HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-08-02, Page 15YOUNG
(=OLKS
A SNAIL'S WAYS.
One day 1 found a snail in We woods.
Ile was crawling on a mossy log. His
;)frail was glossy and of a ligts brown.
ht brown
The snub, too, was t/)r.
(front of iitief head,storust out weru hiluvof
ger.
hen 1 pheled up the elicit, Mr. Snail
kly lucked himself ou,1 oI sight ine. I took the shell home in n1Y
kets id et night had it out�on ` my
le. 'ln lie morning it uas gooing about tlie`crom, I foundlf theail climbing up
ceiling.
stood 1?n_n chair, touched him gently'
Ott the head, and, in a fright, he drew
into his ahetl, and it fell from the wall
Into my hand.
put Then I took a large china dish, and
nice. in it a from
the
The stone had little lichens ns on it, andk1
poured water In n dish. Tnen 1 ,et
the snail on the stnne.
Snails like cool, moist things. My
Snail home.at once
came Ile began to ttra vele se his c
aroundit
at a great rate. lie crept to the water
on every side. 1 naw that he ate the
lichens. So 1 brought a nice young
lettuce leaf, wet it, and laid it on the
stone. When the snail on his journey
approached it, he touched it with his
horns. Then he crept upon the edge of
the leaf turned sidewise, and began to
eat fast' lion tie moved
Ne seemed very grY•
along the edge of the leaf, gnawing as
he went. After he had eaten
aboutleaf hea
quarter of the way g
theturned and went back, still eating. So
heto kept
Th nuhelwent had
to anotherdeep
place
lop. The and Glc out another scallop.
chil-
dren said he liked scalloped lettuce.
I kept the leaf wet. At first I thought
the greedy little creature did nothing but
eat. I found that he liked to play and
was fond of travel. He would go to
the edge of the water, and holding fast
to the stone. would dip his head in for
a drink, or to get it wet.
When he did this, he drew In lits
not
herns triedntil to cross could
thewaterb'Floes
and to reach
the side of the dish.
Ile would cling fast by the hind part
o: hts body, raise his head, and stretch
himself as far as he could, and try to
take hold of the dish. Ile often fell
short and tumbled into the wweter. But
out he would conic and try again. When
he succeeded, he would walk around the
rim of the dish.
One night he came out, dropped lto the e
floor, crept over the carpet, up
then
or the table, along the top,
travelled over e
triedto eat theartifcialleaves on the
bonnet. There I caught him in the
morning.
Wherever he went he left a thin trail
like glue. 1 could follow his steps as
you can those of a careless boy who for-
gets to wipe his feet.
DISEASED 1[1DNEVS.
Made Sound and Strong Through Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills.
"Two doctors told me that I was in-
curable, but thanks to Dr. Wlillams
Pink Pills I am a well womanata to-day.'
This strong statement was
Mrs. Ed. Rose, of St. Catharines, to
a
rk-
reporter, who hearing of her remark-
able cure called to see her. A fed
years ago while living in Hamilton,
continued Mrs. Rose, "1 was attacked
with kidney trouble. The doctor allied
are Into a state of false security,
whle
the disease continued to inroads.
Finding that 1 was not getting
consulted a specialist, who told tie tn1s
ud
the trouble had developedinto Br 1
disease and that I was and
had dwindled to a meire sn he dbw, and
suffered from
often a difficulty in breathing. inso-
niaia next cane to add to my
and 1 passed dreary, sleepless nights,
and felt that 1 had not long live. nd
this dispalring condi�*onWm tins' and
urged me to try
Pills, and to please hire 1 began to take
them. After using several a oxlsc1 felt
the e pills were helping
in-
ued taking them until I had used some
twenty boxes, when 1 was again restor-
ed to perfect health, and every symp-
tom of the trouble had disappeared. . Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills certainly ave,
ught
me back from the shadow of the gr
and I have since enjoyed the best of
health."
