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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExter Times, 1910-03-10, Page 2• 1 Unexpected Confession; tnm glad that I ha},pcned to come tt WHY BE 80 THIN?" linen you. Ono of the girls -'Nan, (:i:1{H.1�1''y mini) 1,1:Sg0Nit� - - Irltah has been token \rich a faint ITCHING Y:RI`Iri'1i11'R 1{!'1.1\C .1 F.11'.IGI:TRI in.( spell, rend all our efforts to re- thyThinness Embarrassing,Battleground hate. and Not Natural -Formula Iletin Ruva);cd Thee and .tguiu. Just a few drops of the (nnu,tus, lithe Punishes Them by Cullla been unavailing. Ian► very aloe!, Now Used Which Adds From Ono Oecu),yie,g the greater portion of . Prescription applied to Oft Ear, !land or fleet. troubled about her. D 1). 1'. fres ' Had I het to Three I'uuudY a Week. I Central Europe, (:( moony is, in pu_ ate Fkin will to}:c relay in cantly The author of "Heroes of Mod ter send to the village for a due the It kind of all itch. We poli- , the Rev. Edwa ' tar, i" l'a Every ono ought to have some !!tical respects, the most uufat urern ('rusades „ �v-�M �'"""`� extra rtes!! net tgh bony ave 801110 ably located country in the world. cicely know this. (;!!liar, M. A., at one time rune "('crtaiely'," said Esther, "bI �uwherc protected by such tea- Oil ofwintergreen, a Will., sr,nit,. Y of the bods, both for the sake of of Harrow School, says in his mo all means ; send one of the men fru}th and salt-eslee►,;in tic uiJ, enntb ued with sur .1 heal. interesting book that he had a fe 1 without a mordent's delay. Where treat boundaries as large rivers or R 1 of i'tISS Pcrcival's Early i is Hannah 7" Must thin people are sensitive to high mountain ranges, which would lett sub.=lances as lh)mol and qty• years ago the privilege of meetin the harsh, unfeeling criticisms flick the way of enemies but easily ccr•,ne, trill penetrate to the inner rtes king of the (duiah country, "In her own room at the further which are constantly being hurled n(cessible and vulnerable on all skin, }rill the germs, and heal. 17(eTelti Agnnlllsunr•, r ' �-�= "-.=r. r«d of the servants wing. ('uuldsides, Germany has been, bat Harrow. fh. yeti of:ur time to cense tied tell oto at them by the more (ultimate \sell• molest times, the object ecu rt 1). 1 . D. Prescription, made at the Otrinh king had been educated a CHAPTER 1.11.- (Cent "1't•s, that was what she said," whats►•uik of her condition ,, ll. U. D. be of Chicago; St Augustinu's (nutcase, ('anter• "11'l:at : , 1 figured persons. ! hostile cried the young man reiaied Jeanie, dcnmrel s Esther hesitated. She felt as if !:very one pities a thin, bony nssrutlls, seems to be just the right com- bury, and was able to lecture to with a violent start. "She thought I was married "' she ought to go directly below, for horse, but horses daunt knots it - For a period wereof 9U0 years the de- pined, as thousands of remarkable! the Harrovian, in geed English. "There is no Lord Irvington," `'$he suppose so; yes, 1 know sIIC had already been absent from while thin people are Loth pitied rnnn tribes compelled to de- cures prove. In his lecture he told a quaint story Jennie repeated. "Did you nut tile! t an 1 ridiculed. 1 It ought not to be fend their independent( from the llun t• go on suffering from ce• which brings one nearer to the ho did," said the .positively, her guess for ream! time; and of I 6 it,ow and wishing she dare tell him how hnman(ta and her own inclination so' but it is. Romans. Later came the horrible zcma or any other itching skin div• tteirrl lives of the rndiiis, a small "No Lord .Irvington!" gasped she }Wad come suddenly upon 1'.. - pe :nptcd her to give her personal A well rounded figure, be it roan b\�tl,ion•ot the Nuns; the piracies ease, ulten relic[ is so easily oh- agliculaural and trading tiih . the startled lover. cher, only a day or two before the ; It••ution to the sick girl. or woman, excites admiration; not. o \the Men; the frequent at- invasion t reined. inoffensive character onthewest How, thea,tacks bythe Magyars, Mongols and Jtubt e\rite the