HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-11-15, Page 7CIWTAir
Eeeps your body
waren, yet lets
your skill breathe
—knit, loot'
woven,—
,
--it fits,
doesPEN
ANGLE
Underwear.
tap
Guarsed
Against:
Shrinkage
Roe
TrodeM a„ r
Trade-markedin red In a
arietyof styles, fabriceand
prices, fora women, meed.
d
hildren, - 8'u
ARTISTIC
Toilet Ware
TOILET WARE in artistic
!l abundance is pictured in the
page's of our Catalogue. Whether
your taste turn. to Silver,. Ebony. or
Ivory. it will find ample variety from.
which to choose.
From our own factory comes the
richly chased Pompadour Pattern in
heavy Sterling Silver: A six -piece
set—consisting of Cloth. Velvet and
Hair Brushes, with Mirror and Comb
--is unprecedented value et 130.
PiectsCare sold singly if desired.
so that a set may be added to. year
by Year.
D%t +u a postal card and we seal
send yoafree of elunge our large iUus-
fraled cola/gene'fttJewelry, Silverware,
Lather Goods, eta
7o1wGa.bnt.
LONG SIIOTS WI'i'II LONG BOWS
One of 307 Yards Made in Jtzly—I3ut
Tiley Did Heiler in Days Gozle By.
e,.theon
In England they still draw long
tow in fact as well as in fancy. There
are country parsons -they secni aspect. -
telly addicted to archery --who can beep
four arrows in the air at once, all timed
t4) descend near the centre of a 150 yard
erg
di'an target, &Omit, r
Flight orb long dtstiince shooting is,
Of, course, a special department of arch-
ery, On the occasion of the meeting
at Le Touquet in last 3my Sir Ralph
Payne-Gallwey, shooting with an old
Turkish bow of curious ;lake, some-
what resembling that of an American
split can rod (of force equivalent to
112 pounds), shot one of lus Turkish
flight arrows (weighing about three-
fifths of an ounce) for the astonishing
distance of 367 yards, as carefully mea-
sured, on a windless day.
The previous record (if its accuracy
be equally reliable) seem.; more remarli
able still,
in 1795 Mahmoud Effendi of the Turk --
tall Legation, m Landoll, ;using a Turk-
ish bow still preserYed at the 'Archer's
Hall, in Regent's...Park, ;accomplished.
4S0 yards.
With the exception of the Roman
short sword perhaps no weapon has
accomplished so much net carnage as
the English yew bow end cloth yard
shaft, says Baily's Magazine,
The wounds inflicted ' were always
more dangerous and hard to be cured
than those of any (unpoisoned)•shot,`and
it was realized—at least among English
archers—drat the smaller the holes
made in the body, the more difficult
they were to heal; whilo,the barb could.
easily be made in such form as to defy
extraction, even, by the most skilful sur-
geon.
Even the bulky, slow going balm of
those clays effected a much cleaner in-
jury, and often passed through the.
body of horse or man and was gone,
while the effect of tho n theyardk ofd shaft,
o
hanging and flapping
wounded horse, rendered the animal
perfectly unmanageable.
In 1595 it is recorded that a party of
Scotch rebels (bowmen)
encountering
th
500 well appointed
King's did engage them and kill nearly
300 of the horses (besides slaying or se-
verely wounding most of the men), a
success which would do credit to the
Weiser rate.
But the historic carnival of archery
was, of course, the battle of Crecy
(1341), when the English, numerically
half the .strength of the French, rein-
forced as the latter were by ,those 15,-
000 Genoese cross bowmen, inflicted a
defeat familiar to every school -boy.
AU the carnage of a respectable mod-
ern campaign would scarcely strike the
imagination beside the spectacle of those
"thirty thousand men at arms, and
"eleven hundred princes, dukes amt
captains" left 'dead upon that fatal field,.
of wounds at which modern surgery
would shudder aghast.
The Mic-Mac
Hockey Stick
IS MADE FIliaid SELECTED SECOND
GROWTH YELLOW ninon, GRAIN OF
WOOD RUNNING WITHI CURVE OF
BLADE. SOME OF ITS EXCELLENT
FEATURES ARE;
1st. Stiffness and Lightness.
2nd. Does not fray at bottom.
3rd. Keeps its correct shape.
