HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-07-12, Page 2111L'allla7ESS WOKS. Sunligilt 5 ap
Weed task Red BIleci to Stand' wormy better thaa other SQara •
Sallialbt Way. . S la tri
lt
S4aap 'and fealleiVadite
S111111
IIMS1111013,UG WEAPON§.
,
Erects -Wen Lasa et' the Beilorlial9 Itleasse
of Eueepe.
issat is. best av.iseis lased la the
*Eal Steaba Buetueea
S. aveina a's
elrieBaaa. Weala leneausTatag cirle
iaele aas ataaka, lates sie!.; health
saner than centaoyasent clad the,
ilese tecaltheateeeiA the loss el eautes,
`l'housands OE -e3r1g04 vomit; ASE
eseinen sslio ear% a h.uottW0y feota
in ./11161 latheatese
latish/I:tents .are' eneat„ suffering .aie-
.tiara 01 0C1aX2d nees-es- ana deticienca-
V saceizigth 'Ince:Ilse -their Weed, ssupply
)1.a .not equal" AO the atrain„ placed - upon
thenr. 'baeattileas .-"and flerv051
they Work agaiast time with never s a
a rest when' headaches • and backae ies
Simko every hour ince- a day.
. woozier their cheeks .lose the tint of
• health and grow pole and thin. Their
ey e$ are dull, ahrunken and weary; their
beauty .slowly but surely fades. Busi-
ness girls and women look older. than
their years because they need the fres
guent help .of a true bloodenaking,
etrengthening medicine to carry them
through tae day. Dr. Williams': Pink
Pills are' actoal food , to the starved
nerves and -tired brains of bush1 „'°
men. They actuelly intik° the rich
blood that imparts the bloom of youth
and glow of health . to women e cheeks.
They bring bright eyes, 'high spiritsitinti.
make the day's duties lighter. Taaelse
months ago Miss Mary CadSvell, who
lives at 49 Maynard 'etreet, Halifax. N.
S.. was rua down. The least exertion
would tire her out. Her appetite was
peor and fickle, and frequent headaches
added to her distress. The doctor treat-
ed her for anaemia, but without appar-
ent results. A relative advised her to
use Dr. Willams' Pink Pills, and, after
wing but six boxes she says sae feels
like an altogether different 'person. She
can noweat her mals with zest, the
color has returned to her cheeks, and
she felt better and stronger in every
way. .
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure blood-
lessness just as food 'cures hunger- That
is how they cured Miss Caldwell and It
is just by Making rich,red .blood that
they cure such commonailments as in-
digestion,rheuinatism, headaches and
backaches, kidney trouble, neuralgia
and the seiecial ailments which make
miserable the byes of so many women
and young. Oils. Sold byall medicine
-dealers or by mail. at 50 cents .a..box or
iSlY boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
t Soa
For obyimis reasons it: is rihtural
than the anainiels police sliguld not be
anaious to sectire the bomb which did
not 'explode when thrown at tae roy
couple. •
There was 'a reason behiad the desire
to nip in the, bud chance of further
damage. There is an unwritten law in
the reigning houses of Europe, says the
London Evening Standard, that all re-
nes of attenipts upon royal lives, as
\sell as the instrumeuts used for treat-
ing the wounds caused in such attempts
shall be destroyed. Them was a solemn
as'iernhly in Geneva of Austro-Hungarian
officials to witness the destruction oftn.e
instruments which caused the death of
the Empress Eliaabeth and of the esurgi-
cal implements used in making the post-
-Morten' examination.
The custom is based to a certain ex-
tent upon superstition, but more solidly
upon the determination to prevent the
relics from falling into the hands of ex-
hibitors of such ,tragic trifles.
The custom in this matter once was
to grind to pieces the weapon which
had been employed. When, however,
the dagger was secured with which the
priest Martin Merino attemPted to mur-
der Queen Isabella of Spain, rather mo e
than half a century ago, the 'blade Nv
found to be of such finely temPered
steel that it resisted every effort, of file
and stone.
a
iflfli Or OCEAN CABLES.
e enie Cases in 'Which th.p Aiase Men
Miscalculated.
