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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-10-18, Page 6 (2)Ilefese Srme get Pete e gle easenenes the sleritak t‘ke te • gt e Underwe iteepa you come y well aa wannetheeanee the hor t fibres that Make some under - ear itch are taken nut Of Pen- , Angle wool. ?ezees. wee la a variety of fabrics, styles and Falco. la all *flees for women, ruen otr4 anci guarantazd by your owst Fruit Growers, Attention IUiringno conunision top?...7, und erillln,7 for kaI The Mastoin TOWIL9ttiN ifto thus Ode to ofter you tilan-lzral Apple Tre.es 4 to Q foci gh, grown hero, liardy gad tbrjfty etecl: for Fall mil Spring douvory, ior s15.40 per hundred. LOUIS CiEnVAIS, f Laurenceville,Quil MAKE rifONEV for yourself and frien,ds by selling Winnipeg Reel lietate, Good tommise ',Olen allowed reliable agents. Write toe ;lay for particulars. CAMiJ.AND DELMRIDGE, Central Canada Brokers, 446 Main St., WINNIPEG. A SNAP IN A WHEAT FARM 'NEAR WitiiiiPEQ. 1,066 acres of clean unbroken prairiet the fines( •wheat land on earth, on the banks of the Red River, 45 miles frona Winnipeg, four miles from two railwal stations. $15 an acre takes it, $5,00(1 cash, balanee‘easy. No better farm, no better investnienf. WAUGH & BEATTIE, 12 Merchants Bank Building, • 'Winnipeg, Man. uctZ etdeti Forty ',carry° Tau eaulilth.wa hoastltt int. in Denver for MO on whirl sew stows wh;elt bying $15.00o • row ram Dower has a populatio* of 200„000. la fire rears the 'p000ktisa will reads tie half•initUosh rearL Ordinary reslelenee lots in clistriete droo},v into. 4.4.4 Wel Goa SISO to $2.000 esela. WE ARE LAYING Cat A NM AHDITION Waallingt 011 Iltiglitd . 111 lacted end mac iggitlyschlktioa ia Darren iaraiaViall a 14400 ',sew of Pike's Path and ' 'Roder 14onntning Apr a (listener or 75 ins?" Owlish ii45$11koMagtaa Park. A. idea Wt.. Lots 25x125 Foot foic $100 3.1 CASH VAU:Satrni • Illistrur,.`..zer 441tm.zr Zirlt owl I. Yos own. sexas w macre» 'Nair yars,..42* a• t4yak•ota gra wa.ar $9.braga saw Dadra. owl fa tad. aarmal. •4.11#481sat• dust 'oloseiromt orece4r. aim* Ns Oi 41.4az ra,• lasolse. Leo rely fast " THE carrostv teteiN AND TRUST co, Ccatarr ligadins ts n Anne, Cklaato ;ea hoc mower to all Ak Gowen wise ea • " • , c 00 lam, • , arommoneme atch SOLID GOLD T171E 15 -jewelled Ryrie Bros. Movement of this $25 watch may be had in either closed or open face, 14k. gold case. It carries a full guarantee as to its accuracy in time -keeping. , Freels* the same excellent movement in., 25yeargold filled case will be sent postpaid for 41 ,e b44 us a hostal tearer end stie.71 send free qf claxte our larg-e troioti ataiorue. WIIEN CALENDARS BEGAN ADVICE OVER THE PHONE THE EARLIEST' DATE MEV IN 1E61-PTI2tN EVCORDS. Eetypielaells ftts It leel( to year 42i1 B4,' C. — How Ile awe the lime. Prof. dams Henry Breo,sted, et the linivereity of Chicago, veho just return - Cd. front an C.,41(diti011 tON 1110 upper , Nde, has set /me% the authentic, date La the workis history_ 1,000 years. He has eatielied inimelf and a number I ef his echoic* intituateedthat records were set dOINI(1. in Egypt in the year 4241 B. Recent excavations in the Nile val- ley by the University of Chicago Egyp- tian expedition, of .which Prof. Breast - at was the head, are the basis for his claim, Beginning with 42i1 B.C:, which Prof, Breasted belielles marks the, beginning at the recording' of the years, he finds a calendar was kept, not unlike that followed- to -day. CONCLUSIONS OF SCIENTIST. Prof. Breasted's opinions and preof, Atrii,laieMdf-'4Tife omedFid Date in History," in part are as '1%e Egyptians had early determined the length of the year as 365 days, not being aware of theadditional quarter, ar nearly a quaeter, of a day. This convenient ytcar they divorced from ihe,sphases of the ninon, and divided it into twelve ninths of thirty days eaca, WW1 jin intercalary period of live days a:, the end of the year. This, the first, prietical calendar ever evolved by'ecin ancient people; remained an achieve. merit unparalleled in any other eiViliz• anon. TRACES BACK CALENDAR; "Now we know from. a statement 'n COnsorinus that eorne lixne in the period from. 140-141 to 143-144 A. D., the calen- dar coincided exactly with the seasons, and that in One of the years in that period the rising of the Sothis took place oi . theefirst day of the calendar year. An entire* revolution was completed at that time. "That, revolution must have begun 1,- 400 years earlier ---that is, in 1320 B. C. The next earlier revolntionmust have begun in 27.80- BC.