4th. Weight and design correct,
5th. Etery stick carefully in-
spected before leaving factory.
TILE STAIR IMO CO,
LIMITED,
DARTMOUTH, - N. S.
Branch. 126 Wellington
St. W., Toronto.
THE REX
HOCKEY
STICK,
Our Latest Pattern
fi'tnE EXPERT'S FAVORITE.
•pOTh—The longitudinal serrations on
handle, enacduortt firtu:grip• rod •
preventing etiek elippieg • Irene '.
pIayere hand.. •, .
The donblelrooved blade,: the
lower sue also being serratod.
This enables ,the park. to' be ac-
curate* shot fort goal , awd
strengthens the etiok.•
The material used Is
istratght grata selected
*ac is �plow
lew
IN A DEADLY DECLINE;.
Saved Just in Time by Dr, Williams'
Fink: Pills.
"Before my (laughter Lena „c
an tak-
ing
Or. Williams' ,Piffle t'i1le she looked
tt'ruce like 0. corpse than a live. girl,'
says Mrs. Geo. A. Myles, of Soutl.A)v'ood,
5liae, Out. "Ilei' blood Seethed as though
it had all turned to water, Then slue
• heart.
a
1't.
m
'ii 11 i
,�is .a
've bad
)L1 wt., 4
1 t 1tL
1 1`�
began 0l
At the least excitement tier tweet, would.
beat so rapidly as to ahnest smother'
her. She grew very thin, had no ap-
petite, alid what ittt;le food she did eat
did not seem to ,nourish her. She was
treated by one of the best doctors in
this part of tale country, yet slue was
dally•growing worse and her heart got
sc bad that we were afraid• that she
but very little,
would die. slept,She
and would, frequently awake with a
start and sometimes would jump right
up in bed. These starts would always
bring on a bad spell and leave her weak
and exhausted. We had ahnost given
up 'all hope of her ever being well again,
when we decided to try Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. After taking a couple cf
boxes she'began to'sleep better al night
and color began to return to her lips.,
:g in
From that on she kept baht on gainin
and alter taking eight boxes of the pills
she was again in good health. She is
now fifteen years of age, the picturO 'f
health, and since beginning the pills
has gained about forty pounds in weight.
Only these who saw her when illcan
appreciate the marvellous change .Dr.,
Williams' Pink Pills have brought about
iri her condition.. I believe that had it
not been for the pills she would be in
her grave to -day, and -it is - with feel-
ings of great gratitude that 1 -write you
in the hope that it may benefit some
other sufferer."
And Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can do
just as much for. every weak, ailing,
pale -faced young woman who is slip=
ping from anaemia into a eleadly de-
cline. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actually
make new blood. In that way they
strike straight; at the root of all com-
mon diseases like anaemia, headaches
and backaches, heart palpitation, indi-
gestion, neuralgia; rheumatism and the
secret ailments and irregularities 'of
girls and women. Sold by all dealers
in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box
or six boxes for $2,50 from The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
QUITE AS LOUD,
A few weeks ago a big transatlantic,
liner was proceeding through a dense'
fog off the banks of Newfoundland,
when suddenly tate loud squealing of tz
pig was heard right ahead,
A few minutes later flee ocean levia-
than, going dead slow, ran clow alone
aisle a small washtub of a -Norwegian
barque, upon whose deck two men Were
Bolding a pig aloft by the ear ,
13y (1C liaise the emote was making
it was °quite evident that it dad lint ezu.
joy its position.
The barque's master shouted in bro-
ken 'English, inquiring why the steamer
Game so close.
The captain of the liner retorted 1)y
wanting to know why in thunder he did
not blow his foghorn.
At this the former replied, to the
anlusernent of all on board:
"Abe got' no foghorn. Me lose lame;
so me use de pig."
"Thought It• meant death sure."—Mrs.
James McKim, of Dunnville, Ont., says
,of her almost miraculous cure from heart
disease by Dr. Agnew's Cure for the
Heart: "Until I began taking this reme-
dy I despaired of my life. I had heart
failure and extreme prostration, One
dose gave me quick relief and one bottle
cured me. The sufferings of years wore
dispelled like magic."—3
COOKED THE MEAT.