Pe'e:elmietia iproplts cometini6 sound
CCIge and le0.eal, inat tho unree.iening
ce-Aiinist vale eees hettee things &vile
argumthem
.In
outetrips the.
daye e2 titep%enson's early
periments it was predicted that a speed
• ntore, than twelo Milos an' hour by,
reit would be impractieable, if for no
other 'reason than that the, litiman-sys-
teen would not withstand travklling at
.0, higher rate of
In theearly days of steambets itwas
declared that transatlantic steam 'nave.
gation would be impossible, mainly be-
cause of the inability -to provide room
aboard Alv fca. the !Nal that would be
necessasy
had scarcely done, speaking when the
news arrived that a ship had just finish -
en a trip across the Atlantic under
steam.
So with transatlantic cables. Some
promulgated the belief that they could
never be laid because the density of the
water below a certain depth 'would he 30
seat that the cable would not sink to
the bottom of the ocean. All the wise
folk regardless, however, of their predic-
tion, have saw the cable promptly de-
scended to the ocean bed at a depth of
10,404 feet, and withip. the last year a
cable was sunk in the Pacific Ocean
in the vicinity of the Luldn Islands at
a depth of 26,246 feet. or
ti e voy
age The prophet
A BANK'S VERY STRONG SHOWING.
The fortsasecond anntial meeting of
the Shareholders of tn.e fiterchants' Bank
of Canada was held- in Montreal on -the
-twentieth instant. This institution has
an ,eminent board Of directors ankh
q numbered among its officers polite of
Canada's greatest business men. An
able directorate, like this undoubtedly
influences a bank's business, and this
Something like panic was caused
when the news got abroad; the Spanisn fact ia probably in al measure respoa-
1 peasants imagined that there must be sible for the splendid accumulation of a
l magic hi the blade. So a Cabinet was rest fund of more than three and a half
millions and a remarkably large proper-
. di 1 available
COURAGE IN MAN AND WOMAN.
Stories Showing flow Two Persons
Faced Great Peril.
Women display courage in their own
incomparable fashion. Typical of wo-
man's method of encounterin't danger
is the story of the woman who observed
as she was concluding her toilet for the
night the presence of a burglar under
her bed, says the Strand Magazine.
Without letting the man know that she
had perceived him, this woman quietly
• piat on her dressing gown and knelt
down at the bedside to say her prayers.
She prayed aloud. She made her own
personal interceasions to heaven and
then prayed for all poor sinners living in
• the darkness of estrangement from God,
"particularly this unhappy man lying
under my bed, meditating the wicked-
ness of stealing and perhaps of mur-
der." The woma.n saved the situation.
I cannot imagine a worse situation
than that of a certain steeplejack who
found himself one day at the top of a
church steeple with a madman grinning
into his eyes. The madman was his
mate. Both' men had been at work on
this - steeple far many days and had
talked ,together while they hung in the
saddles with the utmost accord, but on
this particular day one of the men looked
up to see madness in. the eyes of his
companion. In that moment -he was
alone with danger. No shout could
avail- From the street below he looked
like_ a spider snoozing in its web. The
macs and chithneys of the houses seem-
ed to be level with the ground. High
up 'lathe loneliness of the empty air he
w was alwith a madman. ,
- The man kept his wits about him, and
addressed some cheerful remark to his
mate. The madman only grinned. The
man -bade. him look alive, that they
naight the sooner get below and enjoy
thernaelves. The madman chuckled.,
and announced that they would get be-
low in 'double quick time, for that he
was going te jump from the steeple with
his friend in .his arms.
The other laughed as if at a good jest,
and turned to his work. Then he began
pushing with his feet against the steeple
to get a swing into his saddle; he meant
to grab the madman and hold him till
help carne. But the madman was also
swinging'his saddle, and before the
sane man realized his danger the mad-
man's fingers were closing round his
throat.
There they. swung in the dizzy air,
high over the utcoriscious city. By
. something of a miracle the man found
his hands clutching at his tool box as
he swung baek. His hands closed on
wrench. Ile grabbed it, made an upi
•ward thrust with his strangled tody,
and caught the Madman a jangling blow
across the side of his:bead. Then lie
&itched the fellowaahody to save it from
.falling, end., after 0, moment's breath-
• ing, quietist lowered himself and his un-
eOtiSciou$ mate to the ground below,
especially summoned to deal with the o assets
crisis, and it was deterdined to submit These two points mean great strength
'
the steel to the influence of acids:This from the deppsitersstandpoint, and
for the like foul purpose
proving successful, all implements used have under- should be carefully investigated. anal
•compared when considering a bank for
deposit purposes.