D. D. D. Labora-wus she Lady .1l ington'1'' housewarming at the manor, and "1"e s,' only for the figure but for the coast of Africa. if she said, after a momentTurks. s Toronto,rioDept. W. f.., 23 Jordan 6t., y. said the king, 'Wily his lordship dice! in Am_ found her crying over a little ring, •.f t!t„u);hl; "it will lake only a few bright eyes, pink cheeks• rend lips,"fn my county " erica.'' set with forget-me-nots, which hung tee; tents -I will go with you." and vigorous carriage which accom- Germany the Thirty Years War and they will send you, "\\e have no prisons; theref„re �' "Died in Anrericn •"" came in n from a (Hain about her neck. lies. Bellows ,bur a keen, sweep- pans a well-nourished body. Germany served as the great bat- free, atrial bottle. This aamp]o a culprit is brought to me I enter hoarse whisper from Donald's pale She had kneel' all• about that ing look up and down the hall. Strength, health, beauty and Italian 1 for Spanish, Swedish, will relieve the itching at once, and chop off or ,foo in lips. "For Heaven's sake, ex -ring as long ago as when Esther Then she turned quickly.prove to your satisfaction that herog•-•an earr two, sound flesh abound, if ll►o blood (Italian and Hungarian troops, who a hand a foot,- he gees home Main yourself !" hired a room of her mother, when "This way, she said, inn low, reduced the population from ser_ at last is the cure for your torture, rl sadder and a wiser man. lust • and nerves get enough nourisbmentl Jennie studied his face for a mo= she first. began to make aprons. eager tone, and hurried back down out of the food eaten. 1 entcen to four millions and made 11 rite for a trial bottle to -day. before I left for England a chief meet while tie began to understand She felt sure that the revelation' t.h. c• ,ender, lather following close. This prescription aids nature; I flee country an almost uniibabit_ For sale by all druggists cauls to my hut, bringing a some things which hitherto had ac•nld be a great comfort revelation Mr. bchin(1 her. helps absorption, digestion and ns- I able desert. In Saxony, during the er. . 1 puzzled her. Lancaster, but she would nut be- The rase sinulation; helps distribute the years 1ti11 and 1632, 9:!9,000 The churchchit does not fit for • 'What has he done, friend?' I "Nell, it is rather a queer story, tray her friend. passage leading int othe ser- blood and nano elements which persons were killed or Swept awayasked. yams' \ting had been shut off from by sickness. life is not fit to lire. , from the beginning, aha at length Donald sat suddenly erect after' the corridor by a curtain that bun make sound flesh, Get the ingredi-"Ile is a dangerous witch, 0 observed. "1 thought. at the time her reply; 0 great burden settlers ` R cots and snake it at home. and see In 11 urlteuaberl; over 50,000 lust ! king; he can turn himself into an that vit was very, very strange that�, -. de by side with the hangings which: how very fast you gain in weight.'their licca; and eight clues, •13� alligator. from his heart with a long, r _-;1, 'oyee'cd the secret panel before In a half pint, bottle, o),tninll► us , KENDAILLS he could only live a little while; breath, while a new light began t., i,., r;lotto,, 65 churches and '36,000, "Pooh! nonsense! I don't be - for I was quite sure that she was gleamtreat. in his eyes. g g 1toned, so that ellen Mrs. !lel three ounces of essence of peps!►►, o es wore burned. The I alatin Neve that old-fashioned stuff.' + 5 pulled aside the tapestry 1e+ three ounces syrup of rhubarb, arc, having at that time a papula ! =�i aaa►W "'Oh, but we saw him do it, down fund of --of some one else." Ile understood the whole situ, 1, ad of the curtain, Esther died This last remark was nccon'pani_ tier, now. • lout observe the Fact ,as site was!