story at a
Murder Trial,
While it would be absurd toclaim
prophetic significance for dreams in
general, there can bo no doubt what-
ever that, in .some mysterious way,
sleepers have often seen in "visions '.1
the night" scenes, remote either in time
or place, of which in their wakeful
=moments they have had no knowledge
whatever.
The terrible bazaar fire in Paris, Which
so shocked the world a few years ago,
for instance, was foreseen in all its
horrible realism by at least two people,
one ot`whom, in spite of this warning,.
perished in the flames. On the night be-
fore the bbatast.rophe an invalid lady of
Vouziers went through all its horrors
in a dream; she saw the first outlaw's
of the flames, the beautifully -dressed
women rushing frantically in all dime
tions in search of escape; she saw,th
flames leap on them, and in her terror
exclaimed, in the hearing of her docto
and nurse, "They have fallen in. a pile
across the door, and they are all ablaze!
It is raining flames, great drops of fire
are falling on them, the ceiling is giv-
ing way; they are rolling over each
1
other,another
epilingtopof one
on
The poor woman—
DRAGP � man—
DRAG HER OUT, DRAG HER OUT I"
e
WRIGGLES OUT 01? IT.
First Sparrow—What excuse do you
offer your wife nor, staying.out until
morning?
Second Sparrow -1 tell her the early
bird catches the worm.
1' that he consulted the Rev. D. Collier, of
Abertillery, about it, and told him
that he was convinced he had but four
more years to live. No arguments could
shake this conviction, and, strangely
enough, Mr. Gay actually died on the
fourth anniversary remarkable
to v of his roma 1 able
Y
dream.
The French baritone, Jules Devoyod,
on waking one morning, told his wife
that in a dream he had seen himself
lying dead on the stage. In ram did
his wife try to dissuade him from going
to the theatre that evening. IIe went,
took his part in "Rigoletto," ruptured a
blood -vessel during the performance\
and died almost immediately after-
wards.
And when she awoke, from the night -
snare vision she described it all in Its
gruesome detail the scenes which were
enacted a few hours later in distant
Paris.
Equally singular was the story told
not long ago on unimpeachable evi-
dence of Count Cibrario, the head of one
of the most ancient families of Turin.
The Count's son was mountaineering in
"the Maritime Alps, and as he was a
cautious and expert climber his father
had no fears for his safety. One- morn-
ing, however, he announced to his
family that he had had a terrible
dream, in whichhe had seen ins son,
bleeding and battered, lying at the foot
of a precipice, and had heard hien ex-
claim, "Father, 'I slipped down a preci-
pice and broke my head, I am dying."
In vain did the Count's family try to re-
assure him. He persisted that his son
was actually dead, and a few days later
news came that Livia. Cibrario's body
had been found, dreadfully crushed and
bruised, at the bottom of a deep cre-
vasse in the Alps.
A remarkable story was revealed at a
sensational •murder -trial of a couple of
generations ago. The dead body of lvJr.
Norway. an inoffensive Cornish gentle=
ratan, had been found by the roadside
between Wadebridge and Bodmin, and
it was evident that he had been brutally
done to death. The whole country was
excited, and a large reward was offered
for the discovery of the assassins, but
all to no purpose. They had effectually
disappeared, and the mystery of the
crime seemed beyond all solution, when
Mr Norway's brother. a naval officer,
arrived in England and told the
FOLLOWING SINGULAR STORY.
On the very night of his brother's
murder, when he was on his ship in .the
West Indies, he saw him, in a dream,
walking along the Bodmin Road, when,
from a dark recess in the hedge, two
ruffians sprang out. slew and robbed
him, and then made their way to. a
house in Wadebnl'dge, which he saw
vividly in his dream. To this house he
conducted the police officers, and there
he found the very two men whom in his
vision he had seen commit the dastardly
act. They were arrested, confessed, and
suffered the extreme penalty of the law
orie April 13th, 1840. In this case, as in
many of the others cited, it must be re-
membered that the narratives of the
dreans formed part of the sworn
evi-
dence and should thus be placed above
any suspicion of their literal truthful-
ness.