The Merchants' Bank in the year just
closed earned in net profits about three-
quarters of a Million, and carried for-
ward two hundred thousand dollap of
this to the met fund. One hundred
thousand dollars was written off the
Bank Premises account. The notes in
circulation amount to $3,984,050, an
increase of about $300,000 over 1905.
Deposits at call amount. to $11,349,169.99,
while deposits subject to notice total
$22,834,055.89. The total assets, how-
ever aggregate $49,541,955.27, and of
this $19,526°,486.54 are immediately avail-
able. The capital stock is $6,900,000; the
rest lands$3,600,000, or over 50 per cent.
of the bank's capital. The surplus pro-
file earried fotward this year after pay-
ment of dividends and addition to rest
fund • and officers' Vension fund amount
to $74,590.1% The payment of quarter -
/sr dividends, beginning with the current
financial year, was decided upop..
These facts and figures, when care-
fully' analyzed, -show conservative,
though progressive, up-to-date manage-
ment. One important indication,. in
particular, of the confidence of the
depositing public in this institution is
the very marked increase of deposits
over last year. It seems that the in-
crease was general throughout the year,
and was not the result of any large in-
dividual depoeits, and, therefore, show
special and uniform progress in this
•
department.
• Mr. E. F. Hebden has been 'acting
general manager for the past year, and
the very satisfactory position of the
bank in this year's statement made his
perialanent appointment as general man-
ager a foregone conclusion. It is safe
gone the like treatment—knives, swords
daggers, _revolvers' and, • presumably,
bombs.
It was a cruel irony' that the bombs
thrown at the young King and Queen
of Spain should be nurled by a man -
secreted in -the only house in Madrid
owned by Queen Christina. This, at
first sight is surprising. Napoleon III.,
in the terror which Orsini's attempt In-
spired,. bid for safety by buying up
the houses facing the Tuileries, so that
bombs shouldfisot be flung thence by
his enemies.
It is from places whose position should
guarantee their safety tnat danger comes
Only a miracle prevented Alexander II.
from being blown to -atoms in his own
'winter -palace. The Grand Duke Serge
was assassinated outside the law courts
at St. Petersburg; Gen Bobrikoff was
slain • when ehtering the Senate; M.
Plehve was struck dead with hie secret
police all around him; the King and
• Queen of Servia perished' in their own
palace. •
A blow by the would-be murderer
upon such an occasion as a short time
ago 63 aimed in spite of the most elab-
orate"precautions of the police of Europe
The detective forces of all the capitals
z f Europe are represented at this mo-
• ment at Madrid. Probably all the an-
archists societi6 in Europe, too, are
represented there.
Plots are always on foot, though they
y not come to anything. The police
et to hear of a movement; the conspir-
ators are warned of the discovery and
abandon s their plane. The authorities
do not unnecessarily' display their know-
ledge.' -There is danger in publicity, the
anarcnist is imitative, and will strive
tc shisre the fame, as it is esteemed, the safe .princiPles and the large con -
of to say thalf.Mr. Hebden will carry out
the man who, dascovered in a feloniou-s-1
enterprise, becomes for the :moment a servative development of this old estab-
European figure. a lished inStitution. ••
M.
Uti.MGHT
• ta. Ann REWARIS wig
•Ta.rowNdhe,Lo rail i Cray
Fcmon Provca that
Sop Fontaiao any
injurlons chcw:call'; or miy
form IA ad ulteratik!.n,
aa,
•
as'earer'N.
-
is equally good with hard ,or soft water.
*If
you Use Sunlight Soap in the St4iiht way (follow dirctions)
yoU need not' boil nor rub your ,clothes, and yet youw11get better
• results than with boiling and hard rubbing in the oldrfa.shioned way. •
As Sunlight Soap contains no injurious chemicals end is perfectly
pure, ..the most delicate fabrics, and dainty silks and laces may be
washed without. the slightest injury.
Unfor Brothers Limited, Toronto
61, • .1",„:„:3
4_3
ileac -Mr
terfi.!
Your money refuRied
by thedeatee froin ashore you buy
Sunliiht Soap if you find any
cause for complaint.
s6
LOW RATES TO CALIFORNIA.