�3hen add one ounce compound es tion of 500,000, buffered a loss of, 1 Sra�nt by the big river.' fol by a quick, searching look at Iatht•r had believed him to I preoccupied, and anxious to get; verse cardiol, shake and let stand t5''�' and in some parts of Thur -1 ' 'Indeed! Well, chief, tell me the tense face opposite her. bound for life to believed Marjorie Dexter, be downstairs again as soon as pus- ; Iwb _ours; then add one ounce- 1ng►n more than 90 per cent. of the [' all about it. You saw him your - " on } go sad !" commanded and that was why she had told him sibto, fii>eture cadomeuo compound, (not' papulation perished. CR[r theelt r' Donald, impatiently, Re had no right to utter words of+cardamum). Shake well and take! the seventeenth and eighteenth "'I did. We were hunting by 'rhe panel had previously been i a teaspoonful before meals and one t•enturies brought. the frequent! banks of river with our Thus in►portuuyd, Jennie told love to her -that was why she had opened, and Esther described a dim raids by the French, who left the Kills Bone SpaVttl rifle, when all the once hint all that, she knew of the cis- j so distressed. . light at the further end of the pas- after meals. Also drink plenty ofwe saw • cumstances connected with Esther' } beene believed that she still loved sage, and unhesitatingly entered, water between meals and when rc - Wales of hundreds of beautifuld Rich Valley. Alia, May 20th. t>1. big alligator lying on a rock in the marriage, and the events following tiring. Weigh yourself before be castles on the Rhine, Moselle andrbaveusaOuueed tp,.ia by its tor. river. The witch man was itn, and he now relaized how she Nil's. Bellows following and careful- Neckar as lastinglong im• sad would not be ;ithdut it. lying it -her giving up business, her corn- marriage, must have suffered as she st ret a sinning. i monuments of Have kiaed a roue swr;n b us use. • asleep in a hammock some fifty fn t abroad, and going directly to 1>' dropping re as the covering over that their visits. OLE cwetsox, yards away. 0 the dangerous crea- te conceal all the evidence of the ar.:'rhirc she did so. ' 1 That ten. the whose story. Aad t school to knish her education. fact, while, with his arms infoldCURIOUS CUSTOMS OF NIJI'S.The beginning of the nineteenth taro he is. "Why is the passage not. 'lighted' hundreds of thousands have had the (. She also dwelt, with fond roti- Ing her and protectingher fr,•tug iccutury saw the onslaught of that aameesperieacelntbe past tu•night }" Esther inquired, as she - p 1 'Well, king, do not laugh with lode, upon her great kindness in that surging throng, he had remind- greyed her way along and think- i Little 'strewn Race Living on ilnt•• mtnstrous adventurer, Napoleon I., FNS gV1n RI.• your eyes like that, for I am el,cak- cd her of thepast and betrayed his by whom Germany was humiliated p !1 ge, Cvb, ing the truth. I put np my rifle recently sending for bur -when she int( that she had never observed dery of '1'itibct. las Weyer before. The imperial Splint, Swellings and to shoot the alligator, but to our was poor and ill to come and find present feelings toward her. before that. it was quite so narrow. a home with her. 1 Curious customs are noted mantle was torn into shreds and an Tameness great fear, as soon as I fired, this ed, J mid !" he mentally {texeiaim- i "There has been so much to do: among the lefijus, a little-known stamped into the dust. The Gcr standout Sparin core ranee. (t 1 fellow rolled out of his hammock "I never loved anyone but m today the servants have been seg Asiatic race, by an explorer, who lean kingdoms and States were giv Ironb:e-m.ke• the hone senna owner nnJ fell on the round a« Y to have discovered all this Lafora: ligcnt about their own quarters," I writes : "Though living on the bur en by Napoleon asB drubbed mother so well," she snit{, in C011- "I oo 0►i, if 1 had but suspected thepresents to Iris well -and sate• „nary for the his back, and swore he was hurt. C111510n, the te3r9 ,gall! streaming lll'C Bellow's eXpinitle(1, r1ClJtit e( gbecause it removes the caw* of the " 'Now, g truth, she might have been mine g ;dens of Tllibet, no trace of Bud - *ter 1•ttives and favorites• rho made! trouble. �,ow, O king, if this wit over her cheeks: "she is the kind- Lut. you will find a light in the dhism is found among them. Their the German cities ring with their Keepatoeaealwaysatha„a-!)lore loot been inside the all' eat, dearc.,t fiend that anyone ltturt1tcunder myclprcaitectionthis mu f chamber below." I religion is animistic and consists :.