"Every drop of
fblood Initthe
body
Is
Isfiltered by the kidneys have no
Is weak
nd leave th
blood unfiltered theirstrength for aand foul. ThenW
the ke
neys get clogged with painful, poison-
ous impurities, which brings aching
backs and deadly Bright's disease. The
only hope is to strike without delay at
the root of the trouble in the blood with
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They make
new blood. They flush the kidneys
clean, heal their inflammation and give
them strength for their work. Common
kidney pills only touch the symptoms
—Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure the
cause. That is why they cure for good,
and at the same time Improve the health
In every other way,. But you must get
the genuine pills wllh the full name,
Dr. Williams'
Peo-
ple, on the wrapperaround each box.
Sold by all medicine dealers or direct
frm the Dr. e Co.,
Brli
oekville, Ont., at 50 cents acibox or
six boxes for $2.50.
SPELL OF MAGIC POWER
EXTRAORDINARY VISIONS IN RUIN-
ED ENGLISH ABBEY.
Sunlight Soap is
bettes than other Soaps
but is best when need inthe
Sumight way. Bury Sunlight
Soap and follow directions
Sunlight Soap
Phantom Bishop Heads Procession 10
Throne In Transept of Old
Edifice.
Three trends staying at Whitby,
England, have had an extraordinary
experience. They saw in broad day-
light a long procession of mediaeval
monks and nuns, headed by a bishop in
full canonicals, wind slowly through
the ruins of Whitby Abbey.
One of the party recently received
from India a packet of powder, said to
have mysterious psychical powers. He
experimented with it, and saw visions
fof the ollowed smatter d. I hitbsovision
takingme of this
powder.
The three friends each took some
it, and almost immediately one of
them heard the words, "Go to the south
transept," another receiving the WS
stcuctions : "At the abbey to -morrow
as soon as possible."
The following extract from a letter
written by one of the experimenters to
Light describes what they saw at the
abbey :—
"We entered he abbey just at mid-
day, and went into the ruined south
transeptandstood
nw a long
Oneofof my friendsat once
procession of brawn -clad and cowled
monks, and smelt incense very dis-
tinctly. PHANTOM BISHOP.
LOWEST BIIZTII IRATE.
The lowest birth rate in any first quar-
ter of a year sInce civil registration
fwas
irst etshtraebeleo ttlssofthedpresentyear,
according to the quarterly return of
marriages. births, and deaths 1n 1':ng-
land and Wales. The actual nu he tit
births during this period
the proportion of 27.9 annually per 1,000
of the population. In the ten preceding
first quarters the mean rate was 29.2.
While the birth rate has fallen so twee.
fly, it Is a remarkable eard:'linetintat, the death
an even greater population
rate the natural Increase of t oI
in England and Wales ales dturing nind thesvith quar-
ter was 96,934,
96,-
034, as compared with 96,758, 87,166 and
89,740 in the first quarters of 1003, 1904,
and 1905 respectively.
"INNHL'VAN"' SUNDAY.
London Vicar Sees Little Use In "Smart
Set" Crusade.
The vicar of Holy Trinity, Sloane
street, London, England, in a sermon rec-
ently, said he could net see much use
in the denunciation of the "smart set."
Ile could not accept the Puritan
of Sunday, which was an idea of 200
ago and seemed almost 1nto n :in.
Nor washe secular Sunday.
had to dread, eof character formed by the
The type
passion for the motor -car and the social
excitements et the day was not, he said,
so much the desperately wicked as the
vapid, weak and tibreless. Social plea-
sures and conditions now -a -days tended
to produce not so much the militant des-
perate
e s
perate wickedness for which perhaps
not-
ed 11 asether times the thoughtless,( lazy oand tltri o-
lous type of degenerate; people of no
deep convictions, no earnestness or hon-
esty of purpose.
Those who indulged the most in Sun-
day exercises and recreations were not
always those who needed thein the most.
English people were often warned
against the continental Sund4'
ut
from his own observation that Sunday
was not nearly so bad as some made It
out to be; the element of revrence, of
worship, was always present.
No loss could be greater to any peo-
pleple than the loss of the habit of public
worship. The great mark of a nation's
worth was the mark of worsohiB. No
man could give himself uments wtlh-
thoughtless, frivolous enjoy
out buffering terrible deterioration.
years ago,
tite continental Sunray we
7`
Cholera and all summer complaints
are so quick in their action that the entl
hand of death is upon the victimsis mea e
ffore they are aware that dangerthe
1! attacked do not delay 1n getting
e t Dr. J.
proper medicine. Try a
D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial and you
will
th
wonderfulet rapidity rapidity relief.mediate cts i
and never fails to
effect a cure.