To accommodate summer tohrists to
California the Union Pacific has author-
ized the very low rate of one fare
plus $2.00 for the round trip to either
San Francisco or Los Angeles. Tickets
on sale June 25th to July 7th, with final
return limit September 15th, 1906. Also
Other low rates to California pointe
during the summer. Inquire of. J. 0.
Goodsell,„T. P. A., 14 Janes Building,
Toronto, -Canada; or F. B. Choate, G.
A., 11 Fort SL, Detroit, Mich.
THE PERIL OF IT. .
A lady at whose house Leigh Hunt
was dining solicitously said to him at
dessert:
am••••••••••••••••••*.aaaa•••••••*.aal
YOUR SUMMER OUTING.
• If you are fond of fishing, canoeing,
camping or the study of wild animals
look up The Algonquin National Park of
Ontario for your summer outing. • A
fish and game preserve of 2,000,000 acres
interspersed with 1,200 lakes and rivers
is awaiting you, offering all the attrac-
tions that Nature can bestow,. Magni-
ficent canoe trips. Altitude 2,000 feet
above sea level. Pure and exhilarating
atmosphere. Just the place ler a young
man to put 111 his summer holidays, An
interesting and profusely illustrated' de-
scriptive publication telling you all
.about it sent free on application to
3 D. McDonald, Union Station, Toron-
to', Ont.
•
ntAVY • V.VEDDING RINGS.
Women of the Upper Congo Wear 'Them
KE.VP CIRLDREN WELL. ,
Stonsarli and bowel troubles kill
thouSands of little ones during .the hot
weather, Diarrhoea, dysentery and
cholera infantinn sornetiinee conic
without warning and if pronmt aid is
not at liand the, child may be beyond
Kid in a few it011M, li you want, to keep
your children hearty, rosy ayid fall of
if during the hot weather give them
to ocea.sional 'dose of 13aby's Ovvn Tab-
lets. This inedieine prevents illness
and eures it when it comes unexPee1eci-
4 ly. And this. mother has the guarantee
, pf a govere ment analin
analyst that this .edi-
ii
eine is lal sit'alutely I safe. , Mrs. W. J.
Munroe, 8 nialina, Scirile., soys:--"For
More than three Yee1'9 Baby's Own Tab-
' Vete 15 the only,' reedieine I have giVPrIa
thy childreri, and I think the Tablets in-
valuable for storeaeh and bewel trove
lilts." Sold by all Me.licirie dealers or
ty mail at Ve. eentq o, box from The
T. Willtathe lifediKine Co., Ileeeltente,
Ont. lilosp the Tablets hi the home,
Round Their Necks.
The Bayanzi, who live along thel Up-
per Congo, have a strange custom which
makes life it burden to the married wo-
men. Great brass ring,s are welded
around the necks of the \MITS. Many
of these -rings worn by the women,
whose husbands are well-to-do, weigh
as much as thirty pounds.
Frequently one sees a poor woman
=whose neck is galled by the heavy
weight, and in places the skin is rubbed
off by the ring. This is a sure sign that
the ring has been recently welded
around the neck. After a short time thee
skin become 6 calloused; and then the
strange ornament produces no abra-
sion. The weight is a perpetual tax up-
on the energies. In every crowd of wo-
men inay he seen a number who are
Supporting the' ring with their hands,
and thus for a time are relieving their
weary shoulders of the' burden.
A ring is never put around a woman's
neele until she i9- belliMed to. have at-
tained her full physical development.
Once on, it Is no eas3r matter to get it
off :Women who' inerease largely in
flesh, after the rings have been fastened
on thelierieeks, are in danger of strang-
ling to death. and htstaneesi of this eort
heve Occurred.
Soinetiof The vruiion regardethe*eurfous
ornameht with pride, imagine it en-
beneee their Im ortane.e, and beauty,. and
wear their burdens 'with light hearts.
5
CHINESE NEW YEAR.
The Chinese New year is a. most thor-
oughgoing festival. The houses and
other buildings are lavishly decked with
flowers and lanterns on the eve of the
great holiday, and the streets are throng-
ed with people who have come out not
only to buy provisions, new clothes and
gifts, but 'also to settle their accounts,
for, by an exemplary custom of the
Chinese, all debts must be paid before
the close of the old year.
"Don't yon
orange?"
"I should be
dear madam,"
I'm so afraid I
ever venture on an
delighted to do so', my,
the poet replied, "hut
should tumble off."