Mr. Brampton had always understood
that the life a sailor lives at sea is ex,
ceedingly primitive; but a revelation he
received recently proved a shock, even
le him.
He wished to consult the mate of a
vessel about to start on a voyage, and
when he got aboard he spoke to the first
man he saw.
"Excuse me," he said, "but are you
the .;late?"
The answer came in a rich brogue.
"No, sorr," said the individual, "Oi'm
the mon as cooks the mate."
"Good gracious!" said Mr. Brampton.
At Wiswick, a tiny village between
Harrow .and Ulverston, necessity having
arisen for extension of the village
churchyard, the 'whole able-bodied po-
pulation turned out, under the guidance
of their vicar, removed the old walls,
levelled the ground, and constructed a
new: road,, the excavation work being
• Mone- by. miners after their day's work
in the• pit.'
•A re^ord number of Essex ploughmen
assembled'• at William 'recently for 1.
• ploughing .competition- organised tinder
•. tin county Council, scherlie. There were
no entries in the boys' elnsees, and the
Hon, C. I1 :. Striilt., chairman of the
committee, said ;the absence of, young
ploughmen, m
aIkeltnow phose in ogre
1i
cultural life, and
n`eint (het the
P
1
ou le
Men would soon become extinct.
5h
i
KI,
t,'14"H��.�®1$gA6hr.
Lf't
rEs
d•:.
)°
4'4 is%s add oltlr.
COMFORTING FJORDS.
"Ah . d4 ctor, said the melancholy iii-.
v2rlitl,'"I'li:,never rind relief .until I'm' in
my grave."
''Oh,, well, don't worry," replied the
M. D.;''I'm doing the best I tan dor
you.
mamma
A RELIABLE CARETAKER.
(laving engaged a married couple to
take care of the house while she was
away, a wealthy lady cautiously locked
up everything that was of the slightest
value—a proceeding which the care-
taker's wife watched with disapproving
eyes.
"It isn't because I doubt your honesty,
my good woman," the lady explained.
"f am doing this 1n your interests, so
that, if anything is missing when I re-
turn, you and your husband cannot be
held responsible."
"Oh, as for that, ma'am, your things
would be a thousand times safer if you
didn't 'lock 'em up at all," said the wo-
man. "My husband wouldn't touch the
Koh -i -poor if it were lying about loose,
but locks and bolts is ailers a tempta-
tion to him. You see, ma'am, he used
lo do a bit of burglin', just as a sort of
a hobby, before I married hint, and old
habits die hard!"
The lady didn't go away until she had
engaged another caretaker.
SCALD BRAD Is a disgusting and 'obstinate
disease, frequent in children. Treatment: Per-
fect
Veaver'aCerate.and
Motbe Mothers b. us application
tollearn
this.
EUROPEAN DAILY NEWSPAPERS.
Germany, which stands at the head
of Europe for the number of its news-
papers,_ has over 5,500, of which 800 are
"dailies:" • England takes the second
place with some 3,000, but bas the most
dailies --809 in all. France is close be-
hind with. 2,800, of which a quarter ap-
pear daily, bi or ti's -weekly: Italy has
1.200, while in order, totemwAustsra,
•Spain, Russia; Gr"ecce; ;end'Sivityeareate:
Catarrh ter twenty years and cured In
a ten Reye.—Hoa. George James, of
Scranton. Pa., nays: 'I' have been`
mortar to Catarrh for twenty years,
0012*
'stent hawking;: dropPini .in thei...throat
and , pain in. ` the ;head; very :offs:narve
broatli. I tried -Dr.,: Agnew's 'Catistrbel
Powder. The first applieutien gave in•
stunt relief. After using. al Sew bottles
I was cured. 68 cents. -1
DON'T BC A BAKER.
The latest compilations which have
been made show that the air in cutlery
factories 1$ laden with invisible metal-
dusl, and this, being carried_ into the
Bungs, causes astiuun end consumption,
The steel -grinders, bonding over their"
work, Inhales such huge quantities of
metal -dust, that they rarely live Ieyoncl
t1'. age of forty, All metal trades are
very hazardous, end phthisis or tuber-
cular affections and respiratory.disenses,
are the penalt'.ies of these' pursuits. The
rete Of martelily at1IOngst btaivers is
50 Per cent. greater tial that nMong
men of ordinary Callings. Gout is a
r
enemy which makes itself serely frit in
this-ocettpatton. 'Bakers, too, ere mote
than. norreeity subject to premature
death, In Ilio flour there Is n very small
Microbe, which has its efteat on the
teeth, and attacks the drullls at the
ears, causing deafness.