There are many cases on record in
which an opportune dream has saved
a life. Writing of the late Admiral Kep-
pel, • Lord William Seymour says:
"Harry's life was saved by a dream
when in Sir Harry .Tone's camp at Bom-
arsund. A brother officer (I think it was
Cameron Wrottesley, who was himself
killed two days after) said one morning
that he had, in his sleep. seen a shell
explode in the middle of the tent .where
Keppel was sleeping. We cleared out,
and' sure enough, the next morning a
Russian shell ligbled just on what had
been the site of the tent." And, to give
but one more example of this kind, a
well-known war -artist writes thus of
A WARNING DREAM,
which, in all probability, saved his life
a few years ago :--
"This
—"This dream Coincidence certainly
had an effect on my mind, and in a
weak moment I decided I. would not go.
`I'll he hanged if I go up to Etchowe,' I
said to myself, and I didn't. It so hap-
pened that I heard of^a gentleman then
in Durban, who could sketch very well,
and when I had put myself into com-
munication with him he offered to take
my place and send his Sketches down
to me, so that I could touch them up
and send them to England. I communi-
cated with the proprietors of the .'Illus-
trated London News,' informing them of
the whole ineident and what I had done.
isthecurious thing
verythatoutof
C
sixty or more battles I've been present
at, witnessed and sketched, such an
idea as 'keeping out of in never oceure`f
to me, The man who went up for me
was one of the first killed in the fight-
ing 1"
Among the minerous cases of men
whose death, or that of a friend, hes
been foretold in .a dream, the following
are good samples. On February 1.9tli,
1001, Mr. i•Ionry Cay, of Abertillery,
Moninouthshire, hada very vivid dream
which impressed him strongly. He was
standing in the company of "a radiant
being" in a far -spreading cornfield, and.
his companion, plucking four ripe ears
of corn, handed there to him with .the
wards,
' '1•IESt'e ARE POD 'PIiEE."
Mr. Gay was so lrotlblcd by his dream,
MOTHER'S ANXIETY.
•
The summer months are an anxious
time for mothers because they are the
most dangerous months of the year for
young children.. Stomach and. bowel
troubles come quickly during the hot
weather and almost before the mother
realizes that there is danger the little
one may be beyond aid. Baby's Own
Tablets will prevent summer complaints
if given occasionally, because they keep
the stomach and bowels free from of
fending mailer. And the Tablets will
cure these iroub]es if they come sud-
denly. You may save your child's life.
by keeping a box of Baby's Own Tab-
leis on hand to give promptly. Mrs.
t Frank Moore, Northfield, N. S., says:
"1 do not know any medicine •that can
equal Baby's Own Tablets for curing
• stomach and bowel troubles. I al-
ways keep them on hand in case of
emergency." Sold by all medicine deal-
ers or byymail at 25 cents a box from
The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ont.
Time Has Tested It.—Time tests all
things, that which is worthy lives; that
which is inimical ca to mann welfare
-
er
per-
ishes. Time has proved Dr. Thomas'
Lclectric Oil. From a few thousand bot-
tles in the early days of its manufacture
the demand has risen so that now the
production is running into the hundreds
of thousands of bottles. What is so
eagerly sought -for must be good.
"You always appear to be worried
about your housekeeping," remarked the
sympathetic friend. "But, really," re-
plied the housekeeper, "there are only
two occasions when I ala really wor-
ried. One is when I haven't a servant,
and the other is when I have."
Physical Pain and mental anguish afflict the
victims of skin diseases. Get rid of both by rub-
bing Werver's Cerate on the heated, itching, dis-
figured face. The relief given is among the
wonders of medicine.
"Woman," said lie, in agonized tones,
"you litive broken my heart." She laid
her ear to his manly bosom. "No," said
she, after listening intently, "there is
not` the slightest evidence of organic
le:ion. There is a slight palpitation,
due, perhaps, to cigarettes. That is
all." And now the young man swears
that hereafter when he makes love to a
girl he willbe sure she is not a medical
student.
A Cure for .Rheumatism.—The intru-
sion of uric acid into the blood vessels
is a fruitful cause of rheumatic pains.
This irregularity, is owing to a derang-
ed and unhealthy condition of the liver.
Anyone subject to this painful affection
will find a remedy in Parmelee's Vege-
table Pills. Their action upon the kid-
neys is pronounced and most beneficial
and by restoring -healthy action, they
correct impurities in' the blood.