—that is, at • about th6 beginning of the age at 'whin we are •first able. to 'observe conterdporary indications of the. shift. - "Now, it Is impossible that this cal- endar was first introduced at late as the Awenty-eighth century B.C., in the midst of the • highest culture of the- Old Kingdom'. .Moreover, the - five intercal- ary days at the end of the' Year, proving the use of the shifting year of 365 days, are mentioned in the Pyramid Textse, which are tar' Older than the Old King dom. • ,,,, HOW HE FIXES •I't. ?The Calendar existede therefore, 'be- fore the Old Kingdom, but if this is true, we ,nniet, seek its invention at a time when its sessions coincided rough- ly with those of nature, as they rnwt have done at ifs introduction. Tbis carries us 1,460 years back of their co- incidence in the Old Kingdom; that is, the cajendar was'introduced in the mii , die of the forty-third century B.C. (4241 B.C.). "This is the oldest fixed dale -In hfs- te.ry. This fact demonsteates not only a remarkable 'degree of precise know- ledge 'of nature in that remote age, but also stable political conditions, and a wide recogaition of central authority, which could gradually introduce •such an innovation.' -. •• FRENCH HOTELS. * # __- The kiitives Demand Certain Comforts, but no Gewgaws. , The Feench desire in hotels the essen- tials of a high civilization and enof the gewgaws: Dislkie of •ostentation is as strong in the..commen people as in the educated Every one is satisfied with a hotel that can offer airy rooins, clean -beds, with immensely long upper sheets that double nearly the whole way over the quilts, spring,y mattresses and chine - nays free from return smoke. The sitting room furniture may be ex- treme",y plain. Objection will net Le • 'merle ffin coiinir. ar sealmeldwerolgetej ZEri, Itiutetuilran even SOlob ni tune. I ceVeredewith a, dark oilcloth. The white Each meal may be served On st table ,elatnask table cloth is reServect general- ly -for dinner. The veriest lout requires a napkin at all his meals. , French children are on .a. different footing from -English children, says London Truth, There is no netrsery in Frame°, exeept in houses where there is snobbish„ Anglornania. Nei' is there 4 "children's dinner" either atehorne cr at hotel: Having company is not a rea- son to Occlude the ehild or the one tr - two children from the table of the grown up persons The disadventage is that food unsuit- able to .extrerne youth may be sometimee (en; but with a little management 0 lk soup and a sweet entreinet may re* to blunt the aPpetiteefor heating dishes. The advantages are that the child unconeciously imitates' the man- ners of the adults with whom he dines, and learns to express himself In a na. tutal manner with neat eleganee. , One hardly ever sees more than 4 coupe of children in a I;Tench fernily. A whole tribe of near relatives go to. gather to the...seaside or country gear- teee in thn holidays. The grandfierents are included. - If the child or children of a family are Small, a bonne le of the party. She has In govern her charge or chargee by moral evasion. The law severely for- bids eOrporal punishment, and puhlie Opinien supports it. . hen the day is done the evening is ometimes quite raw. She— When are you ping to give nini tat itlie Money to buy that flew dressr flee jnj .-"Next week." She—"That's what yote'ee cued, last week." Ite---"Yeee, end -thee what 1 say now, and airi going to ,say - next week. I ain't the -kind of man. In ray one thing one week arid another *Wing next week." * A' 44,0**101110091MWOMMIMOMNIAMPOIMMINIIIINII,.101.0104M1 ades, And there nre Men whO tin Willing to marey ratherthan go to Work. . . . , . „... • „ . ,..