\►lCTORTAS FIRST WRITE WOMAN.
The Colony of Victoria, Australia, is
still so youthful that the first white
woman who set foot upon its soil, Mrs.
Stephen George Heng,only just
died. She was born at Stolcesby, York-
shire, in 1818, and went with her mo-
tre at the
her to Western Auirtt*lia whee married a Swanage of twenty
River pioneer, Mr. llenty. Soon after-
wards they moved to Tasmania, and
thence sailed in a small vessel which
reached the bay at Portland thene Sunn-
day night in June, 1836.
light Mrs. Henty was carried ashore
through the surf, and thus achieved the
distinction of being Victoria's first white
womn. as her 1837,awas the first onwhite male nativerit in August,
.f
the Colony.
Fellow-Tassenge "Pardon me,
your necktie has been sticking out for
some time. 1 refrained from telling
you sooner because those young ladies
seemed so much amused." Farmer :
"Thankee ; an' the
n thatrom that lamp
khat has been droppin' o
over-
coat o' yourn for the last ten minutes,
but everyone seemed so tickled that 1
hated to spoil the fun."
"Following these monks
owse several whitorobed priests,
he
bishop in full canonicals and wearing
his mitre, llama a fornthcted 1e being
of throne, p
with its back to the altar.
"When he was ' several nuns
from the south
in while habits appeared
transept, one of which was taken be-
fore the bishop, and knelt at his feet,
when he laid his hands upon her head,
and 1 heard the words, 'The consecra-
tion of the prioress at the midday
mass.'
"During the ceremony there knelt in
prayer an old lady, dressed in dull red -
brown, and wearing a very peculiar
white head-dress;
e Cec suldsno were
crossed onherbreast l
member the date, but the word 'Agin-
court,' was whispered to me from the
unseen. 1 felt as 11 she had nothing
ngto
do'with the ceremony,but was
datehere
merely to fix the apPro
by her head-dress. my other
"As we left the abbey
friend saw, dotted about in
th
gounds—where several very material
cows were feeding—more monks in
brown about.wls and
e evidently engaged in con-
es, who were wan-
templation
teniplation or prayer.
"We, none of us, heard any names,,
but 1 should know that bishop again
anywhere if he ever saw tit to reap-
pear."
TBANCE DREAMS.
Miss Annie Sansome, of Nottingham.
England, a well-known psychic, had
also experimented with the powder. In
the following letter to Light she de-
scribes its effect on her :—
"I seemed to go into a dazed condi-
tion, and the room and articles around
me went dim. Then I found myself in
a large city, in a great crowd of pew
and the thought came to me,
is
London.' Then the vision changed, and
1 the spirit
of a
little
and girl, urchins of the street, in
then in beautiful
showing
rags and tatters,
splint robes, showing that, though
rich on the earth, they were
in the
spirit world; that was the impression
i received. brother's wife, who
'Then 1 an my
had died somea time ago, and heard her
name, 'Lizzie; breathed quite audibly.
"I got the picture of a coffin and of
a death to occur in thefuture, particle
o
bars of which 1 shall send
if
it s as I saw it in vision.
PRETTY NEARLY RUN DOWN.
The Tired Man About to Start on His
Vacation. to Let Nature Wind HlniUp.
"At this minute, as 1 think of it," said
a tired man, "the phrase 'all run down'
strikes mo with a new significance.
"It has always heretofore seemed to
me to indicate a condition of physical
ill being, and that only, and that, in
many cases, it may mean still; but just
now, comes°n tothmeeve withf the sense stn implY` of
unwound. h si
"1 find myself, for illustration, physi-
cally web and comfortable and yet
out much power—In the condition of a
clock whose works are (alts right
un-
and
sound, but whose .;p g
wound and which now strikes slow and
lagging. Nothing the matter with the
clock, only It Is almost run down and
needs winding up.
"So witn me. I've been working for a
year now and striking all the time, and
for that matter I can still strike, but
. am not all run
down to the common acceptance of that
e
term but 1 need winding, and l am, hap-
pily, about to go away for the ourselves
e.