RABD1TS IN AUSTRALIA.
A writer describes a plague of rab-
bits in. Australia : "A farmer barricades
himselfin with miles upon miles of
wire fencing solely to keep out the rab-
bits. They eat their way up to the bar-
riers, and in the fight for the green
land within the wire they die in myr-
iads. All round the enclosed land they
lie in heaps of incredible size. Swarm
atter swami follows on, and at last the
heaps of dead are so high that the late
comers make their way over the fence
and the farm is ruined."
lommmsa1..
PLEASANT MOMENTS.
It has been said with a great deal of
truth that you can never beeline really
acquainted with a man until you have
supped with him, and in 'order to en-
sure a pleasant time good tea must be
used. During the past sixteen years
"SALADA" has become a familiar word
tr; every newspaper reader, and the fact
that the demand is steadily increasing
requires no comment; it tells its own
Story, "SALADA" is king. The delici-
ous flavor .of "SALADA" Teais due
largely to the care used in the culliva-
lion and preparation and to the fact
that it ispacked in sealed lead pack-
ages which prevent it conning in con-
tact with articles that would affect its
flavor..
A RASH ACT.
Bella -George proposed to me la4t
night,
Nell—Oh, poor fellow! fro threatened
he would go and do" something desperate
when 1 refused him last week.
. Holloway's Corn Cure is the .medicine
to remove all kinds of corns and warts,
and only costs the small suns of twenty-
five cents.
FRIGHTENED,
"Were you frightened when you
arose to make your first speech?"
"What should frighten .ale?"
"The audience."
"The audience left as soon as my
name was announced."
ifou are out of sorts get
YO a bottle of 'Ferrovim'
the best tonic, and you will bo surprised how
quickly that tired feeling Will wear oft. $1.00
bottles. del dealers in medicine.
Berne (about to propose)—"Miss Bol
1n —
i a r
Aau —
d theat
r has. been-somt.thint,
trembling upon my lips for these last
few da
ys—er Maud (mistaking his
meaning) "Why not shave it off?"
Cucumbers and melons are "forbid-
den fruit." to many persons so consti-
tuted that the least indulgence is fol
]owed by attacksof cholera, dysentery,
griping, etc. These persons are not
aware that they can indulge to their
heart's content if they have on hand a
bottle of Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery
Cordial, a medicin.e that will give im-
mediate relief, and is a sure cure for all
sun'nner comptaints.
May --"Really, I don't feel like walk-
ing. i\iy feet bother me a good deal."
Jack—"Why, you must be nervous?"
May—"Nervous! Why?" Jack—"Other-
wise you wouldn't let such little things
bother your
Sunlight Soap is batter than other soap~:
but in boat when need in the sunlight way.
Buy Sunlight soap and follow directions.
Home Seeker—"What miserably Im-
perfect glass you have in these win-
dows? Every object is horribly dis-
torted." Agent --"Yes, ma'am; that's so
you'll feel better •, satisfied with yourself
when you look through those windows
at your neighbors." -
They are a Powerful Nervine.—Dys-
pepsia causes derangement of the nerv-
ous system, and nervous debility once
engendered is difficult to deal with.
There are many testimonials as to the
efficacy of Parmelee Vegetable
Prlls'n
treating this disorder, showing that
they never fail to produce good results.
By giving proper tone to the digestive
organs, they restore equilibrium to the
nerve centres.
She—"What do you think of my sis-
ter's coming-out costume?" 1•Ie—"Most
appropriate. She seems certainly to be
corning out of it.".
There is nothing equal to Mother
Graves' Worm I3xterminator for destroy-
ing worms. No article of its kind has
given such satifaclion.
EGYPTIAN CURE FOR SUNSTROKE.
Travellers in Egypt must often have
noticed curious scars upon the foreheads
Graf the natives, though perhaps they have
not discovered its significance. nt is a
sign that the man who bears it has had,
or has fancied' that he had, sunstroke.
The formula for the malady is curious
and typically Eastern. The victim must
be laid full length upon the ground and
massaged from the feet upward, The
sunstroke is some form of evil genius
which must he squeezed and forced into
one spot. This the massage accomplish-
es. When " the masseur has done his
best to this end, and assumes that the
virus of the enemy is all concentrated
in the forehead of the patient, then' the
teeth of the operator are applied to the
infected area, and a piece of the flesh
of the forehead bitten out. The strange:
thing is that the treatment is said to be
invariably efficacious. It may be faith
cure, or it may be that the sunstroke
itself was imaginary—the cure is sure.