--
, • Pleasant Medicine. — There, are
some pills which have no other purnase
evidently than to beget painful internal
disturbances in .the patient, adding to
his troubles and perplexities rather than
diminishing. them. One might as well
•swallow some corrosive material. • Par,
melee's Vegetable Pille have not this
disagreeable and injurious property.
tbey are easy to take,e are not .unpleas-
ant to the taste, and their action is
mild and sopthing. A trial of them
will prove this. They offer peace to.the
dyspeptic.
An End to Bilins Headache. — Bili-
ousness, which is caused by excessive
bile in the stomach, has a marked ef-
fect upon the nerves, and often monis
f(ets itself by, severe hendacnes. 'This
is the most distressing ,headache one
can have. There are 'headaches from
cold, from fever, and from other Onuses,
but the most excruciating of „all is the
bilious headache. Parmelee's Vegetable
Pills wilt cure it—cure it almest int-
mediafely. It will disappear as soon as
Abe Pine operate. There 1$ nothing sur-
e' in the 4reatment of bilious headache.
:instal Johnny : "Well,
about it. You earl take 3 ce
banli and buy. anatherpint
.1.•••,•••••1•11..
'NOT THE RIGHT ONE.
"Did you finally get up courage
beasisk her to marry yoti?" ,
"Yes, and sho gave her word."
• "Ah 1 I congratulate you—"
"Not so fat. Her word was Nit."
len't worry
Is out of my
of milk."
.,
Very seldom does the photograph of a
woman -look lifelike—perhaps because
she had her face closed when it • was
taken.
• 2.,• --a
4.
1 , Scratching is foolish; it only makes a bad
matter worse. Weaver's Comte allays the pain,
cleans the skin of eruptions and other, sores;
Why not buy a bottle to -day ?
"You horrid thing!" exclaimed the _en-
raged wife, "I'll throw my shoe at youl"
"Oh, a little thing like • that wouldn't
hurt," he replied kindly. And then
they Made IL up.
Hard and soft, corns cannot withstand
Holloway's Corn Cure; it, is effectual
every time. Get a bottle at once and
be happy.
a• -.••••••••••a••••-•••••••-••••*••,.
USED TO THEM. --
"Have you noticed with what uhcon-
sciousness and composure Ethel wears
elbow sleeves ?"
"But my dear," replied the haughty
Algy : '"What did ypur mother eay
when yeti told her that I was sorry that
I'd mille such an idiot of myself last
night?". Alicia : "Ohl she said She
noticed nothing 'unusual."
30i asca -ex ix Ea, et, 4:11. Dirwolioati,irt
03
" Keeping Bverzastingly at it Brings Success."
'01:
4I
11411 51';14 lath/Mir-
Pt's.
,!, 111111u
ll
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F li 0.,
pit!! 11
,11;
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)1' 4
IN 1.11 ,11,4 '
'
PEDLAR'S CORRUGATED IRON is made on -a 36,000 Ib. press (the only
one in (anada.) one corrugation at a time, and is guaranteed • true .and
straight to size.
We carry a 600 ton stock in Oshawa, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto and
London an_d can ship ordinary vequirernents the same day order isreceived.
•Made in 1 inch, 2 inch or 2 inch corrugations in sheets any length- up
to 10 feet in 28, 26, 24, 22, 20, 18 gauge both Painted and Galvanized.
This class of material is most suitable for fireproofing Barns, Factory,s
MW and Warehouse Buildings and is water and wind proof.
Corrugated Ridgee, Lead Washers and Galvanized Haile carried in stock.
Send Specifications to your nearest office for catalogues and prices.
THE PEDLAR PEOPLE, •
Montreal, Que. 1-Qilawa, 0111 Toroille, OHL lunaou, Oil 11011CoilVer,B.C.
• 761 Craig St. 428 Sussex a. n Colborne st, 09 Dundas at. 70 Lombard st, 616 Ponder et.
Write your Nearest Office.—IIEAD ovricy, AND WORKS—OSHAWAf Ont.
Largest makers of Sheet Metal Build ing Materials under the British. Flag.
ima••••••....aasmasamma0,1 • ma ram ;ma la mom mamma Nona w• 1 ma
1111•011011•11110111••••••■••••••••••••••••••••••1.