•.1 life. Would Any nation, says; for $5. (food for titan and beast. Ask could he have been h could have. and laud• If . Wonan in May eat s your dealer for free copy of our book ignore 4TrealfaeOnflellurse"orvrllteusAt ' fired?'Genliem tho lessons taught by such an un SR e. t cnsAi L CO.casero rant. yr en," conclude happy, terrible cast 1 1 king, I sen you are laughing with your eyes; but it is very difficult to rule over a people untaught and given over to superstition. "What did I dot Why, if I had ler: hint free th(e• would have killed him as soon as I had gone on my stip, so I saved his life by chopping off his left car." Cr, The Storyy Life. if site is never Still unconscious of treachery, in the propitiation of the various found -if she neer comes back -if the sprang to his feet, looking the fair girl kept on. finally reach-; spirits to whom sickness, failure of ahc is diad, I hope that I may die, lice a different tnan. ►•1Q lt►e rouse from which the light' crops and such like calamities are too." Thank you, Miss Burt, for tel- 1. shone and entered it to find a very attributed. The Thepropitiation Heartbroken sobs here again ling rue so much," he said, in a: comfortable apartment, circular in the form usually of thesacrifice (.1 burst from her, and, seeing that . more animated tone than he had: shape, \cry neatly fitted up, the' a fowl or a pig, a small portion b: she was utterly unable to control i vet- used daring the interview. %vr.ils hung with fresh print, the; ing set aside for the spirit, the rest herself, 1etterl allowed her to Ind new try to be ltopeful," he' furniture consisting of r,dd pieces going down the throats of the offer - weep unrestrained, while he sat (acl(10(1 I cannot believe that any, that had been discarded from other er and his family. with a pale, perplexed face, trying Ir\in personal h nrm tapihetofltheallen Lady suspieiuns but s from rotrenrpet time tel were. A whole "The 11lijus bury their (lead in a to solve some new problems which 1 covered the fluor suitable spot now seemed to puzzle bin,. twhich von say have been entertain-'-- nicely made bed stand on one p t rear the house,' the led in connection with sir. Harold s'Fame traveller continues. "A child If Esther had been a widow fur edin;ton. I nm nut goingto re- td(.' a bookcase, half-filled with is buries{ at once, but the corpse more than three years -if she was!Netswish hu a --I am books upon another, and a writ- .,f an adult is kept in the hoes( free to ►Harr _ } P going into the' ing desk upon still another ; but y Hsg' nl, why had she I search for her myself. if she is the room had no occupant : from two to fear days. The !death so Pers steedjly ave. cc1 !tint since!: r1► England- if she is titins; -an - ,. i of time intervening between Beath me to London irks, had she • 1 • ,, j will yet find her." y "Why," exclaimed Iisthcr, in ns -'and burinl depends on the wealth ridden biro to refer to Hee toI tonisllment, after one sweeping of the deceased ---the wealthier the ptahtr that you may! , glr.nee around her, "Hannah is not man the longer the period. relations that line once exist((! bc- 1 fervent!) breath( d -,Jennie who here ! She must have--" (. twcen there i7 He could not under- now also began to tall+ heart a I A month or sc, after burial. stand why sRc had preserved such little, in view of his courage. Her sentence was ant, ,hurt at when the deceased's relatives have an attitude toward him, especially Donald then bade her "( drmurn- .this point by the sound of the clus- had time to prepare for it, a feast after his explanations that night ing, and hurriedly tookhis!nose. i .ing of aa p•,ndernts door behind her. is given to the tillage. The grave on coming out of the burning The next inscnnt she heard 1110 bolt is then opened and the remains are theatre. g� Ile hastened at once to the nenr of the Itck shc•ot into its socket, and es; livery stable, and was soon ga'. t1 ris- alnazcd to find herself a i' torch, the ashes being left un He did not believe her for be a tieing with ati possible speed to-, .pity 1 ,touched. coquette --she w•a t (To be continued.) LIVE STOCK NOTES. 