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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1906-10-25, Page 6• Iv HEALTH $ FATIGUE. Fatigue is a sensation with which all are more or less familiar, but w Inch ut- (e.ls different persons differently, ac- la a verity of styles. e.u•ding to ciieumstances. &brio and prices. (or 'I here is a suscalled "healthy" fatigue womea. men sad whir h comes after normal labor, either childrta. Fon„-fined. ct body of mind, and which varies in n Dealers are authorized healthy person according to the anreuit p replace iartatttly and PEN -ANGLE cf labor performed; and (here is "Ihnt at our cost say Pea - tired feeling' which came.., without,Arelle gumxit Gutty much preceding work. 'This last may is trtaterial or tairrg. le- merely what man cults lossiiutle, hal the "tux call, laziness," or it may be due to the accumulated effects of too JNDL"� EAR unfit► work carri+'d 0n unduly over a long period of lint,, with too short in- tervals of rest or sleep. This is u dan- ger -signal, which muy be the forerutiner of a breakdown. and is 0110 of which the worker should lake heed if he would not later Nage the penalty. Physical labor tires in jrnportion to Us unwontedness,. The mini accustoni- ilesadn• Pen -Angle Under- wear is form -knit so it can't kelp fitting your figure, --it's made of long - fibred wool so it won't shrink —and it's guaran- teed besides. The whole idea is to make it so good you can't afford not to buy by the trademark (in red). fob el to walk ten or fifteen in without special In iguo tires after a very little manual labor which is strange to Wm; and, on the other hand, the carpenter or the blacksmith may (o exhausted by a four -or -live utile walk. It was formerly Thought that fatigue w as due to an accumulation of waste Products In the blood and tissues. hut recent investigations seers to show That the waste products resulting from mus- cular action do not accumulate in the system, but are promptly eliminated .n the Perspiration and other excretions, so that they have no opportunity to poi- son the system. A German scientist hes recently seg. gesled that fatigue is really u disease, although an evanescent and readily curable one, and Is caused by the for- mallon of n special toxin. a substance similar to that elaborated by the ba- cilli of lockjaw nr diphtheria. if this is true, it would explain how persons becoming used lo a special kind of la - tor accustom themselves to do an im- mense amount of it without exhaustion. This would be by the formation of an antitoxin in the body, to neutralize The, action of the fatigue toxin. The toxin 15 readily eliminated when its forma- tion ceases, as during rest or sleep, and it is only when it accumulates in the system that one becomes, as it were, chronically Bred. Then some of the fa- tigue of the day before is felt on awak- ening In the morning. This Is a warn- ing to make the work hours shorter. --Youth's Companion. HOW TO AVOID TYPHOID. Typhoid fever is caused, in the vest majority of cases, by water, milk or food. being poisoned by the germs ut a previous cast of this disease. Water and milk aro the two articles most particularly infected with typhoid. Ileal hill; the typhoid poison, there- fore, it your drinking water is not from a source beyond suspicion, boil It fur 25 or 30 minutes. Protect your milk from contamina- tion by dust and flies, or pasteurize it, that Is, heat to 158 Fahr. or 70 Centi- grade. Keep It at this temperature 13 minules and then cool rapidly. Dirty hands cony also carry typhoid infection, therefore, wash your bands carefully before allowing than to copse in contact with food stuffs of any kind. Food becomes infected by flies craw- ling over it or by dust from the street. Wash thoroughly all vegetables that art intended to be eaten raw, wash In water of known purity, or water which has been boiled and cooled. Keep flies out of the house es much ns possible by screening all doors and windows and by the use of ray papers. Cover the food supplies so that flies end dust may not have access to them. Clennliness is one of the greatest safe- guards against typhoid fever. The manure pile Is one of the great- est breeding grounds for flies, it is, therefore. important that menure be not allowed to accumulate or lie uncovered. Cleanliness of lite person. and in every detail of housekeeping, cleanliness in everything to lie eaten and drank. clean- liness of bark yards, and most rigid cleanliness in the cure of those sick with disease cannot be too strongly emphasized. NATURE'S DRUG STORES. It chemists and drugg:sls disappeared from the face of the earth, humanity r.na' 1 sell worry along with the simple remedies whirl Nature yields, practi- cally ready-made. There 14 netting to beat rhubarb juice as a cure for gout or rheumatism. all kinds of scurvy mid blood poisoning yield to the juice of lemons or of limes, which are the greatest blood purifiers 1n existence. Iden doc'ors acknowledge that natur- al, h esti cream from cows milk can gate pones to cod-liver oil and similar na-t• liquids In treating consumption. Common nlustoril, used ns a plaster o.