Suamaaaanawawaramerminamaarmal
in Western Canada zttitclAte
. ed lauds hi
Saskatchewan, only 8 miles'from two railwayg,10.1".R. G.T.P.
Strongspil, 00 per centplough laud, spring =colic, no sloughs&
About 40 miles 14.14. of Indian Head. Pnes 'S10.50 per acre
- Write for map tmul full particulars.
c'rt. PARSONS, al VVelleeley Street, Toronto. 'Canada.,
"So he praised Inv singing, did he?"
"Yes. He said it was heavenly." • "Did
he really say that?" "Well, not exact-
ly but he probably meant that. He
said it was unearthly."
,
annuirat map is victor rnsa otter soaps,
but is best when used in the Simlight way,
lbw Sunlight Soap and follow directions.
"I'd like to go away for the rest of the
week, sir," said- the • tired bookkeeper.
"There is no need for. you to de that,"
replied the employer; "stay here, and the
rest of the week will come to you." • •
••••••••••
•
SCr &telling is foolish ; it, only .me.kes a bad
one, ,"yop must remember that she is matter worse. Weaver's Comte allays the pam,
used to washing dishes." weans the skiother n of eruptions and oer norms:.
— 'Why not buy a bottle to -clay I
.' • New Toronto -Muskoka Train.
Perhaps the handsomest train that has
ever left Toronto is now running, leav-
ing at 11.00 a.m. for Muskoka Wharf.
Everything is new, consisting of bag-
gage car, two beautiful coaches with
large smoking roonisa and two parlor
cars. The train is equipped for elec-
tric and gas lighting,. and- it is sure to
please Toronto -Muskoka patrons of this
line.
The parlor ears • >have buffet attach-
ment, and meals will be served to pas-
sengers without the necessity of leav-
ing their seats. •
ENOUGH,
"Yea," said the returned native, "I've
become a Benedict since I sawyou last.
I understand you have Married, too."
"No, thank Heaven 1" replied Peek,
ham, "only one."
aramaporma
Nearly' all Infants are •more or less
subject to diarrhoea and suehtemplaints
while teething, and as this period of
their lives is the most critical, mothers
should not be without a bottle Of Dr.
J. D. laellogg'd Dysentery, Cordial. This
Medicine is a specific for, such - corn -
plaints and is highly spoken • Of by
those who have used. it. The proprie-
tros claim it will cure any case of
cholera or summer complaint:
DULY ENDORgED.
• Lord Roberts tells how orC one Oeca-
Mon, finding hiniself short of cash, he
drew a cheque for £50 to the order pi
1IiS8oldier servant, and eent him ovei"
ta the bank to get it cashed.. The ser-
vanthanded' it inand the cashier ex-
amined it. •
"Yon will have to endorse, this.,", he.
remarked, as he pushed the cheque
back.
The soldier stared.
"Wha)t, for?" he asked. -
"Well, I *cannot pay the money un-
less yell do," replied the clerk.
. "Where shall I endorse it?" ,asked
theservant.heew
• I
the reply,. 45 the clerk
pointed to the back of the cheque.
The Soldier took the pen and wrote tto
follows "I ben to. gay that I have
known Lord llobert,i for several yearti
and he has prOiied himself, times with -
°U. eriumber, to be ale. lierive Os, a lion
but .v.iwilys kM
kindly considerate towaS
all serve under' hitt. • And I have
therefore great pleasure in respectfully
endorsing his eheqne.---lames
• THE WORLD.
They tell us in our childhaod days
The world is round, and we,
With youthful heedlessness, accept
The doctrine easily.
• -
When we are grown to man's estate
We are so overwrought
With constant struggling we've no Urn
• To give its shape a thought.
At last When we approach the end
• And see haw small a lot •
Of stuff we've' gathered as compared
With what some folks 'have got,
He ---"Do you -think you could love me
in a °Wager She ---"Possibly not; but
'might be able to put up with. youtll
sou could, Make money enough tes•s y
a larger shame'•••
•
• One trial of Mother Graves' Worm
Exterminator will convince youthat it
las no equal as rt-ivorm medicine. Buy
a bottle and see 11 11 does not p1eas3
you.
IN THE LIBRARY. •
"This book is So dilapidated .it looks
as though it had gone off, on a tear.
What are you going' to do with it?"
"Oh, just have it bound over to keep
the peace."
