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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1903-9-10, Page 31 MERE! OLD LIGLA.NO NEWS BY. MAIL ABOUT 3'OIIIT BU'LTt ANT x x$ PEOPLE, i)ccurrences, in. the Land That Reigns Suprema igt the Cern- mere/ fel. World. The cereals .,f the' church -going population of London shows that only one person in four attends ser- vice of any kind on Sunday, A mother and son who have for- gotten their namee and where • they earn from have been taken into sus- tody at Brighton. The police are trying to find their relatives, A Newbury poultry farinor moved into new premises and the next morning found that eighty-three • •young chickens from prize birds, had been .killed by a big rat, which . 'rte aj caught. During some excavations for a new graving dark, at ITebburn-on- Tyne, on Thursday, a large body of earth fell in, burying a number of Men. Seven dead bodies have been 'recovered. At Rochdale, the other day, the horses In an omnibus were frigkten- ed by a motor sorry and ran away. The. driver, Abraham 11'hiteheacl, was thrown from his seat and killed, and the conductor and several pas- sengers were injured. The ancient ceremony of blessing the fisheries at Folkstone took place on Sunday morning, the Rev, 0. J. Ridsdale and procession of +choristers marching from St. Peter's Church to the harbor, where the quaint ceremouy waw observed. -siX Leonard Patchett, agedy tweet , was sentenced to death, at Lincoln Assizes, on Monday for murdering his wife by strangling her in a field near Lincoln on May 23. Accused 'committed the crime whilst visiting his wife, from whom he was separ- ated. A pool of the ratepayers was taken at Southport on the question of run- ning Sunday trans, which has been the subject of keen controversy for .several months. The result• was de- clared to a large crowd on Saturday alight, and showed that 8,630 had voted against, and 1,843 for, so that the opponents had. a majority of nearly two to one. A touching scene was witnessed -during the visit of Lord Roberts to Colchester. Among the crowd was an old plan wearing war medals, Lord Roberts went up to him, shook him by the hand, and, looking at "the medals remarked, "Afghan Marchi" "Yes," replied the man, "I have not sten Your Worship from that day until this." The Home Secretary has ordered the removal of the eight-year-old boy, Patrick I 'nowles,• to B.roaclmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum, instead of ,placing him upon his trial for the murder of Frederick Hughes, a fif- teen -months' old elks d, by burying the infant alive at Stockton on May 80. , An ancient couple have been dis- covered at Laughton-en-le-Morthen, a village not far from Worksop, says a London print. Their united ages total 104 years, the old man being ninety-six and his wife ninety-eight, They have been married seventy-five years and have lived in their present 'cottage sixty-six years. They are in receipt of ten shillings per week out- door -relief. Two swarw.e of bees took posses- sion, one after the other, of the pos- ' °tal pillar -bo., at Oruxeaston, near owbury, with the result that no re was able to post letters between recent rd evening and the �• ei t . F 3atu ay v e g following„ Tuesday afternoon. The postman had to call in the assistance of a bee -keeper to clear the box, but the bees returned, and he has had to collect the letters from the hous- es of the villagers. The turn of Fortune's wheel sent John Hartshore from wealth to poverty and then promised luxury again, but death intervened. In coring- days Ilartshore was a colli- ery pxJoprietor near Wolverhampton, but at; ninety-five years old found himself penniless in Newark Work- house. Then a ray of sunshine broke through. An American rela- tive left him four thousand pounds, and negotiations were going on well .when the clouds gathered again and the poor old man was taken ill, Death won the race, and the romance coldly ends. ALL NEEDED WATCHING. The directors of a bank had en- gaged the services ..t a, watchman, who came well 1 ecommended, but did not seem over -experienced. The chairman, therefore, sent for him to post him up a bit, and began:— "James, this is your first job of this kind, isn't it?" "Yes, sir." "Your duty must be to exercise vigilance." "Yes, sir." ., "Be careful how strangers ap- proach you." "I will, sir." "No stranger must be allowed to enter the bank at night under any pretext whatever." "No, sir." "And our manager—he is a good malt, honest, reliable and trustwor- thy; but it will be your dutyto keep your e3'o on him. "13ut it will be hard to watch two Men and ,the bank at, the same time." "Two mon••-•how?" "Why, sir, it was only yesterday that the manager called me in for a talk, and he said you, were ono of the best men in , London, but it would be just as well to keep both let the 'dir eyes on you, and z. eetors trev if you hung around after. hours," Sufferer—"Do you extract teeth Without pain?" Dentist --"Not al- ways. 1 sprained nay wrist on one a couple of days age, and it hurts HAD TO LEAVE SCHOOL. THE PITIABLE STOU or A 'YOUNG" GIRL, . Every Mother of Growing Girl Will, 13e Interested in the Story as Told By the Youia.g Lady. • Miss Laura Dumontier is the daughter of a well-to-do farmer in St. Cuthbert, Quebec. The cireuxa stances under which she was forced to discontinue her studies and leave soliool will be of interest to ail mo- thers of growing girls, and Miss D)u- moutier consents to make them pub- lic for the benefit her experience may ba, to others, She says: "At the age of twelve 1 was sent to a con- vent school in this parish. At that time I was ,as healthy .as any girl of my age. At the and of a couple of years, however, I felt my strength leaving me. My appetite grew poor, and I suffered from severe headaches. I nevertheless continued my studies until October, 1901, when x became very 111 and was forced to leave school. The headaches that had bothered me became almost constant. 