• poultice is the -.,est curt' for a cold no the chest, and the while of an egg with sugar is the flnest medicine for hoarseness. To cure n burn nn appli- cation of the while skin That liners the shell of an egg is unbeatable, while the t•i%v yolk is a capital tonic. Finally, the gardens enol hedgerows are full of herbs of which the jai. -o or It twee nffon.I remcdie' nr palliatives for almost every disease In which humanity Is their. HORSE Asti WC, \Ih,\T IN (l Ii. Gcrrnnn Government statistics shun that 13.131 horses and 2.151 dogs were Slaughtered for food under government Inspection during the first three months of 1906. This was on increase of 7,52: horses and 36,S, dogs over the number slaughtered during the salve time in 1915. And this only nccounts for the dogs and horses killed %meter govern - mettle auperwislo0. 1t is esliniatel That among the poorer classes, forced to re- sort to dog and hors meat by the ex- clusion of :knieri:•an and nitier foreign meats from the country. the consuwp- 11.n of 'hie soi of meat was much larger tbso tis ofi1cial records show. YOUR OVERCOATS Ne foot -4 Sults ...wtll souk tetter Are't. If on aa.rs er ours is jour ire, .rite direct Montreal. 130. 115 BRITI$N AMERICAN DYEING 00. Fruit Growers, Attention Having no ooamisslon to pal, and selling for otsb. The 1!:astem Townships Nurseries are Ulna able to ..ger you Standard Apple Trees t to 0 feet high grown here, hardy and thrifty stock for Wall and Spring delivery for 11116 .00 per hundred LOUIS bikYAIS Prop., Laureuoeville,Qss ASNAP 19 A WHEAT FARM NEAR WINNIPEG. 1,066 acres of clean unbroken prairie, the finest wheat land on earth, on the banks of the Iced River, 45 miles from Winnipeg, four miles from two railway stations. 115 an acre lakes it, 55,000 cash. balance easy. No better farm, no better investment. WAUGll & BEATTIE, 12 Merchants Bank building, Winnipeg, Man. Engraved Calling Cards Aiesk 9 Your name engraved in grace- ful Ryrie Script on a Copper Plate will be furnished by our Stationery Department for $ 1.00. The supply- ing and plate -printing of one hundred Calling Cards will be done for an additional $1.00. Q The card stock used is made specially to our order and is of the thin "snappy " sort that denotes quality -elegance. Q Our Catalogue contains speci- mens of engraved Wedding Invita- tions, Society Stationery, Etc. Deoy us a tbrtal card and we m71 seadyou free of charge our large illus. treed cal a logue 0/Jewelry, Silverware. Leather Goods, err. Rya BIM Toagto.ont. A WOUND THAT MADE HISTORY. There is a certain peppery old colonel who cinlins to have been wounded long years ago in the kg while serving his country in some petty little frontier fight. Ile Is very proud of that wounded leg. One afternoon, when he sat at his club nursing the injured leg. a fellow clubman of recent acquaintance, syu►- pathetically asked : "Lome, Colonel?' "Yes. sir," was the reply, after an in- expressibly solemn pause, "i am lame." "Been riding, sir?" "No." this time with rebuking stern. ness. "1 have not been riding." "Ah, 1 trust it was not due to a fall, Colonel?" "No!" come In tones of ferocity. "I'e'rlinps, then, you have sprained .'our ankle?" With painful slowness the old fellow lifted his pet leg in both fiends. set it carefully on the floor, rose deliberately from his chair. and. looking down upon the unfortunate questioner with niit:gled pity and wrath, burst forth in almost sublime rage : "Go. sir, and read the history of your country, sir!' ItET.\1 I.