11 seer!:, hardly worth while. with his horses and have their Fer- t s on sincere by I ward Irvington Manor, although he nature to trifle with 1,un; and, he- had no definite purpose in view in seeking the place. He was simply inspired with a desire to visit it -to look over the gr(.uud, and see for himself the place from which the woman whom rl observed, when nt length .Ten- j he loved had so strangely vanished. Iambs continues. One cannot have be posted on their comma] nilmet ' pie's sobs subsided. "Who is that' ggentlemen with whom 1 have seen her several times l'' "She has been out occasionally with Mr. Frank ('ushmnn- "Xo, no," 1►onald interrupted. "I know hurt. The 11131 I refer to is touch alder -,bunt my age, 1 she.uld judge." "i think you must mean :1r. (Jiegory Appleton --he has heft hair and wears a nnl'taehe," Jer:n c, thoughtfully. Yes -he is the one : :incl tile. is Mfr. Gregory Appleton • ' -:1;,1 ler u- ald. with n frown. ' He is Mr. King's nephew, and he lived here while he was stndy- Ina low with his uncle. Ile bus his own lo(Igings new. but he comets here n great deal, rind thinks as much of Esther as if she were lits owe sister." "Oh!" said Donald. inn lone of much relief that the girl wanted to snide in spite of her grief ; for she also began to understand Ferric things which bad long puzzled her. '' 1►id -- di.l Lady Irvington ever hat pen to mention that she had nee; me here in London 1" the young alar, inquired, 11fter another pause, met flushing slightly ns lie put the gut -t i. n, for lie realized that it see- ll .t quite the thing to innkc r Janie witne-1 atzainst her friend. llut the Aid unhesitatingly re- Ple ndrd, and with (Ieliberate. pur- 1,,,-e: she fold nee flint ns she lees, she hacl.secnred greatly dis- tressed over his confessions of lure to her nt that time. "It is very strange :--I never dreamed that she was a widow " III: REA()1' TO ('t'ftI HORSE .111.11E:\'I's. Because a farmer has to work LE! - -- - ..� A Savoring used the save as lemon er vanilla. It (assclaing granulated sugar its avatar sed adding Mapleine, • delicious syyrvp t• mss: s/J a syrup better than so opt*. ►tap eine is s -,id by rr.aers. it rot send 5ec for T as. bottle not recipe b.ok. Crescent Mf,, Co.. Seattle, We COLT DISTEMPER Can be taadled very !sally. T.•stet are eared. ar:d ell nth err In Nem sea W... '.smatter her"e• ..est." kept from harms Use qln. ea'r by army aiV11S., I. 1.41 1L U13Tfall'ra cya(E. nlv,,, tb• tont(• or la recd. aro- on the blood **teepee germs of all fandorte. e1l, dutee,c•me;r. Oe• am!bmtletnerzes.aa,of,rd to e.,re o'.• see. tea de•l•,a. •C.b':3 •1o.sa I.oe ofp.+',Itle• aeon.. drogtn.t,'r' farcl ee I..Ae. ( (Dee •r.rytb int. Iar;mI me111nr bone remedy In ea:steam - r... y,a,\ IISTalal TORS, all ID..,sraaM a SPOHN MEDICAL CO.. t►..I.t, sad asw.• ea• Hamm .l.tl•t.. Goshen. lad.. U. S. A. Swenson's Malleable Stump Buller Stumps and Trees, We Pull Them as We Please. preaching :In increase in flocks a ices nearly every day in the year, flf ADI H while the high-priced demand fur it is nbsoltltcly necessary that lie • SWENSOMS, is.), Illumine hmnc after her pre - F. -?.talion to the gns•rn, she passed I: 1' t Ilh y(•«r father ruli(1 mother and couug Airs. Lancaster." .l nether shock went tingling '. h Penal,' ter Ids very toes at thl+ Papist. . ")'"ung firs. f.ancaster !" he re- pented, with a dazed look. I.S In spite of itis anXi('1y, iii spite; his cake anti eat it too, and the►(• elld know how to treat their injur-t of the suspense and mystery attend- t will sur^Iy be n sheep futni,i by ie1• in); her fate, he was far happier and by' I 1t is not nut of place to stiggeo than he had be •1► for more than ('i.rn lacks a great (Zeal of being , that it is wisp to hove such n th(,r three years. a balanced