"On our vacation, If we give
n chance, we rewind automatically, with
no effort whatever on our part, and still
with a delightful, end cumulatively de-
lightful, consciousness ot the rewinding
it we give ourselves a chance.
"There are men who take their busi-
ness away with them or let 1t cone to
them—if not a fatal, a foolish mistake.
Anrewind-
ing Instantly touch of band ealsss o oretardsps the r It Ifor
enema little time after before the winding
sets 1n nein. so that the man who does
this conies back with his spring only
half wound.
"1 would not attempt to counsel all cre-
ation,
st man; but
thns about t start rnonetheir vacation t1
would say: Sink the shop, and sink it
lietel . BeCut wisetandtget utterly
MI benefit.
Forget the desk the minute you turn
your back on it. Take all the resist-
ing tenston off the spring.
"i am going myself to the mountaln';,
to the shores of a lake, with forest clad
mountains rising all around, where na-
ture Is et once restful and strong
ug tod
patent. and 1 shall give myself ,
nature, let nature wirld me up."
FRENCH LABOR WAR.
,,,,,f0\\' JOHNNY STOPPED CRYING.
Johnny and Nellie were playing in
dtwnhe sitting
bumped hist) nose.en Johnny fell
did
not hurt him Thecltears the camevi intos fond his
o: crying.
es es.
Don't cry, Johnny," said Nellie.
"Ilow can I help 11," replied Johnny,
"when 1 have fallen down
and bumped
' d
fay nose?" And he beg cry
ell his might.
"Then," cried Nettie, "there Is moth tib
for me to do but to Leat the arnicttair
till Johnny stops crying." So she seiz•
ed a stick and began to beat the chair
as hard as she could.
Fred came running In. "0 Nellie,"
Feel he, "why arc you beating the arm-
clta:r?"
"Ilow can 1 help 11," replied Nellie,
"when Johnny has fallen down and
bumped his nose, and is crying with all
his might? 1 must beat the choir till
Johnny stops crying."
"'('hen," cried Fred, "there is nothing
for me to do but to blow my tin trurn•
pet." So he took the trumpet from his
pocket, and began to blow with all his
might.
In !" me said she,la y oldaretst youister. "0
blo blowing
Fred!""why
Ito loud on your tin trumpet?"
"Ilow can 1 help it," replied Fred,
�. "when Johnny has fallen down and
bumped his nose, and is crying with
all his might, and Nellie is beating the
arm•ehair? 1 must blow the trumpet
lift Johnny stops crying."
"Then," cried Sophia, "there is nothing
for Inc to do but to ring the (limier
tell." So stir seized the tell, and be-
gan to ring as hard as she could.
The noise brought In Mother Allen.
"0 Sophia!" said she, "why ere you
ringing the dinner hell so herd?"
"flow can 1 help
it,"llrelied ophnd
"when Johnny
bumped his nose, end is crying with
all his mt1 hl,! and Nellie is beating the
arra-chair, and Fred is blowing his lin
trumpet? 1 must ring till Johnny
sl' •p: ming." ; they will no. ..._
""Chen," cried Mi Cher Allen, laugh -1, Some of the French industries are ver
y
Intl* "there is nothing for nie to do but ;
to took for the switch which stands 1nuc a demo, alhzed .oma In recent years
nano the pan of cookies." And shet.d to ha\e had an important re
ran to the jumped
with alt her might. • feere In leading to a "concentration of
yther. jumped np and eon after ed.
mother. after ran
r ran after' Frrr,f.1 471usindepen independent there �41.-
in
in 19(lt the total number of
NO DIFFERENCE•
Dr. Leonhardt's Item-ttoid cures any
fora of Piles. Internal, External, Ble d-
ing, Blind, Itching,
c.,
are simply names of the stages( through
which every case will p
con-
tinues.ass congestion of blood
in the lower Piles are caused by
in-
ternal remedy toe removeand lthe cause. takes an
Dr. Leonhardt's Hen -Bold is a tablet
taken internally, and no case of Piles
has
Money ever
bbeen
ck lf fout nd
it
tafailed to cure.
l.