Bickle's Anti -Consumptive Syrup Is
agreeable to the• taste, and is a certain
relief for irritation of the throat that
causes hacking Coughs. 1f used accord-
ing, to directions it will break rho most
persistent cold, and restore the air pas-
sages to their normal condition. There
le no need to recommend it to those fa-
miliar with it, but to those who seek a
sure remedy and are in doubt what to
-use, the advice is—try i3ickle's Syrup.
DIPLOMAT.
Polly (to her fiance)—"Tom, you
danced four •times with that girl Jen -
'lens and only twice with me.'
Torii (shyly) --"Well, it takes quantity,
you 'knew, to make up for quality"
BY BRIBING TIIE "NERVES with opium you
fray stop a cough but the inflammation goes from
bad to *orna •Atian'a Lung Balsam, ccntaiuing
no opium, goes to the root ,of the trouble and
cures deep-seated affections of throat and lunge.
A SOLO PART.
She—"Did you find your investment
a paying one?"
He—"Yes, but I did all the paying."
The healthy glow disappearing from
the cheek and moaning and restlessness
at night are sure symptoms of worms
in children. Do not fail to get a bottle
of Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator;
it is an effectual medicine.
"And do you believe that the figure
thirteen is unlucky?" asked Pat. "Sartinly
I do," replied Micky, "I've seen it often.
There's always thirteen against me—the
judge and the twelve jurymen."
Dick—"You are such a funny girl. I
never did know how to take you." Kit-
ty (coyly)—"You never tried."
BABY'S FRIEND.
Happiness is a sign of health in ba-
bies. Nearly all their troubles vanish
when they digest food well and are tree
from -teething pains. Baby's Own Tab-
lets brings happiness to babies by cur-
ing stomach troubles. constipation, fev-
erishness, diarrhoea and teething trou-
bles. There's a smile in every dose and
tiro mother has a solemn guarantee
that this medicine contains no opiate
or harmful drug. Mrs. James lowers,
Beaver Harbor, N.S., says: "I have giv-
en my baby Baby's Own Tablets as oc-
casion required since she was a day
old. They have always helped her, and
now at a year .and a half old she is a
fine henithy child I think every Mo-
ther should alyvays keep ,these: Tablets
on hand.-- ..You earn: get•• Baby's- ,.Own
°Table.ts from any •medicine dealer or by
mail at 25 cents a box by writing The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,:
Ont.
LABOR IN AUSTRALIA.
What Recent Report Tells of Conditions
There.
Reports from New South Wales show
.that there is practicality no demand for
more labor of any kind, except for" -fe-
male servants. At Young, however,
there is a demand for farm and general
laborers and pastoral hands, and for a
few carpenters, joiners, bricklayers,
stonemasons and blacksmiths.
In Victoria there is no general de-
mand Tor mechanics, but at Bendigo
;men in.; the building,,trades have been
Wan ted'
. 1ri' South 'Ai.ustralia the lowest wages
payable for dressmakers or milliners
of five years' experience have just been
fixed by.the•boards appointed 'under the
Factories Act, et 1,6s per week of 48
hours;• In. • t1iacenslana : arid:;' -Waster n
Australia farm laborers, and lads for
Items, are wanted in some of the farm-
ing districts- '
in New Zealand men in the building,
engineering, clothing, and boot trades,
and in th
sav
ml1ls and on farms have
been generally busy, and in some places
there has been a difficulty in procuring
competent roan.„e All mechanics are
warned against, going. to Cape Col-
ony, but (here is a good demand for
competent Women servants,
in Natal there is n.`tplentiful supply of
skilled and iic skilled labor, And no
more is wonted. Person8 are warned
against going to the Transvaal at the
present time in search of work.
ONE ON US,
"1 bnow of hilt One' outhcntidatcd
5 'ti heir turningwhile
0
i. n
e,t+
' "of.
a
ac P
case
in a single night,” said the physiole-
gist, "It was the ease of a young and
hetntlrf tl girt who---"
"Who Was jilted'?" we in'torruplcd
eagerly:
"Nov who fell head drat into a barrel
of flour."