FACTS ABOUT MANKIND.
Married people live longer than the
unmarried, the temperate and indus-
trious longer than the gluttons and
idle, and civilized' nations longer than
the uncivilized. Tall persons enjoy a
greater longevity than small ones.
Women have a more favorable chance
of life before: reaching their fiftieth year
than men, but a less favorable one after
that period. The proportion of married
persons to single ones is as 75 to 1,000,
Persons . born in Spring have a more
robust constitution than those born et
other seasons. Births and deaths occur,
v
all
v morefrequently at
the world over
night than in the day time. There are
at present 3.000 languages spoken by
the inhabitants of our globe. whose re-
ligious convictions are divided between
1,000 different confessions of faith.• The
average duration of life is thirty-three
years. One-fourth of the population of
the earth dies before attaining the
seventeenth year. Of a thousand per-
sons only one reaches the age of a hun-
dred years, and not more than six that
of sixty-five years.
M. Courtenay (flatteringly)—"1 lied the
y blues awfully when 1 game here tonight,'
nigh
Miss Fished, but they are all gone now.:
nen are as good as medicine." Miss
Fisher's Little 13rether—"Yes; father
himself .says she'll be a deng in the
market If she doesn't catch, some fellow
Sam,"
4
i 0,
Wind,
Waterp
SUM
and:.
Fire
Proof
HAWA" Seel Shin les
I1 11i
litealeAVIMIEr Mi,
iSte:'.r'nnne
W a J , t .11 AM ill
. YI tetras slate•
34 NM iii IN IN 4 414 r4 a ,li if Iiiiiiiiii tit ant r
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U d*I 4O .� r1 ✓. .• W e�asral'ettmlla,p
r! -rel er ). AWAY
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dd AO DOr.� dal tit7—O�O� r �,. �r �: ea.M�vV}
`fry. •/w.OQ>d ,4po.1 �v rr>O `..ViCq.A' fly,•
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ON 0i
Ps
POI
Looked
on
AH
Four
Sides
Made from Painted or. Galvanized Steel, at prices varying from $2.85 to $5.10
per hundred square feet covering measure. This is the most durable eov
ering on the market, ,and In an ideal covering for Houses, Barns, Stores, Rie-
vators, Churches, etc. Any bandy man can lay the "OSHAWA" shingles. A
hanliner and snips are the only tools required.
We are the largest and oldest ccompany of the kind under the British
flag, and have covered thousands of the best buildings throughout Canada.
Making diem
FIRE, WATER AND LIGHTNING -PROOF.
We also manufacture Corrugated Iron in long sheets, Conductor Pipe and.
EAVESTROUGII, Etc.
METAL SIDING, in imitation of brick- or, stone„
METAL CEILINGS, in 2,000 designs, '
Write for Catalogue No. 14R and free samples of "OSHAWA" Shingles.
Write to -day.
113101EE3S1 3E0 3E33Ia 31E0 3E2 Ce 3E01.a3B,
321-3 W Craig
Montreal, oatOttawa, OBI. Toronto, Ont. loudoa, Oft wInni eg, paa. uaacQUYer,B.e.
St. 423 428 Sutsex et. 11 Colborne, et ! 09 Dundas et. 76 Lombard at. 615 Ponder st.
+
� l
Write your Nearest Office.—HEAD OFFICE AND WORKS—OSHAWA, Ont
LM Two cornering.
In Western Canada eeetione,aelett.
ed lauds in
Saskatchewan, only 8 miles from two railwaye, C.P.R. ds G.T.N.
strong soil, 90 per cent. plough land, spring creek, no sloughs.
About 40 miles N.E. of Indian Head. Pace $10.69 per acxs.
' Write for map and fall particulars.
RPA SONS,91.
Wellesley Street, Toronto, Canada.
f . wTHING More Safe
and Sure
Than an Investment in
Toronto Real Estate.