„. It gra what a man owes, but, ityliat II pftys; that keeps hint poor. After aildft weetands effort to beautify 'herself le bu & lain attempt, A BOdiltS g Saya ia a Descendant ot the 6re4 *• Napoleon. (7.401-1,t WII0 PAU- Sevenal British touriete hid an eaciitt EMS1 T WAY. ing experience. Whiteinspeeting the roe= of Napoleon 1- Vegneetleet, Franee, the other' day. Th. "ervons People Cell tsp Theii Nailed!! Advitser" on the Slightest Provocation. The writer reeently met a certain well-known and highly reepeeted Wee York phyniciart who does a largo and inereading practice over the 'phone, Ile is an extremely clever man, and ea never rise sending advice when he feels that. a personal interview le neces.. eary. He is a surgeon as well as a phy- sician, and recently when performing hay lia oWas t ractiaoionir,r one of the big bonito's up on the 'phone by a nurse in a children's infirmary, some three miles distant, who informed him that he was wanted immediately to at- tend a child who haid dislocated his shoulder. . , He could not leave his work, but he told the, nurse to bring the child to the 'phone, and when she anstvered that the boy was in her arms he gave her minute instructions'structions whereby she WilS able to . lent dhendisloceteeltehatelder Wit hi itStplace. The whole thing Wok le,s,s than -three mlnutes, and as soon 115 he learned that everything was "in order" the surgeon returned to his Operation and smiled at the expressed surprise of his assistants. "The 'phone," said the doctor in ques- tion, "has been of the greatest benefit both to the medical profession and its clients, and I do not know to -day how should get, throtigh my work were it net for its aid. Not a day passes that I do not send advice to . A DOZEN PATIENTS. over the telephone, and in nine cases out of ten the results • are as satisfac- tory as though I had seen them persone ally. Of course, where the ,complaint is a serious one, and ,much depends on personal observation, I do not risk eehd- ing advice over the 'phone, though even In. such cases as .thesetI know my pati- ents so well when' all the symptoms are wired to me by an iatelligent rituese am enabled to prescribe with perfect safety. "Only last vveek I had a case which I treated almost entirely over thee 'phone: The patient in this instance Was a boy who had met with an accident WelierbY he right leg was fractured. .After Set- ting the limb and leaving hitt in the circ of a capable nurse, I found it was, milt° unnecessary to Sechim for several the nurse telephoning me his symptoms each hour, so that I Was able to follow the -results of the accisient just "as' care- fully as though I were -beside his bed.' The medicines were Made up in ney own -dispensary- and forwarded by expre.ss messenger to the nurse with minute in- structions! which Were followed to the letter.- The lad never had- a relapse, and to -day -he will •be out of bed. ,e 'Of course, in diseases evhich m,ay have a sudden termination, sending .ad- vice over the 'phone -is toe - risky, add no medical man,- however well he might know his patient, Would, in such a case, be justified in - adopting Anything but • , A PERSONAL ATTENDANCE. could tell you o/ one . instance in which advice sent over the 'phone re- sulted in the patient's death—simply be- cause the disease was one which re- quired the closest attention; and this canna be given eyithout the presence of the doctor: . . "The case was one of acute pneumon- ia—a disease Which will take a sudden turn for the 'worse or, the better in the twinkling of an.eyet The patient had Itten progrensing favorably; and the dobtor had 'left him apparently com- fortable and on the road toerecovery, when the nurse noticed a sudden and alarming change. She at once tele- phoned to the doctor, ,who sentesome advice over the wire and said he would be up as soon as possible. But he was called away to a very urgent Ca.SJ and it .was two hours -before he was able to fulfil his .promise., When he ar- rived ,the patient was dead. ,- "Many -parents are extremely' fidgety and nervous regarding their children— especially if. they are" very young—and T have been at dines driven almost erazy during the night by the ringing el' my telephone bell and the questions seri la un Ii, a lady ,patient tit three in the merit- ing, she declaring that her baby had croup and was dying. I asked her if the child was ,eoughing at Hint moment, And she replied: `Oh, yes, doctor,tsome- thing terrible,' Then I told her to bring the baby to the telephone and let, him cough there once or twice,. and I %Ironicj soon be able to tell ,whether her feat..., were well, founded. She immediately was u.s I told her, a.nd in a moment I 1 sOrtk.mnt,ING J„rox.' o MY CLOTHES, for I could hear the infant erouping its little life mayeetuul I knew that speed