Dear Mother
Your little ones are a constant care is
Fall and Winter weather. Theywill
catch call. Do you know about Sloh's
Consumption Cure, the Lung Tonic. and
what it has done for so many? 1t is said
to be the only reliable remedy for all
'diseases of the air passages in children.
It is absolutely harmless and .pleasant to
take. Itis guaranteed to cure or your money
is returned. The price is 25c. per bottle.
sed all dealer in medicine sell 314
SHILOH
,This remedy should be in every household.
•
REVENGE.
Johnny—"I'll get even with 'Ina for
spankin' me."
Tommy—"Aw, what'll you do?"
Johnny—"One o' these days I'll ever-
lastin'dy whale her grandchildren."
4000.14.M40 •
EXPE .eTORA.MT
•
i
The sign that drives away Colds, .Carriage, 'W'hoopfn :
� Cava. Asthma, Throat troubles. Ctgup, 'etc., etc..
Produced by the highest ' nsedtcal kinowled f e ottd
science
a A pure veuetnblr cough syrup.
Your druggist not only keeps it, but, recommtenda 1t.14
'rice, 25 cents.
r. _..... "lr'••."f
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v
• _ __ _ a _. -
69118
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EXPECTORAidT
_ _.».x
ocyyle
Tao Years Abed.—"For eight years I
suffered as no one ever did with rheuma-
tism; for two years I lay in bed; could
not so mach as feed myself. A friend
recommended South American Rheuma-
tic Cure. After three doses I could sit
up. Today I am as strong as ever I
was."—Mrs. John Cook, 887 Clinton street,
Toronto. -2
Brannigan—"What's the matter, Wil-
likin?" •Wiilikin—"Matter enough. You
know some time ago. I assigned all my
:properly to my.wife,.to-=to:.keep it out
of the hands`•of—of people'1:• owe; you
knew" "Yes." "Well, she's taken the
money and gone off—says she won't
live with me because I'swindled my cre-
ditors"
" OS HAW >, Steel
Wind,
Waters
Stcrm
and
Fire
Proof
Shingles.
®1 /I
tp% -r---
dr—_, Looked
,.�) ,4...,..94x.,.:.,,...jt gassn.. iasssstaee.za
lk s. [.l>AIV.,V :F./OIrGp .:,t.,...3., �"'-""r.oY�7�11��
A.>t>Ub, AAS
.`.3uoorn.rbv.►�Ci-.:vrr �in''�o ,,��, �•.�y All
Ja1`c#Q`dr¢t+,.t.`avx[t,���r6•�.u.G.,�tO,e)d.�.)._ QOQ.vtrlLr, q,. Four
Iri4vr✓..,;....i,i•tmt4ivvvV_r.�a:1A1C4.VvtSvt�VV.�o:I,ar,/r," 7>•
�,i.,i, ftinn'e`T,...Te/'!'r�.w,a_'""r„'+•t; � 1,� Sidse
t!:ef ilk Re sera ! a ail- �' sl♦ air—ie. er
Made from Painted or Galvanized Steel, at prices vary ng from $2.85 to $5.10
per, bund'ed square feet covering measure. This is the most durable cov-
ering on he market., and is an ideal covering for Houses, Barns, Stores, Ele-
vators, Churches, eta. Anybandy lruzn can lay the "OSHAWA" shingles. A
hammer and snips are the only fools 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 then
FIRE, WATER AND UGHTNiNG-PROOF.
We also manufacture Corrugated Ironin long sheets, Conductor Pipe and
EAVTSTROIJGIi, Etc.
METAL SIDING, in imitation of brick or stone.
METAL CEILINGS, in 2,000 designs.
Write for Catalogue No. 1311 and free samples of ;`OSHAWA" Shingles.
Write to -day.
AorlNrem, one., OHM, oat. [-ioro�mo, ons. `toodoo, poi, I Woilion, Mea. inICOlVer,B.G.
8213 W Craig St. 423 Sussex at. 11 Colborne at fib Dundas st. 76 Lombard 'st. as Ponder et,
^_— Write your NearestOffica.—BEAD OFFICE AND WORKS—OSHAWA, Ont
THE PRICE OF SUCCESS.