81.00 at any dealers, or The Wilson-
Fyle Co., Limited, Niagara Falls Ont.14
IJNLIGHT
--f)/SOAP
Clothes washed by Sunlight Soap
are cleaner and white' than if washed
in any other way may the
Chemicals to soap the removelons.
dirt but always injure
Sunlight Soap will not injure
the most dainty lace or the
hands that use it, because it is
absolutely pure and contains no
injurious chemicals. always
Sunlight Soap should
be used u directed. No boiling
cc hard rubbing is isbne better than
an
Sunlight Soap
other soap, but is best when
used in the Sunlight way.
Equally good with hard or
soft water
r Idols*
rt• idnn• nt�sttoa•NOMAR? will be lewd
o bo
et" Lever tretbers LYslesd. Tommie
SA\V HER FiBS('.
Visitor : "Willie, tell your mamma
that 1 have_cone to call on her.
Willie : "Mamma's not at home.
Visitor (shocked) : "Why, Willie,
I'm sure I saw her looking the
from
parlor window as 1 came up he street.
Willie (stoutly) : "No, you
peeking
neither, That was
through ttte parlor blinds. Mum saw
you coming from up stairs.
Holloway's Corn Cure destroys 'ell
branch.kinds and
of Who, then would corns and tendure tthem
with such a cheap arid effectual rem-
edy within reach?
Dibbs (facettously) : "This is a pic-
ture of my wife's fir•�t husband."
Dobbs: "Great snakes! What a
brainless -looking idiot! But 1 didn't
know your wife was married
before
she met you?" Dibbs :
e7'his is a picture of myself at the age
of twenty."
AWN
happen.
"qty mother also tried the powder,
Ceofort by flay and wand deep by night fol-
low the use of wearer a terata, for skin troubles,
ao matter bow tormenting they be. This ofnt-
meat soothes tad cleanses
but did not get any results, It only ap-
pears to act on those who feel some
psychic development. I did not feel
any Injurious effects from it, but a
nice, soothing feeling that feels very
much like the trance state."
a a 3 - Lit Ewa IroZa.
Swede' se N Menage 1.110../.'•
r HferisNt11ag1►
MUSKOKA THE BEAUTIFUL.
Do you know the place? if not, your
pleasure has suffered'. 'rake
a freegh
a mental little journey
Mus-
koka by asking for hatTrh Grand Trunk
Mus-
koka Folder issued by large
Railway System, --1t contains a
map, lots of journeys, and 8omea fund of evening fafter
Take the
supper with your wife and children.
Then siom the door on the doctor for
1906 by taking your family on a real
journey through the Muskoka District
this summer. Less than a day's jour-
ney from principal American cities. The
Ideal Family Resort. For all particul-
ars and handsome) illlustrated dnalublica-
Nn-
tion free, apply to
Nn -
ion Station, Toronto, Ont.
She: "What is meant by the pipe of
peace?" Ile: "Can't Imagine. Never
yet smoked a pipo in the house but my
wife made a fuss about it."
Biliousness Burdens Lite.—The ebili us
man is never a comp
and gloom . The complaint ent renders tm morose
toeo
dad gloomy.
dangerous as It is disagrdeuhle. Yet
no one need suffer from it who can
procure ti°the iliver andlrble o vin tinis. g the
t ffects int,
,,Steels of the bile in the stomach they
restore amen to cheerfulness and full
vigor of action.
PHOTOGRAPHING A BULLET,
Tits Wretched Canaille,thousands care dee
to the fast that they neglect the simplest
their health. when in Ukie condition " 1errorlee
will build you up and Ore you strength.
Effects of Industrial Agitations Benefit
Large Firm,.
The labor conflict 10 France still con-
tinues. The workmen declare that they
are determined to struggle until the em-
ployers capitulate, dile thea employers
apparently equallye
determined,
any concessions.
Gregson in alarm) : "Great Sct''tt 1
I've left niy purse under my pillow"
Fisher : "Oh, well, your servant is
honest, Isn't she?' Gregson : "That's
just be -Isbell take it to my wife."
Old Flints : "i doubt if one man out
of twenty can recall to memory the
language he used in proposing."
Young Stewpid : "Probably not. But
the girl can. Mine did. When the
breachbof promise
nmysuit
proposalllwordwas
or
able to rep
word."
111111111
11 13 ll i1
I �,, 1, 1'tt' 11'.