nri my part, was the only thing that would save it. • ,"I reached the 11011130ttse in. -record time, and, after three,hours' constant attire, tion, dragged the child out of danger, and to -day he is well, '111113liS WO'S it ceee in which advice over the wire would he been useless., though had it not bcen for the 'phone the child's life veould undoubtedly have been sacrillea ed, for long before the Messenger could have reached me and I had answered OW etimmone the diseaee would have avnitipliehed its purpose. "1I 'have Many doilsumptive patients, and men and WOM011 who are victims of other slow -killing diseazes, Whom I treat perfeetly eatisfaietorily OVer the telephone. ',they inform me of the proo gents of' the, ,nomploint, and I preecribe for them just es I would were I seated beside them and With quite as rnueh All. S'Onle patients, of . course, Will 119 trik0 adviee over the 'phi:Me, being ler judiced egainst the tsrowing ettstOtri, an i. Adder prP. Illmi 'P./.0.c). Adte,,,110 fa't . rettetrird, howevei, Unit, I have m ny patient.; whom I tionielitnee nevn, st,6 'for -Weeks together, and yet wdient I ni eonetently attending to and ad- vi mg lit OW method." t QV** ihe Virie .other night I *as wrung, up e tarty wi In the Emperore bed- room„ and the gide was peinting oot the beautine of Napo/el:nide bcd, when one at the party exclaimed: ntherede somelevely in it owl" At this momenta inart looking won- ,. derfully like Netioleon, ,arid dreesed in °the grey coat and ,coalted 'hat of the familiar, shape, eat bolt upright, In tile bed. "I am Napoleon the Po:twill," he. said, f'the direct descendant of Napoleon the Great. 1 fought at the Rattle of Sedan, and after the battle 11 retreated to Paris, came here, and fell asleep. You- welt° me up, Go away." - The guide untArstood that the man must be mad, and had the good sense not to contradiet him. Ile replied: U please your Majesty to follow us, we will conduct you to your palace." The man folloWed with dignity, and was eventually, taken to' the hospital at Versailles, where he is to he looked after He is an Italian -named Benvenuto Buonenore. . It Is ;thought that it may be his ,extraordinary reeemblance 1.0 Mpoleon' the' Great which has turned hie head. SAVED BABY'S LIFE. 'There are thou,sandse 'of mothers throughout*Canada who have no hesitae Lon in saying that the geed health ere: joyed by .their little ones 18 entirely due ie the judicious use of Baby's Own Tab - Jets. And there are many mothers whp de not hesitate to say that at critical periods the Tablets have saved a baby life, Mrs. Wm, Fortin, St. Genevieve; Que.,. says: "I feel sure that Baby's Own Tablets saved my baby's- life. When I first began giving them to him he was so badly constipated that the bowels could only be moved by injec. tion, and he suffered terribly. After the first day saw a marked change, and in less than a week the trouble was entirely remeved, and he has since en- joyed the best of health." Yeti can get Baby's Own Tablets from your drug- gist„ Or by mail at 2e cents a box from The Dr, Williams' Medi -cede Co., Brook- ville, Oat. • . AN IRISH SUPERSTITION. A sdperstition, that to this day finds great credence among the Peasantry pf Ireland, is that a lighted candle . place in a dead man's hand will not be see by any but those by whom it is used and also, that, if a caudle in a clea hand be introduced into a house, it wit prevent those who may be asleep with in the house from waking. Withi recent years a party of moonlighters Mader the Wetzel -Ice ofthis superstition attacked the home of a farmer, lightin their way :with a candle whose candle stick went -a edettel man's hand. 'Unfor tunately for, the creditof the creed, th inmates were alarmed, and their assail allth fled leaving their dead hand be hind them. COSTLY. TRIP. Sir Robert Ball tells us.,•what it would cost to reachone of the most distant stars, supposing a railway , were con- structed to it from Lotedon, and that the low 'rate of two cents der 100 miles prevailed. If tho -intending pa,ssenger could present to the booking clerk the whole of the National Debt:of ithe United Kingdom, a sum exceeding $3,350,000,- 000, he Would require 5,000 huge carts te eonvey it in sovereigns to the ticket ollice. Even when the poor clerk Intel accomplished the lengthy task of cOunt. nig' the "fare," he., would want another $515,000,000 before he would feel justi. lied in issuing even a third-class ticket, and that could not bea return one for -the money. ,The Flagging Energies Revived.