\l'lc iN. "111 g -gel even w -with you, m-mnm- mn," sullen small lilsier who had just been severely chastised. "flow?" queried her mother. "When I g -grow up and h -have a 1 -little girl III heat the life out of h -her," answered Elsie. REBUILDING OF 'FRISCO 1ItRilE TEARS 111 %V SEE TUE CITY ITSELF AG.UN. Over 301,000 Men Now Engaged -Two Thousand Houses In Twelve Weeks. A city is made by its traffic, and the growth of a slate i; cicluv dent upon its natural resources, says a San Francis- cs letter. Commerce is not an occident, and neither trade nor population is drawn continuously to a city or a coun- try by brag, however persistent. A strategic position, such as San Fran- cisco occupies, command of a great nn - lural gateway, with n country behind it imperial in area and incalculably rich and varied In the products of its soil, will compel growth inevitably. The San Francisco Ileal Estate Cir- cular, showing the real estate market for six months ending on June 30, 1900, records transactions for this period to the amount of M8,399,651, and that real estate in this city is not heavily in debt. The real estate transfers during Au- Est were 1075, as against 974 for Jan- us. 11EAL ESTATE EXPERTS now say That within Three years the burned district between Market and Wanness avenue will be rebuilt. The movement is going on from Vannes eas1vardly, and westward from the downtown section. This is not a long time in which to cover a large area with substantial buildings. And while this heart of the city is being made of steel and cement work will be going on south of Market -street, and most of that great section will be reconstructed. The de- lay in pushing up the big class A struc- tures Is growing shorter as business and the insurance situations adjust themselves. Meantime, no lot or block of properly within the lines of the urea indicated will represent n decreasing valuation fel any length of time. In fact, real es- tate values have gene up in some blocks of the burned district. and are holding their own in most of the others. There were employed in building end reconstruction work in this city on June 9 20,000 men. Those figures were obtained from the rosters of the unions. The nuniler of mechanics and laborers on the rosters of the building crafts, and unclassified and unnfliliated, nr working on permits pending applica- tion. was on Aug. 1, in round numbers, 30,000 men. LABOR BENEFITS. An eastern slnlislician, who has care- fully surveyed the situation here, goes into elaborate calculations as to the sunt that will be required to rebuild the city. Ile puts it at 1100,000,000. It miens n sort of rough guess, but perhaps it is not too much 10 expect That some such vast sum will be spent on build- ing in San Francisco twithin the coating decade. Whatever the total, labor will receive something like 40 per cent. of the whole. This money returns almost at once into circulation and is felt in the volume of retail and other trade in the city. San Francisco hits been credited with exceptional courage In undertaking her own rehabilitation, doing business at the old stand and on her own capital. But while sentiment is involved --a pas- sionate nitachment to the city, its site. Its climate and its cosmopolitan spirit -business sense is behind sentiment, and necessity pushes business sense. One-third of the city's population must be' housed.. C O SES. sedCt\TR:\(T rclnll v ry. i The chairman of the building commit- tee o n►mit- tee of the relief corporation has closed a contract for 2.001) houses, 800 of two rooms and 1,200 of three rooms. n11 to be ready within twelve weeks from Sept. 1. Negotiations are going on with an other contractor for a like number et cottages. and the necessary appropria- tions have been made to cover both con- Irncts. The C.alifornia ruins will be an - 'paled in large measure. 1 is not definitely decided Hint the cost of the new Palace Ilotel will approx- imate $3,000,000, with an additional nl- lovanee of $600,00 for furnishing. The nrchilec•Is who are preparing the pre- liminary plans I nve been instructed to provide 700 rooms, to duplicate the fani- 'ols old court and arrange grills for both Hien and women. The Ainslie!) Commercial Comnnny has signed a contract for a class A steel building on the corner of 0:alife.rnin and Sansone. Tlie cost is to he $.,txi,(Kin. A con •rete warehouse will be huill by Timothy L. ilopkins at n cost of $120.- 0n0. An immense brick warehouse will also be in the same locality, end work nn 1)0114 is to begin shortly. Tho plans aro now drawn. MAKES NEW BLOOD. That is How Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Cure the Common Ailments of Lite Making new blood. 'flat is just what Dr. \\'ilearns' Pink Pills ure always do- ing --actually Making new blood. This netw bl wit strengthens every organ in the body, and strikes straight at the rout of anaemia, and 1110 common ail- ments of Tiro which have their origin in poor, weak watery blood \1r. A ARE YOUR FEET GERM.