Frew (the PEDLAR'S CORRUGATED IRON is made on a t1,Mt N. !* true oue in Canada) one corrugation at a Lme, and is guaranteed
straight to size. Toronto and
We carry a Mt ton stock in Oshawa. Montreal, Ottawa, order o oreceived.
London and can ship ordinary requirements the same y any lench up
Made in 1 inch, 2 inch or 2% inch eorrugalioas in ahe8�
to 10 Leet in 28, 26, 24, ti:, t1), 18 gauge both Painted and Galvanized.
p.
This oleos of material is Lost suitable tor fireproofing Bares,
URI and
rr Warehouse Lead Washers and Galvanised windending* and is water and proof.
carried in stock.
Send
Corrugated Ridges, your nearest office for catalogues and prices.
Send Speciflcatioas b
The Crick in the Back.—"One touch
of nature makepoet. thewhole
what about kin,"
the
the
sings P
which I -touch sfso common tsnow?and
There is no
poetry in that touch, far It renders life
miserable. Yet tinw delighted (sth(
e
sense of relef when an application
away.. There listeetrie 011 nothing equals cit. pain
away.
Dr. Riegler, of Btnlltent,fbusn made
s
very curious exp
photogra-
phy, and one that to many people will
to -
graphed atnost bullet( after incredible.
had (le been fired
from a with
°Yvelocity d 1t it was of 4 0 i >etres
proceed-
ing with n
arter Of a mile—
a asecon . Aher more tiregulaan a rthtfantry rifle was
the weapon selected for the purpose ':t
conducting the experiment, which was
in every way sitcceselul, a perfect re-
production of the bullet being the re-
sult. A horse at full gallop, a swal-
low in its flight, and even a flash of
lightning have succumbed to the pho-
tographer's art. but his Inst triumph is
still more marvellous.
To Prevent is Better than to Repent.1
---A tulle medicine llwhieh aro the t known e of the
wonderful pellets
fills, administer-
ed at the proper time and with
the
di-
rections adhered to often prevent
ous ntlack of alekness
the and
save money in a I
which would go on a all
irregulnrihes of the digestive
they cleansing
the lblood hey clear the
ctive and
by Glenn. ing
skin of imperfections,
ru
Johnny had stopped crying for that
tiny.
A IIL'NDRED TONS OF WATER.
Rainfall Ls a condition which has
much to do with our health. A wet
diswelter, making h a houses ood deal
damp811Isoila
locality In which rheumaUsm and
conauniptton are likely to prevail.
Over England and Wales the average
yearly rainfall 1s about 341n., in Scot-
land it reaches 461n., and to Ireland
about Ilsln. Possibly the wettest parts
sl Britain inial aro (n attain 15010. per yew
1111 ralninll may
ar.
mil, a hundred tors of of rain on one acret�glound
France;
such establishments
sof Weary t00a
diminution In five years
000 establishments. The number now
is said to be very much smaller. Ile
small establishments are reported
e
1> e n
goneoat of buwhich h
business. During teat he
period of 106 to 1901 no
s thanw102,.
S55 small firms disappeared,21 e0 es-
tablishments employing from and 100
workmen increased by )5 in more
e
number of large firms, etnp Y g
than 100 workmen each, Increased
from 3,081 in 1898 to 1,428 to 1901. The
present agitation with a demand for
shorter hours and increased wages thte s
said to have added greatly
con-
centration of business in certain lines
to the large firms.
At iifie age ot 15 a Ohl M willing to
marry a widower wilt ono chtki, al PO
she vr4K tolerate two children sad at
S5 sha lineal care hew foamy he hna•
INVEi TFn•
"Did you notice that the dead men's
physician was riding in the first car-
riage atter the hearse?"
"Yes; it's the first time 1 ever saw
the cause follow the effect."
When yeti encounter • man nwhofells
you that tM world !la grolook and pass him the elle owdssl
oA.
"THE PEDLAR PEOPLE,
ft O. ma, OW. inmate, Orn. lo�Ou,Onl. 111111034, Yea.. YorrCCUr,8.8.
YO4? Cr, YW. et. 7e Lombard et. sin Ponders&
7R Cosi/ et. CIS Sussex et. 11 Colborne es eo pads,.