— Constant` application to businese. is *a tax upon the energies, and" if there be Udt relaxation,,lassitude and depression are sure, to intervene. . These 'come from stomachic trouhlee. The want of exercise brings on nervous irregulari- ties, and the stomach ceases to assintit sate food. properly. In this condition Parmelee's Vegetable Pills will be found a recuperative of rare power, restoring the organs to healthful action, dispel-, depression, and reviving the flog- gin,g energice, I It tequire,s the worrnanship of ttvente Men, and the use of much co-stly Clattery to inake that dairity artiele, thimble. The scenery along the straight and narrOw path is less attractive than that bordering on the broad road leadidg elsewhere. ° To be perfectly proportioned ..11- man should evelgh twenty-eight pounds for every foot of his height. Well-trained Spanielt women leern,to handle the sword from their earliest years, and as a result they have admir- able figures and an easy wellt. MARTYRDOM DESCRIBED,, gi ngston ,Man Tells Ilow Ile Suffered; and 'How Lie was Released, "For years a titer - tele" le how Chas., 11. Po\velh• of 1051 Raglan Street,Kingi ston, , begin& his otory. Intl Myr to 'rhronie eonstipe.. Wien, but now I as ',free from it end all through the use ot ,Chas. t,eonhardt's An -r. 1143111. • "I Was irulueeel to try • Antt.Pin by reading .the testimony of some one who had suffered for eighteen years and had had been bured of ronstipation by it. I 1 taken tOns cif stuff recommended,o cure; Vut which ‘vorp,6 tathk, e than blbel,Ildttofs' told me there wag A itto cure for rot. flr. teonhardt'o Anti- s Pill cured 20e.-0 All' Dealers eri The NIVito214,'le co., c lottuited, .Niagarar Valls, Ont. — POO I: atdo, Whoophig Cough, Croup, Coughs every description and character, ong ArOubles, Ast1=4, Sore hr.ats, etc., ate• all ,cured by this afe and perm4nent rernecIA,. F or sale by an .deviers.. nlY 25 cents a, Bot.tle. 011all sicles we rp,ceive, thousands of estimonials fr0111 grateful people Expresing their app-reciati6n of -- EXPECTORANT "OSL1AWA" Steel Shingles, itainct:e:r, ,?............„ , Adr ......... ..„,.. if Waked .11.114,01,71' j'flrss'oo*„--*""1"ogawr'""ms""asu""NiA""'''l""":A \ Olt .0,414 OW —,11. ::: , lliallIll*Leev."4.7:4 7../.1 LaK efr:L;r:,72t.lbel;g4w ,...,404‘ owl' ettl.""Ventitted WW1?. Jettetdr aTendeatadott ''et' • i A \ *.`f,M 4-"Pa-V=Aisogr. \ FAiolur Proof nagel.,...41 -a onononinnt so. ior somw---- - --,40.,,,,.. No 10. 014208 Made from Painted or Galvanized Steel, at prices varying front $2.85 to $5,10 per bundred sgeare feet covering measuro. ethis is the most durable cov. ering on the market, and is an ideal covering for nausea, Barns, St-ores,Ele vators, Churches, etc.- Any bandy man den, lay the 'OSHAWA" shingles. A hammer and snips are the only tools required, We are the largest and oldest coompany of the kind under the. British flag, and have covered thoUsands of he best buildings throughout Caneda. -making them e - FIRE, WATER AND LIGHTNIN We also „manufacture Corrugated Iron in long EAVCSTROUGII, Etc. . METAL SIDING, in imitation of brick or stone. METAL CEILINGS, in 2,000 -designs. Write for Catalogue No. 1S11 and free samples Write to -day. b-PRofIsm , sheets, Conductor Pipe and of "OSHAWA" Shingles. WIEN= 7221113=214.4i. -.,71Z 3F):E2ICERIER71E8 .fiilifefily 0111 I OHM, Off 'folio, WI WHIN, Oni, I fan, Mal VONNIVet,1),G. 321-3 W Craig St .i t28 SUssex et. 11 Colborne at I6Dflundas at. 76 Lombard at. 615 Ponder :AI. Write your Nearest OFFICE AND WCRICS-CSHAWA, Ont Rear Neridorf, Saslotchewan. A. great bargain. '312 per tyre. Close to two railroads Branch line of Grand Trunk Pacific surveyed almost through the property. COX 21, 73 WEST AbELAIDE STRE2I, TORONTO.' FINGEB-PIIINTS. 'T'he Police have a collection of 70,e0 sets of finger -prints of criminals.