FLY,
PADS
What -ware told comes back, and. We
Are quite prepared to swear
WhateVer other shape it bas,
It surely isn't square. •
.aaaeloaalapiala
It Has Many Offices. — Before the
Gertnan soldier starts on a long marcn
he rubs his feet with tallow, for his
first care is to keep his feet in good con-
dition. If he knew that Dr. Thomas' Ec-
lectric Oil would be of much better sex'.
vice he would throw away his tallow
and pack a few bottles of the Oil in his
knapsack. There Is nothing like it. e
„
"Where's the umbrella 1 lent you yes-
terday?" "Jones borrowed it. Why?"
"Oh, nothing; only the fellow I barmy -
ed it of says the owner has been asking
for it."
11112110011 DERIBBED
Kingtton, Man tells how be Suffered ATI
How he was Released.
(Ivor years a martyr,"
.ii how Chas. Er. Powell
alionlI
gOintiebeanginS:reheit,
o
itory. martyr to
chronie constipation,
but nowt ant free from
it and all through the
nee of Dr. Leonliardee
Cues. IL Povniee Anilatialinyill'W"ho are now
steering from this complaint will be :glad
to learn from Mr. POW611'01 story that there
le hope for the moat stab'born ease. Ho
, continues: _4‘ X was induced to try Anti*
Pill by reading the teatiMony of some ono
who bad bon, oared of onsUpstfon by it.
I had suffered for eighteen years and had,
taken ,toms of stuff recommended as cures
but which made UN worse rather than
better. Dosors tad Ito tuts was no buro
for mo.0
Dr. Leotwhordeo,kutl#Pill lo for mole by oll
Druggists Or by Who Wilsooltylo Uo.s
TAd, Noik Tolls, OM.
14r. Por4 ii1 Tor* otiory word of
'Woo ototootooto. 10*
Tail it tad that the e.vere.re ernhn
r.peridf_•, all his life looking or his fatal
NVOMan—nnd then in the :near:time gets
married t
*nos ONLY
• =MG TAT
KILLS 'THEM ALL
AVOID POOR IMITATIONS.,
sox by 111 Druggists and General Stores
and by mail. -
• . TEN CENTS PEIMACKET rim!
ARCHDAL,E.,.WILSON
• HABULTODI, ONT.
orse
1
wners se
GOILBAULT'S
Caustic
Balsam
A eafr, Tasiths Cara
Thew/Lest, East BLISTER ever need. Takes
lb* place of all Moments for mild or severe
fternovei all Dunches_or Blemishes from Morava
and Cattle. SUPERSEPES ALL CAUTERY
"Shviretriitboxtre'ol*P"id is wgiblearrs.%Peterto**givgeare sa°rtisbfargemig4;tioa
Eric* 1.50per7bottle, Sold by dragelits, or sent
Y express. charges paid, with full directions for
e use. Send for descriptive circulars.
he Lawrenee.Willlavas Co., Toronto, 0 t.
Nte
...erryThe.
sea
la•
a
•
a
t C 'BUYS A
Ode H 0 NI B
:
hey ru.........ta itilve
eugI.I 1010 itil 11341.y0t ter OW
it ki. *one rued kora wiktigh
firlaa 616.000 i yaw rim.
Demo lot. ripskilast of 00,600,
is Gra yaws Ow papititiss will owls
sly lual.aillias wok, V
Penney maims lats la Jiairisis slowly row.
Loma 144 frisk $750 tir $2.000 auk.
i WII Alt WING OUT A 11,16i. *tomes
w y • 1
Nai$1;ingtOn rielgh'01
- l'ile141.40.0A wee Acidly *Attie* is Deaver:
. ilmors.i4si a porttat slaw at -Mi. Pak *1414 ^ '
LA* _widtaika fit s iliiiNsiet of IS *Ito&
9004661041:944440s1 Pac1'. as 1.10 11et.
Lots 25i125 Feet for $OO
CASatiLt Pik 1140ttril.'
41 triesWitett: tot i
$rlatsissett
fors vow es owls sea ataws wits ow* w wools_
zar...trarizr
Lell'4
...
.., LOAN AND utirr co.
'!Ilteeeelhoilliel ii 0 it, $6000r, C404.
Ili 04144110.0 000.01011 Ka le ihswoosilirt 00
1311A1 NO., 2
.1
—