ration, containing too oughly good and reliable horse re The burden of doubt, distrust and little flesh -forming and too much needy as Kendall's Spavin Cur, misunderstanding, which he had fat -forming material. Wheat is the constantly on hand. Kendall's Stettin Cure is non and for a long series of years ha -- been a standard burse remedy. It cart hardly be too strongly recom- mended. Iii this eonneclion, we want to commend to our readers an excel- lent little book called ".1 Treatise; on the Horse and Itis 1►isreAem.'' The book and Kendall's ;spavin ('tire ought always go together. The book can be haei free nt the chine for converting feed into but -drug store where Kendnll's Spavin ter or cheese, it is nIso true that 1 Ctire is sold or it may be secured we hate paid relatively little atten-by writing to the llr. B. .1. Kendall lion to the question whether the Cninpany, n! 1'nils, Ver- e0w5 fr(un which we bent) do the • menti 1'. S. A.. if et ' vuclose a work etememicall• or not. We re- two -cant stamp to pay rAe(AFr. jest machines of n'1 1.'n,1- that. waste ,e....,_ - _ material in manufacture. It is a --�� disgrace, therefore, tint we have lini(I se little nttcntion to this ques- tion of economy of procl11(11011 in our dairy (rows. Remember that this mammy of production is not a question of ability to (ligest, but a que'tien of the use and application of the digested tnoteriai. boloIflfor et Fu satfood n r lung, w•for „ as •nalts R' ), lac, andpoultry, and should IIP was now confident that Esther never be omitted frons their daily stil' loved hien; that she bad never' rations. Grits and barley are also wavered in hr r affection for Rim. °Neellent. 11 is hest to feed small He could tee that it had been only;grain in the morning and corn in her belief that lie had been false to ti'" evening, Penttering the smallher---that he had been bonnet to! grain in dry chaff or clean strew neither - that, had given her' in order to give the fowls needed 8111 ngth to refrain from betraying exereisc in scratching for their her love for him whenever they•had feed. met of late. While it is true that from one * * a . * point of view a cow is simply a tna- But win re has our fair heroine been dnri •; all this time 1 I10w er:18 it possible for her to theappenr so suddenly and so ef- fectually from her friends and guests) As we nlready know, she went up to hrr own npnrtim•nts, after supper, In procure nnother pair of gloves to replace the ones that she had tipped and soiled; we know that Jennie assisted her to put them on, after which she started to go downstairs again. There was no one about -- every one was below, intent upon the pleasures of the evening; even the s"wants, who just then had no pressing duties, were tiptoeing /.bent trying to catch n glimpse of the brilliant throng and merry (lance i'o. I{sal. jii t flE•lhei was passing down the upper stain hall toward the grand stab way. Mrs. ik:llows suddenly appeared before her, corn- ing from the corridor that rear at right ankles with the hall. "Ali! Lady Irvington," she ex- claimed, wifh some excitement, "1 A Ctii',FtjL INVENTION'. One of the latest inventions along the lines of gas and gasoline en- gines is n harvester engine. This consists of a 2'i h.p. sir cerled engine which operates the ►a,• llin cry of the binder, and rr L' vas the horses of s0 much work. This out fit will doubtless be a very familiar object on the Western plains in the near future. (it is manufactured by the Gilson Marruf. etturing Co. Port Washington, 1Vir., and Cluelph, Canada.) 41035 UTE! MTV �l�Qw es 111/1.I S1. l a r Stet\ �U. GILSON GASOLINIC NOlNE F rf,,_..,-r..C.•rn • •n,•e,r•,Cb•meVs aiI M•. ti••s. rtr. Frey Tris!. A.1 f.r ear,'.. ell 11.1, 1 ^r11SON MFG. CO.. its York Si., rill/Lon. 1 Maple Syrup Makers At:ontlon 1 I Now ran yen reasonably est NI to retake r Oven a fair Anality of letup using nut•nt• date puts and kettles and pans for boiling tour Maple Myrna. Writ• for booklet on lbs "Champion" Etnpnratnr to IN GRIMM MANUFACTURING Company, Ii • . lllaiten 11., Montreal. t of Slun`Ve ir.l'ulling Machina made anye largest splace.e11We sell them en a r'n.aran'ee that They will work taster. last longer and are more convenient than any oilier mach'ne made tor that purpose. 