- , has been completely established that the thin capillary ridges on the tips of the finnersundergo no natuetti change of characteristic froni the cradle to the' grave. - • • STILL IN ,FORCE. o Many curious inalances of •old laws t, May still be found in England. - In Chester the man 'who fails to raise his. hat when a funeral is passing becomes. liable by an old law to be 'taken before a magistrate arid_imprisoned. • Sleeplessness —When.Ric nerves are, - unstrung and the whole body given ,bje to wretchedness, vhen the. mind is,filled with kloont and dismal forebodings, the result, of derangement of the digestive 'organs, sleeplessness comes to add ta the distre.ss. If only .114 subject, coulkt sleep, theies would, be oblivion tsr a ,evhile -and temporary relief. Parmee lee's Vegetable Pills will not only in. • duce sleep, but t‘'111 act so bitnefreially. , that the eubject will wake refreshed . pd restored to happiness. A Merry Hoak Goes, all the Dey, But one cannot have a 'berry heart if 110 has a pain in the back or cold with a racking, cough. To be merry one must be well .and free from aches and pains. • Dr. Tlidinas' Eclectric Oil will where alt pains, muscular or other- wise, and for the speedy *treatment- cf ,colds and coughs it is a splendid, 'me& eine, Gibraltar is the smallest British, pos- session, It measures less than two square miles, Canada Is the biggest, with 3,746,000 square miles. , Parents buy Mother Graves' Worm Extenninater because theyknow it is d safe niedicine for their' children mid an effectual expeller of worms. sPearommialmee • • Our idea of strong will power is that of a man who can fast •until he starves to death. - .••••••••••••••••r. • At the Near Chimis Mines in Australia, gold. has been found 4,200 feet below the. surface. This eonstitute.s a record, Where, can I get some' of Holloway's Corn Cure? I was entirely cored of my Orris by this remedy and I wish some more of it for my friends. So writes Mr. 3, W. Brown, Chicago. „ OLDEST ALEHOUSE IN EittGLAND. The .oklest licensed village alehituse he England iselainted he be the George Inn, in 'North St. Philip. The licence dates 'rem ISM. Each Storey 61 the picturesque old'structure overhengS that beneath. The front is broken by by. windows, a poreh, and a flight of stone steps leading to doorway in the wall. At the back are more queint doors and window:h. and a turret built against the wall encloses an outside stair, while in the yard Mill reThailIS part III id gallery found In en many hoetelries of the Middle Ages. .A curious chimney surmountsend' gable " ROUND TIII3 VV0111,1) ON rOOT. A French Noblernan, , the Vicomte Raoul de Grand, who has just eoirn- 'Acted, for a wager of .1,14,000, the feat ot making the tour of the world on foot. tas arrived in Paris. It has laken him en year to do 5j, and u the cours f bis extraordinary ra bles .the VI. mine hos pasqed through Europe, Inerita, Afripa, .Spain, and Portugal, upporting hhi lf, iti eompliancd evith lie condon& of the water.'3.)y the NA&rif ketelteb executpd by himself n route. atirear.....-ergetesee. etlany a man who Wouldn't 'think o2 reeking a wife of his cook has no seruye les about making a cook of his wife., "I have nothing but praise for ourt new minteter.'"'So 1 naleed when the plate mite round." • • Cholera morbus, cramps and lefluired: complaints annually make their appear -- mice at the testicle time as the hot ther, green fruit, cucumberee inclonse etc., and many persons are de.barrea from' eating these tempting things, they need not abstain if they, have Dr.. D, Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial and 'take a few drops in water, It cum:, tine. cramps and cholera in, a remarkable, manner and is sure So check every dis- turbance of the bowel, COLOR -BLINDNESS. The Meet common form of eolor-blinde nee's, is an inability to distinguiell red. Last year thirth-fonr officein and would - he officers of the British mercantile Ilia., rine failed on their eolor test, ttvenly- three being red blind and the remainder' unable to distinguish preen. The 4,606. candidates far certificates were alto. subjected to the fotm vision tests, grid twenty-two of them failed to disringuiele the shapa of the objeet :submitted. Dear Mother Your litdet ones are * ttotiifint eve' to" Fall sod WMt wtathet. They *ill atch oat. Da you koow shout Shiloh'. Corroopthos Cott the L.00g Tonic, awl' veliat3Ihssi,.Jir 41 *my ? It is tea to be the softly whole row* for *IL Iliseosts of the *it pastor. in children. aboaetiy hooks owl plasmas its, take. histoottorosod So cur or your snoop f4410104 The pncai. 25e4, re I itod all tleolors osoirsoisie soli 34 311 I, CO fiVi 4eiipyhassishokt 11‘T'it" "t-4".."14"i6g NO. 41-A