Eternal vigilance is the price of suc-
cess, and it is in this way that the
succescs of the Starr lvlfg. Co.'s
hockey skates and slicks has been
bought. The makers are ever
at, the alert to know what the hockey
iris' requirements are and iii this way
incorporate these features which make
their line the most popular in the mar-
ket. They are also alert to see that
their goods cannot be 'excelled in qua-
lity of materials and workmanship. This
policy, whiclh will always he maintained,
has made the firm and its goods fain-
ous thousands of miles away from the
little Nova Scotian town where the fee -
tory is situated.
WE CLAIM that '"The I) & L " Menthol Plaster'
will cure Lumbago, Backache, Sciatica orNeural-
gia Penia quicker than any other plaster. Re.
commended by everybody.
UNUSUAL COMPLAINT.
Mrs. New-wed—Dear me, these eggs
are very small.
Village Grocer—They are indeed,
mum, and I'm sure I don't know why.
Mrs. New-wed—Ob, I dare say it's
because you take them out of the nest
too soon.
Are your corns harder to remove than
those that others have had? Have they•
not had the same': kind? Have they not
been cured by using Holloway's Corn
Cure- Try a bottle.
NOT POSSIBLE.
"Do you treat yourcook as one of the
family'!'' •
: t'
"Good t.acious, nnt Sie would;t
permit such familiarity,
E
Made in Ca adsa dts Sold by all
Dru
This coupon is good for one 'en
cent (100,) Trial Bottle of the cele-
brated
Dr. Leonhordt'sAnti-Pill
s sire euro for Indigestion, Iiiliote-
gess, Dyspepsia, Constipation and
all ailments arising the:Ofrom.
Mailed (tee, in a plain package, on
receipt of nameand address. Fill
in your name and post oiiice e,ddress
bA dotted lines and Send to
TOE WiL50N-E`YLE CO., Limited,
NF{
Niagara a Is ,
at,L
>tir a
LITERAL RURAL BOBBY.
Gus (fearful of a rival) ---"Bobby, does
a young man call here in the evening
to see your sister?"
Bobby—"Well, not exactly to see her,
'cause there's no light in the room when
they're there."
WEAK WATERY BLOOD causes mnch trouble.
That tired feeling and many more symptoms
follow in Be wake. Try Ferrovim. It
beat tonic to make you strong and well. All
druggists sell it.
A gentleman was once invited to a
house where he considered the dinner
was inadequate, and as he was leav-
ing the host asked hien when he would
dine with him again.
"Now," was the startling reply.
A Time for Everything. .The time for
Dr. Thomas' Eclectric 011 is when crou-
py-. symptoms appear in the children;
when•,rheumatic•'pains 'beset the `ofd;•
when Lumbago, asthma, 'coughs, colds,
catarrh or earache •attack either young
oi- dud; • when burns, 'scalds, abrasieno;
contusions or sprains conte to anymem-
ber of the family. In any of these ail-
ments .it will- give relief, and work :a
cure.
When opportunity knocks it doesn't
use a hammer.
A modern weapon M the batEe ter
bssft .—It disease hoe taken year cite.
del of health.. the stomach, *ad ie torture
ins you with indigestion, dyspepsia and
nervous prostration, South American
Herein is the weapon to drive the enemy
from his etroefbotd 'tat the point of the
bayonet," trench ry trench, but mitt .n4
,ure, it ahreem wiosd- 4
"Miss Passay seems to dislike Mr.
O'Bull " "Yes, he tried, to pay her a
compliment. He made 'the mistake r,f
telling her she was in the prime of
life."
0644.••-,••
Signals'' of ' Danger.—Have : -you lost
yr'ur appetite? Have you a: coated
tongue? . •Slave yeR an unpICS8Ab:t taste
• in 'the mouth? Does' 'your :head "'ache,
and have you- dizziness? If so, your
stomach is out of order and you need
medicine. But you do pot like medicine,
I -1e• that prefers sickness to medicine
must suffer, but under the mr um t
n
ccs
the wise man would procure a box r
Parnlelee's. Vegel:able Pills and speedily
get hhnself in health, and strive to keep
so.
FOR SALE.