\N. National characteristics aro many and varied, and scientists are always discovering new things. The latent of these is feet. The French fent is nar- row and long. The .Spanish foot is small and elegantly' curved -thanks to it. Moorish blood. The Arab's foot is proverbial for its high arca. The Koran says that a stream of water can run under the true Arab's foot without touching it. The fool of the Scotch is H. Seeley, of Stirling, Ont., tells what high and thick; that of the Irish flat Dr Williams' Pink Pills did for her and situate; the English short and fourteen year old sister, a1i.s Annie fleshy. When Athens was in her zen- Sager, after other treatment had failed. ill, the Grecian 1001 was the most per - She says: "For some years Annie had teeny formed and exactly proportioned not been well. She would lake spells of that of any of lite human race. of dizziness and headaches that would Swedes, Norwegians, and Germans have last for several days, and her whole the largest feet, Americans the snutl- Lody would become dry ti‘t as lest. Russian toes are "webbed" to the though she was burning up with hofever. first joint. Tartarian toes are all the Her lips would swell ilil alsame length. bursting point, and nut lien whennether fev- Neer would leave her the outer skin of the ALL THE BEST CHANCES ARE - lips would peel off. Cho doctored with With the worker who is thorough in Iwo different doctors, but they did not mall things as well as in large. succeed in curing her, and the (rouble s\With the ate who takes the thorns Tleo we b seemed eradually lone growing worse. in his occupation with as good a grace '(i.•gan giving her lir. \\'illi- ants PinkPills and under ll'streat- as the roses. The headaches and dizziness have gone; of hie gent n o natter what difficulties With the conn who never loses sight meat she las recovered her health. her color is im roved• her appetite bet- Leser, 1►im. p e \\'i!h the employee who does not men - ler, and she has had no further attacks sure the quality and quantity of his ;,f the fever which battled the dodo's. work by the amount of his salary. We are primly pleased with what 1)r. With the young man or young Wo- \\'illiunls' ('ink ('ills have done for her, man who is willing to do a little occas - and recommend them to other suffer- Tonal extra work without pay and with - It was the rich red blood Dr. l\'illi- out grumbling. t With the courageous struggler who ams' ('int; Pills actually male which puts grit, determination, and will -pow - cured Miss Sager. That Is wliy -hike er against his handicap, whatever it -IIs cure all common ailments like may be. anaemia and debility, headaches and backaches, indigestion, rheumatism, neuralgia. St. Vitus dance and the speci- al ailments That prey on the health and happiness of girls and women of all ages. Get the genuine Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for ('ale People, with the full nerne on the wrapper around each box. Sold by all medicine dealers or by snail at 50 rents a box or six boxes for 12.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brockville, Ont. lEminent Physician Attacks One of NOISE AND HEALTH. FORTUNE IN THE CUP. Who that is young and visionary or 011 and hopeful has nota secret weak- ness for fortune-telling? Many a wo- man long past youth's golden days still looks in her teacup for her fate. And the teacup is an oracle. say the wise- acres. Do you wish lo know Iww many years will elapse before you will ntar- ry? Balance your spoon on the edge of your cup, first noting That it is per- fectly dry. Fill another partly with teat. and, bolding it above the balanced spoon. let the drops of len gather In the lip of the spoe,n and gently fall into the howl of the one below. Count the drops. Each drop means n long twelve month. Should a lenstalk flout in your cup. it means n sweetheart. end you must stir your ten rapidly rotund and mind and then hold the spoon upright in the cen- tre of the cup. If the "sweetheart" is attracted by the spoon end clings to it, you will shortly nivel hinr, but if the b eslnik goes to the side of tine cup, you have lost him._ :\ doctor mole it into laic hefil to go rabbit shooting. and started out bright find early on n beautiful morning, fully nrnned fer game. About four in the c 1- iern0on he returned, tired out and emp- ty-handed, telling his wife be hadn't killed o thing. whereupon she remarked, triu:noliantly:-"1 Iola you so." adding. in the mixt breath: "If you had C=love,! at home rind attended In your legiti- mate businese you might have been icore successful." rain's Cherished Institutions. "'Big Ben' is nothing but a relic of barbarism." Such was the attack Made upon one of iirituin's most cherished institutions by Dr. Theo. B. Hyslop, senior physi- cian