1'.•u know there a an only be one 1:EST. II you write for catalogue 0 you will know all (.bout it. They are tree for the asking Write to (1+), as this may net :'i rear again. Limited, • LINDSAY, CANADA t1 T. Prmi-pnrte►,le Fneine with iva:.,'rator Tunk Thr.(. F; 7. - ODORS :1S .IIOS '10 1)11. ' TI 1 . -- Orientals Inhale Suref l'crfumee After Each Meal. Sweet scents to aid digestinn are an importation from tho Orient. The influence of odors is exceeding- ly markt-I Some people cannot re- main where lilacs are in full bloom or hear the odor of jasmine. Some are given a headache by heliotrope or tuberose. Some are given the 1•t reign or a sinking sensation by cantharides, semc are nauseated even by roses. Attacks of real ill. ness with long trains of digestive disorders following in their wako may be brought on by odors. The fact can be explained only cis n pathological phenomenon says 1►r. George M. Niles, exerting ita :!'fluence on the rnost vulnerable i a r b a n ks•Mo rs e I 1 It(t in the human economy, of nd- gastro-intestinal tract. As uffcnd- the ing scents may set• in motion a train of morbid digestive symptnms. so, on the contrary, those that are sweet and agreeable veiny exercise a highly beneficial effect. The Ori- errtnls have developed to a notable degree the faculty of deriving the most enjoyment frurn inhaling fra- grant. adore. The most beautiful creations pie- '• tared in the imagination of MI'ham• ugtnr, are the rams a• fhr P,on.lar.1 llorif.'ntal Y..apnrsln. Rn. ' 1n(dana etre the he' eine., weep! that they ere rnonntrd nn •kid, with iris represented hose o1 1110 engin.' %litre it is well prnterted. makingRa• vl•ry t tient, pr• m am + ifl the .mnied ns uyinplls Uf I'Aia- relf.rnrltairlyd oulft, ar sal, he peen fro', the illustration r.hnre of the t h p. ]t, who exhale oarnttne dice• formed of mug l:ngint.. fl.-a.,r,3 ,.1tn.,•.mpl.t.a.1.erti.•mer,f.'n1.endt.r...(sh.ptt (•,. THE CANADIAN FAIRBANKS COMPANY, Llmlted' from their lovely bodies entrancing MONTREAL,y ST. JOHN, N. D. TnnouT perfumes. It is the custom of man CALGARY, VANCOUVER0. WI►:NIrEO' Eastern people to spend after each ( steal a season of quiet while the air Iaroend them is rendered fragrant I,,v a fine ►Hist. Or a bottle of their favoritetalrel. perfume is constantly in- I:yen the poor indulge in this hee . bit. for all fee] that. it benefitsi tit Ives reel digeat.inn. 1►r. Niles be lir•'.es that n psychic state fay..rnhle to the digestive process may be filmed through the olfacle• er as \tell as through the otl , CHEAT IS THE LAW. Semi -Portable or Skidded Engine Epulp;,e1 *115 Evnnorator Tank. Designed taieclally for gerrral farm Work Molt in S and 1 n f' +. Specially Adapted for Liork In Cold Weather. 4 N: Aen'u41 HOTEL TRAYMORE 01 7111? 0(:1 -AN i 11ONT. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. A m*1al8,.nt t,. G .,, r . re.f s.1 :Man la plat 'Rev •a,,)r•t•A salts I':r'e 901.5 hoet•try ah• newNt a.d rt .el np t Mate , ; a.!a(t;. CU/ stns,:• A tee !a.e.,l:• Is la. lige Mel •b• of tic bed recess, ,•1: AURA if feet p, • R.4,7 r'.ts ea:smand. an ore*'• v:' v •„ty r:141,0 *tib mos and MITI vat., !•Mss'• fesoes' le stl storyCk►n'+n 7.n, .,rature •si.i.s.s 1 by 1T.:rm uidasi th• 1►:..t 4:••1 -1'm,�$ is bsot..t 1r•y. a Is ,vary my Ua,f paraeler. Capa.11y 1:40. tree• for 1:lu►:als1 CHA'tLEiS O. MAIQUi:Ti t!, Mencpr, TRAVMORE HOTE.1. CO1PANT, D. S. Will I E, Pratelen1. "And now, my sen," said the bank manager, "on this. the tllres- hnld of yottr business life, i desire In impress one rile.nght on you. Ifenesty, ever and al.1a; s, is the policy t.h•rt 1s hell." "1"es, father," said the young man. ":Ind, he the way," appcnt:ed the cit.;Lread. "f would urge ','.li to reed up a little common law. It t. ill amore you In find• bow many things you can do in a l•usinese '..ny and still be honest." IThe nnly things as ceittagious to 1 vices aro virtues.