$34,000 -FOR INVESTMENT—Block of new solid brick
houses, under five years' lease to pay over 10 per cent. net: most cen-
trally situated on quiet residential street. As owner has other houses
n do construction these are offered at a bargain.
S. FRAtii( -WILSON, Owner, 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto.
TELEPHONE MAIN 15.
THE
BISSELL STEEL ROCU
With Three Drums and Strong, Rigid Frame.
Soine improvements are: Heavy Steel Axle,
Thick, Heavy Steel Plate,iOrrtms Rivetted up
to stand any strain, Roller Bearings. stuns like
a bird. Full particulass free by mail, or ask
your dealer. None genuine without the name
BISSELL." For Sale by Agents.
On exhibition in the new Implement and
Process of Manufacture building at Toronto
Fair, also on exhibition at Ottawa Fair in the
implement building. Fun particulars free.
Send your address to
T. E. BISSELL, Dept L, ELO A, ENT
AUT
BILE F
ftL
Fifty Horse Power 6' THOMAS" Motor
Car, in perfect condition, cost $5,000.
Very low price takes it. Address,
5 Dale Ave., Rosedale, Troth
TELEPHONE MAIN 15.
Wilson' s
FLY
PADS
ONE PACKET HIS
ACTUALLY KILLED
A BUSHEL. OF FLIES
Bold by all Druggists and General Stored
and by mail.
TEN CENTS PER PACKET FROM
ARCHDALE WILSON,.
KAB ILTON, ONT.
have no home—" began the beg-
gar. "Sorry, old man," said the brisk
pedestrian, "but I have only one. How-
ever, if you'll pay the mortgage I'll give
you thatl"
ASTONISHED THE DOCTOR
Physician Said She Might Drop Dead
at Any Time.
"The Doctor told
me I had heart dis-
ease and was liable
to drop on the street
at any time," says
Mrs. Robert Eaton, cf
Dufferin, Ont.
"Iw a afraid d to
s Ira
draw my breath, it
pained n1e so. I was
nervous, short of
`tr breath, had dizziness,
Mrs. Robert Eaton loss of . appetite,
smothering and sinking spells, and 1
Could not sleep.
"Sometimes I would have to lie down
to keep from falling. My hands and feet
would seem to go to sleep and a sort of
ntinbnesS would come all over me.
111 began usng Dr. Leonhnrdt's Anti -
Pill. Frons the start 1 improved. -'l feel
much stronger, loots better, and alto-
gether Anti -Pill look
made a new woman
0f ale.
"I am entirely 'cured."
All denlels or the Wilson -Pyle Co.,
Limited, Niagara nulls, Ont.
1' N lLl ISSUE. NO, 35--,.!i
a
WANTH O
sI. EN AND WOMEN everywhere, Loueekeopl
ers buy over and over again, now used in al
pillion homes. Send post card for ten cent pack-
tgo frac. Write quick. Spencer Company, Barrie,
Drat.
Sewovuperflued frousom Hthaireface, canarmbesj
r
`� and neck in Two Minutes
a 3` and growth forever destroyed by PILATOhl'
Perfectly harmless. Sent by mail, sealed,
on receipt of price, $1.00. AGENTS WANTED.
The Lane Medicine Co., Montreal, Que.
To Ainatour P.h.oto rapliors
If rou want the best results from your
plate and terns get them developed and
finished by us. Enlargements, 8x10,
50e; 10x20, $1.25. Full price lists free.
-1+IG•ARY'S PHOTO STUDIO
590 Yonge St. Toronto.
(Calgary District)
Ready for the plough.
Convenient to Railway and Post
Office, Market and Schools.
Climate the finest in Canada.
Cattle graze all winter, and fatten on
prairie hay.
Soil the richest in the Northwest.
Will grow, without irrigation,
Winter Wheat, Oats, Barley, Sugar
Beets, Alfalfa, and almost anything
that grows in other parts of Canada.
With irrigation a crop never fails.
11 the best Ontario farms could be
irrigated, they would double their
present average yield, and could
be cropped tett years longer without
running out.
They are cheaper now than tlitey
will ever be.
The first crop should pay for the
land and increase its value four -fold.
Special Reduced Railway RateS.'
Write for illustrated folder.
Telfer & Osgood
Selling Agents
Ras CORIsTIPHZ .BUILDING
MQNTHEAL