to the Royal Hospital of Bridewell and Bethlehem at the Congress of Sani- tary inspectors at Blackpool recently. Dr. Hyslop, however, only touched an Pig Ben in passing. Ile classed it mere- ly as ono of the many noises which torture the town -dweller, and the sub- ject of his speech was the effect of noises on health. The effect, it seems, is a very had one indeed. "The fact that town life under exist- ing circumstances makes it impossible b obtain adequate brain rest goes far to cause the prevalence of insanity about which municipalities are so solicitous, and which, in my opinion, they could do so touch to prevent," said Dr. Hy- slop.The influence of noise upon infant mortality, he continued was much more serious than was at present dream- ed of. Ile had seen the growth of in- fants who lived in er near noisy streets greatly arrested, and their removal to gmieter localities had enabled them to recover. "The noises of clncks, bells, and chimes, such as Big Ben. are nothing but relics of barhnrism-the baneful ac- companiments of the night." After Dr. llyslop's speech the con- ference p on- ee r ce passca a resolution 1lnn aski n gate (: ci e s Central Ce.un . 1 of the n. sec' 1't in r ,n to (.ring the subject of noise before the Ccunly Councils. Sir James Crichton Browne then said that he had lately been the vic- tim of a bantam cock of nntazingiy in- defatigable and exnsnernting hnLits. "Rut," asked Dr. Hyslop. "have you ever heard n really good, healthy to►n'- ent-not a melancholic cot. but one really end properly in love? It can give points to any cock That ever crew." . CZARINA'S CHARM OF MANNER... Beaulitul, Grnrefml Woman, Whose Pk - lures Represent Thr Poorly. The general appearance of the Czarina may be fairly well known in this couu- Iiy, although fewer pictures have been published of her Ilion of any other crooned head. But no picture that had seen, writes Aurelia Kussner Com dirt in the Century, gave any idea of how she really looks, seen thus face to face. Perhaps this may be for the reason that much of her beauty conies from exquisite coloring and that there is about Iti•r a subtle charm Impossible to picture and difficult to describe. She is very tall and very slender, yet niost finely proportioned. Ilcr features ore almost Greek in their regularity, and the natural expre.sien of her face struck me at once as a singularly wistful and sweet sadness that never went quite away even when she smiled. Her hair is strikingly beautiful and luxuriant. long. heavy, glossy and 'Teen gold in color. Her eyes are large soft, lustrous gray bloc, with long lash- es, and 1 painted them cast down, ea they nearly always are: for slue is shy and hardly ever looks up without u blush. Yet, with all the Cznrinn's blushing shyness her hearing impressed me with if sense of something much deeper rind graver than mere admiration for a benu- liful, graceful woman. It is diflicull to Jeflne jn.l what thio impression was. hot it near be termed mejest•, for leek of a subll.r term: and the feting of it increased during the entire lime flint I was privileged In enter her presence. although no one could have been kinder a^ more simple in all that she said and did. There w•ac mire n professer who never lost an opportunity to rebuke any hnniptiousne,ss on the part of his she Hints. On one neeasinn, when he was taking trove of a certain graduate, he is reported In have said :-"Sir, your fel- low -students think highly of you; 1 think highly of you; hut sir, no one thinks moro highly of you than you do yoY-•elf r Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator Ik pleasant to take; sure and effectual in destroying worsts. Many have tried '.t with best results. Minister mildly) -"I've been wanting • to see you, Mr. Kurd, in regard to the quality of the milk which you are sere- ine me." Milkman (uneasily) -"Yes, • sir." Minister (very mildly) -"I only wanted to say, Mr. Kurd, that I use the niilk for dietary purposes exclusively,' and not for christening." "F} RROVIM" IS A GENTLE STIMULANT to the 'stomach. thereby aiding digestion. As a tonic for patients recovering from f and all diseases lowering the vitality. it Is without a rival. At all drug and gen- � oral stores -- Witte: "Mrs. Neighbors threw a flat- iron at her husband last night because ire accidentally sat down on her new bonnet. Now, I couldn't do a thing like that." hubby "You couldn't i" Wifie : "Of course not. 1 haven't any new bonnet." "By Medicine Life May be Prolonged." -So wrote Shakespeare nearly three hundred years ago. It is so to -day. Medicine will prolong life, but bo sure