Write your Nearest OHtcs._.UKAtOFFICE
AND lwanstinder the Brit Oat Flag.
Largest makers of Sheet Metal 13u11d ing
--
Ile: "Before you married me you
used to say there wnsn't another "man
like me in the world."
and now 1 shouldn't like to think there
was."
ect
otllcst his(a guest's wooden e nervous about
ti
leg upon the
polished floor) : "Hadn't you better
come on the rug, maim? You Wright
slip there, you know." The Major:
"Oh, don't be afraid, my boy ; there's
no danger. I have a nail in the end of
it."
Wilson's
FLY
PADS
be convinced
Much distress an sickness to child-
ren is caused by worms. Mother Graves'
'I und
Worm Es terl ifl for C i e surelief
trial and
re -
pant in moving
sues Coen some hotels one oil nste^ s
palms about the dining -moms, \\hat
kind of palm is the most prominent?"
N
Ds In Western Canada edLees le
ssekatcJewaa, only a miles from two railways. C.P.I. i O.T.P►
oo per Bent. plough tied, wiled emelt, w elosgtt,,
ons , . 510.45 pr seer
W_bost 40 m11 for sap sod MI es1� ord.
'ma. v*Dsgtf. M Wellesley Street. T.teate. Csalledn►
TOYS TEACH MUSIC.
Novel Method of Teaching Music to Lit-
tle Children.
Miss A. Seppings, L.R.A.\t., gave an
exhibition of her method of teaching
music to little children at Cavendsh
Booms, Mortimer street, London, ccentl . She Instructs by means
o Eng-
land, recently.
of cubes, on which the various short
notes are inscribed.
Miss Seppings tells the children that
the demi-seml-quaver has a head, one
leg, and three feet, so that it can run
veronly fasty two,
feet, and beelnuse It doat the esver not ran
as fast as the other. By shifting the
cubes according to her direction the
children see that it takes two demi-seed-
gtiavers to equal one semi -quaver, and
so on.
"All children
"and islove btherefore ys easytoSeppings,
Interest them In music by this method.
Children of four or five can learn to
read, play, and transcribe little pieces
in one term.
"You always appear to be worried
about your housekeeping," remarked
the sympathetic friend. "But, really
refilled the housekeeper, there are only
two occasions when 1 nm really wor-
ried.
shen 1 haven't servant,
and the other when 1have."
T111 O%LT
THING THAT
1CILLS THEM ALL
AVOID POOR IMITA'T'IONS,
Bold by an Draggy aid Go°ers1 Storm
and by mall.
TE>!1
CENTS pWACKET moo
ARCHDALE WILSON
HAMILTON. Clt1T.
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tee tM seep brewed yew ewe Se sem.
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twilight teat 1s betta Cum *We mays,
bot to lost when and la the tasted Way.
Boy ttullitbt Ss, gait follow dimities,.
A gentlemancourted
/nld than lady for
lweniy-eg Y perfect
d
Iter. She turned out to be a p
Otago. but (i od Ewe o ars after
f terfnhewe
wedding. ' nw.'
self•congratelately lane, "see who% 1
escaped by a long couiblitP-
Is this really a camel's hair bnish,
mamma?" "Yes, dear." "Funny t 1
don't see haw a camel can ever bruit
his hair with that thine."
For T1s.
Mete. ele eerie, Oar Mom* law, Met es
Ines ?w4~ useHc s stable elsek eel N N
liana isa erne �teyst PLO per rets. lflsal i
WA obese pee sem
liwt so isM to w assess Weals Saw aiMr
S. iL GUNN.
Lad Bests. Nosh Ise. ant
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Coati MI ail Welt litto
standard Publication for Cement and
Concrete users. Covers entire Canadian
nald, ibe, Copy ; 81 a year. Sample
copy _ the, Addatde St., Tomato, Ont.
Andreas. 7S
THE OLD SORE
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by owns loos sliced Lua`Iheos Loaf,
k is a melanins to t►e Moak of good
...1 .ad seed siscss,:,t•„ to
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Way, jj>k)11eU1$ Mb. e
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Psi LAMP OIL ECONOMY
Sarnia
USE Prime OIL
White
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•hIe if need
end KEPT CLEAN.
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