Three hundred Stock, Grain, Fruit
Garden and Canning Factory Produce
Farms in the Niagara District Write
Ior free list, Ontario Real Estate Com-
pany, Smithville, Ont.
$60
POPULARITY OF Tilt's POST -CARD
The statistical abstract for the Veiled
Ktngdorn, just published, shows the
great increase. in late' years in the use
of post-eards. The artistic merit of
ninny of the illustrated varieties, is be
lieved to be responsible for the increase.
In 1891-2 the total number reached 241,-
750,0001 while lest year the number had
increas0
ed t over 800 000 000.
Ho. *70 Para at,
)vans, Odwon—"John, I've waited and
waited for you to come home until I
wars half' frightened to death!" Oldwnn
—"Yes, sw that's iliac like $u-w-41dW0 0t.
frig things by 1ikivestr•
GOCs ate SIXTY
SELLS tine SIXTY
SELLS FOR SIXTY
SASO1mE
E Giti ES
??:. fore t.
Chum >or,
d for catalogue.
stupe EPB. CO.
Pert Washir glen,Wls.
r
S5
BUYS A
.HOME
Forty y•ormeo yar amid Laos
Mo{6t lou i. D....r for 5104
.vLicisow and mons.kick
kri./ ALASKA . Tay rest.
Dem.. k.s a.p,J.tios.f 000,00d
L ii
bra yam a •:M.G.ai.wall e.:,
Ate L.U.rr'lli.. .
0.4.aa, ...id..sa tee. 1. 4t. tr(sa acted', M r'
lora Wag fro. Sl30 to $2.000 sok.
Stn dei LATINO our A MEW ADDt21ON
Washington Heights
Tl..I.1 I .t .ad move.irkdy.ddid..1.
fwrii.0 • pried view ofi4.k ..d sM
.r
Reeky Mo.ais. %r ..4uW,,,,, 1! eras.
O.4r4.aki4,waki+ato. poi.' "A.:d.d .r.t.
Z.ota 25 x125 Feet. for $100
ss,
~M cum..,ff rut o Noon'
tftm te, ,. _.y al Flea—
"dr TSAM la ..:.fl .f.
.. T7 .o.w.w.►o.g,:rertt:>.ner
WfYwFDha:Irani
CIA• I,e..a.e...,,0.,.Jye.e.0w s+....
...a r ..a a .rJeer 1..+. tat rim ha
ma CENn* LOAt4' AND'TRU$T 03.
nor....:; e:as:s'
-�%'•. Mw.t„wtrtj.i4rtiYtrr.w w,iei
LARGE EATERS.
Chureh—I see they are crying rise
more missionaries over in Africa.
Gotham—Why, those cannibals muss
be regular gluttons.
ITCH, Hang. Prairie 8e,ratches and
every form of ooatagiosis Itch on human
or amseals cured In 30 minutes by Woe.
ford's &miters. Lotion. It never tails.
Poppy—"Did you and Jack have trou-
ble getting your lather's consent?" Mag-
nolia—"No, but father and 1 had a hard
time getting Jack's."
The Most Popular Pill.—The pill is
the most popular of all forms of medi-
elite, and o1 pills the most popular are
Parmelee's Vegetable Pills, because they
do what it is asserted they can do, and
are not put forward on any !Milieus
claims to excellence. They are Compact
and portable, they are easily taken,
they do ,,not nauseate nor gripe, and
they give,xell.tef in the'.most stubborn
'epees.
Tourists (visiting an ancient caste)—
"Are there any legends cohnected Witte
this old 'castle?" Guide—"Oh, yes. 11
i
ancient tit; a t
n it dnc n times stranger
-
that t
i,said
Ince visited this castle and gave no tip
to the guide. Thereupon the later threw
the visitor over into the moat. But
don't be frightened. Of course, its only
an idle legend."
CAMERON'S
Asthma Care
has never failed to
cure those Bufeting
CAM
Chronic Bronchitis
r Aethele.
If aititoted
wail% !Mk rttS E ilAMltI,E,
and let' us colivfnee you. that *ahare a
Gust efface to
s fared,
eilro-�oera stay e
IMRE tiA1HfPLIf editt'te s,ny ad tte.t,
D. At OANMERON CCH
Owren fiortnd, oat
T N 1J ISSD'Ii, NOr 45 --OL
• i
9