of the qualities of the medicine. Life Es prolonged by keeping the body free from disease. Dr. Thomas' Electric Oil used internally will cure coughs and colds, eradicate asthma, overcame croup and give strength to the respiratory or- gans. Give It a trial. fie -"So your husband has given ap smoking? It requires a pretty strong will to accomplish that." She -"Well, 1'd have you understand that 1 havo a strong will." P1 (''ASF REAR IN MiND that what is called a skin disease may be but a avniptom of had blood. In that case, 'Voaver'a Cerate, externally applied. should be supplemented with Weaver's Syrup, taken daily. liow•ell : "Howell 14 always borrowing g trouble." Powell : "Ile's the kind of fellow who, if he thought he was going to get fat, would go out and walk off the weight before he got it 1" They Drive Pimples Away. -A ince covered with pimples is unsightly. It tells of internal irregularities which should long since have been corrected. The liver and the kidneys are not per- forating their functions ih the healthy way they should, aril these pimples are lc let you know that the blood protests. Parmelee's Vegetable fills will drive them 011 away, and will leave the skin clear and clean. Try thein, and there will bo another witness to their excel- lence. USEFUi. IIINTS. ilang blankets in the sun constantly between tete limes of washing, for It whitens and purillCs them besides rais- ing the pile. Fur duck stuffing take dry bread - crumbs, chopped sour apples, and boiled onions, seasoning the mixture with salt, pepper, sage and butler. Removing lied ink Stains. -Moisten the spots with strong alcohol ncidulnted with nitric acid. i1 is always desirable to stake a blank experiment first, ns all materials will trot take the sane treat- ment. To brnwn flour put n thick layer of flour into a baking pan and place it In a hot oven. Watch this and stir with a spoon until the flour is nicely browned all through. Whet) it becomes cold, put it into preserve jars and cover closely. This is splendid for tiuckening gravies and sauce. The highest oedieallasowledgs in the world has produced COLTSFOOTE EXPECTORANT Thousands of sufferers have been permanently cured by this wor•teh tut remedy and thankfully write to tell us so. Keep it in the house and use it for Cslds. C.i*ghse Croup. Wbooping t>:oagke Asthma and au Throat and lung troubles. Your druggist nut only keen, it hot recommends It. (Price. 25 cents. EXPECT®RANT4 de -� Shing esu "OSHAWA wand, Water, Stcre'n and Mrs Proof SI Steel Looked on AH Made from Painted or Galvanised Steel, at prices varying from Se.S5 to 15.10 per hundred square feet covering measure. This is the most durable cov- ering owering on the market, and is an ideal covering for (louses, Barns, Stores,Elo- vatols, Churches. etc. Any handy man can lay the "OSIIAWA" shingles. A hammer and snips are the only tools required. \Ve are the largest and oldest ,company of the kind under the British flag, and have covered thousands cif the best buildings throughout Canada. making them FIRE, WATER AND LIGHTNING -PROOF. We also manufacture Corrugated Iron in long sheets, Conductor Pipe and EAVESTROCGII, Etc. METAL SIDING. In imitation of brick or stone. METAL CEILINGS, in 2,000 designs. Write for Catalogue No. 1411 and free samples of "OSHA\VA" Shingles. Write to -day. TIMER I6IIX)M.&Mt X2'331 Oa I »X AEI, Montreal, One.Oliawa, Opt.ITomato, Oat. I lonaon, 011.' WionlIeg, pan. Yalcollver,B.C. ati4 W Craig 511.1 eta Sussex it. it Coibx ae st 010Uundaast. 76 Lombard at. 615 Ponder K. Write year Nearest Office.-11KAD OYY1Ui AND WORKS-OSHAWA. Oat 0 ACRES PRAIRIELANDHEAT FOR SJlI_'1311 Near Neudorf, Saskatchewan. A great bargain. 512 per acro. Close to two railroads. Branch lice of Grand Trunk Pacific surveyed almost through the property. BOX 21, 73 WEST ADELAIDE STREET, TORONTO. IN t'ORTIONS TRUE. Wife : "I'm inclined to think, dear, that our milkman puts water in the milk." Husband : "On the contrary, 1 think he puts milk in the water." \Vhy go limping and whining about your corns when a 25 cent bollle of Holloway's Corn Cure will remove Mem? Give It a trial and you will not regret il. "No beggar," says the philanthropist, ., t will go na•ny empty-handed from a ! good man's door." Not if lie can reach so overcoat from the good man's hall - rack. FREE Mode is Canada and Sea by act Druggists This coupon is gond for one ten cent (toe.) Trial Dottie of the cele- brated olo-brated Dr. Leonhardt's�Anti•PiII a san care for Indigestion, 11111oas. nese, Dyspepsia, Constipation and all alimenta arising therefrom. Mailed free, to a plain package o0 receipt of name and address. }Ill in your name and post office address on dotted line. and send to Tilt lnWf Um Maimfidst , IM, 1Me One Pact to tletfer than Ten II Ask Dr. narenrs, Supt. Hospital for insane. M is- Ireal. for bis opinion of • Tho D & 1:' Meutboi Platter. Yard rolls 51. also tins. Ile (who has known her three days only) -"May 1 call you Edith:'" She -"i don't see why; nay parents thought Emily was quite good enough." For inflammation of the Eyes. - Among the many good q.talities which Pnrmelee' s Vegelabl, Pills possess, be- sides regulating the digestive organs, Is their efficacy in reducing inflammation of the eyes. It has called forth tunny litters rat recommendation from those who were afflicted with this complaint and found n cure in the pills. They affect the nerve.' centres and the blood la a surprisingly active way, and the result is almost immediately seen. UNIQUE. "I married you. my dear, because you were different from other women." "Flatterer! In what way was I dif- ferent?" "You said 'yes' when 1 proposed. RARY LIFE AMONG TIIE INDIANS. Given a reasonable chance for life. the Indian child is es !nappy, hopeful, run - bilious. and playful as is the while child bo n under much happier ctrcum- stane,:. Ile is. too, quite as imitative, end. like his wtdite cousin, he apes the ways and manners of his elders and ninnies their nrcupntions in his play. The intent Indian possesses rather more dignity than the ordinary white child. This is chiefly owing to the care he re- ceives rather Than to inherited sednte- Mess. In his infancy he is stropped ti n hoard or securely pricked in on elongated basket woven for that purpose where he ran neither kirk nor squirm. Ile cries less than his white Cousins. because he early learns That it is on un- profltnble occupation. The Indian 111 - tieer is very accommodating. If her in- fant wishes to cry she lets hint do en. She does not, like the while itiollirr. rush to ttie child when it begins to howl rind Try to pncify hien. Site lets hint howl till he tires of it and ceases of his own accord. it Is bemuse crying brings Them attention that most children cry. Tho young Indian does not get the at- tention, so he soon cuts mit crying en- tirely. With crying, kicking, rind squirming eliminated, there is really nothing left for hien but to remain ralm and look dignified. This 13 what lie doe,; as a rule. • Mrs. Nagget-"You don't love me as much as you used to." Mr. Niggrt - "Thlnk so?" Mrs. Naggst- "No; yell eked t0 say 1 was worth my weight in ,;old, and—" Mr. Nagger y,:u'r' net :o s101t as you used to bs, you know." Cholera and all summer complaints are so quick in their action that the cold hand of death is upon the victims before they are aware that danger is near. If attacked do not delay in get - I11. Udeproper medicine. Try a dose of I)r. J. Il. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordi- al. and you will get immediate relief. li acts with wonderful rapidity and never fails to effect n cure. Mrs. M'Dtiff-"This paper says that mice are nttr•aeled by music; Lot 1 don't believe 11." M'Duff---"\Why not?" airs. s.l Duff-'llecause 1 never see any mice around when 1 play the piano." ai leilf -"1\',11, thafs nn rea.son for doubting the paper's statement." Wl, ARF ALL FAMIi.TAR with the, deep. hoarse bark, grinily called a, grave -yard cough." Take Allen's Lung Balsam. a remedy for pulmonary trou- ble. highly r.••ominended eves in the, earlier stages of Consumption. SPECIALISTS' SMALL HEADS. Brains of great men vary very much. 11 is found that tnen of enryclopakdi0 mind hove large and heavy 1>jfit m - - Gladslone hod to wear a very big hat - with an enormous bed of grey molter and numerous convolulipns; on th.• (Otter hand, then whose genius is concentrated upon one line of thought ore til 1.inall brain. and. constituently have• small heads. Newton. Ilyrin, and Cromwell were in this doss. Your Doctor Can cure your Cough nr ('old, no question iawut that, but - why go to all the trouble and inconveniere e of Imking hint up, and then of having hisprescript filled, when you can step into ani drug store in Canada and obtain a bottle of SIIILOH'S CURE{ for a quarter. 1•. Why pay two to five dollars whon a twenty-five cent bottle of SIHII OII will cure you asc uickly ? Why not do as hundrn+1a of thousands of Car:adiane have done for the rist thirty -Pur years: let SU!1.4))! l•-eyour does tor whenever a ('cayli or Cold appears. HII.OH will cure you, and all druggists hal; up this statement with a positive guarantee. next time you hav3 s Co or Cold cure it with SHILOH &SAE NO. LI 94