1 suffered from pains in the back and stomach and the least exertion would leave me almost breathless. A doc- tor was called in and he said I was suffering from anaemia, and was in a very dangerous condition. 1 -le treat- ed mo until February without the least beneficial result. Then another doctor was called in, but no better results followed his treatment. My parents were now thoroughly alarm- ed and two other doctors from St. Barthelomi were called in;aid after consultation their verdict was that my trouble had reached an incurable stage. I was greatly disheartened and did not' expect to live long when one day one of my friends asked me why I did not try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, I had lost confidence in all medicines, but was willing to try anything that might help etre, and my father got mo a supply off the pills. When I had used a couple of boxes it was very plain that the pills were -doing me good, and after 1 had taken then a couple of months I was once more enjoying the blessing of good health. I feel that Dr. Wil- liams' Pink fills have saveh my life and I gladly give my experience in the hope that it may be of benefit to some other young girls." No discovery of modern times has proved such a blessing to young girls and women as Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They art directly on the blood and nerves, invigorate the body, regulate the functions and re- store health and strength to the ex- hausted xhausted patient, when every effort of the physician proves unavailing. Those pills are sold by all dealers in medicine, or may be had by mail post paid at 50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50, by, writing to the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„ Brock- ville, Ont, Remember that no other medicine can take the place of these pills, and see that the full name, .Dr. Williams' Pink Pills-1er• Pale Peo- ple, is on the wrapper around every box. HALTER LIFE IN ATNINT CHICAGO MAN CURES RHEU- MATISM IN CAMP. Famous Resorts and Spas Are Visited—First Relief Comes In. Open Air. , For rheuniatism outdoor existence is the only cure. This is the theory of 13. 0. Henderson of Riverside, Chicago. Putting bis ideas into practice, be has abandoned his resi- dence of 20 rooms in the suburb and has moved. his family into a tent in the woods near by. Mr. Henderson is a wealthy man. Ile has vast mining interests in California and business interests in the East. Ide is a graduate of Princeton. Rheumatism, from which ho had suffered for years, became acute a year ago. 'Treatment for six months in sanitariums failed to relieve him. He decided to test the efficacy of his outdoor theories last June. He rented a twenty -acre grove in Ilariem avenue; half a mile east of Riverside„ and pitched a forty -foot wall tent under the trees. 'P1leit he moved his brass bedsand other in- dispensable furniture into it and set up housekeeping for the summer. The beds, a gasoline stove, a few easy chairs, and a portable Russian bath were the only luxuries he took with him upon his return to aboriginal existence. With bis wife and five children he has inhabited his tent OF INTEREST TO MOTHERS. A Safeguard. for Children Cutting Teeth In. Hot Weather. The time when children are cutting teeth is always an anxious ono -for mothers and when this occurs during the hot weather solicitude often deep- ens into alarm. So many ills that often result family are liable to en- sue that every mother will bo inter- ested in a medical discovery .that robs this period of many dangers. Mrs. R. Ferguson, of 105 Mansfield street, Montreal, Que., gives her ex- perience for the benefit of other mothers, She says: "My baby has always been small and delicate, end suffered so much last summer with his teeth that I did not think he would live. The medicine the doctor ordered for him' did not do him much good. Then ho was attacked with dysentery and a, very hot skin and cough. I sent for Baby's Own Tab- lets, and they did"'him a Wonderful amount of good, and he is now get- ting on splendidly." Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all deniers in medicine or will ho sent post paid, at twenty-livo cents a box, by the Dr. Williams Medieine Com- ping, BrOekville, Ont, ' since, and now pronoltnces 1143 Ox^ perienent a practical success. Ii iXI AINS 1115 HEALTH. "When rheumatism, from which .I had suffered most of my life, becatne acute, I sold out, many of MY busi- ness interests and resolved to devote my time to my health rather than to. my purse. I studied the question of beneficial conditions and Baine to the conclusion that I must get out of doors. Since living in a tent I have regained my health rapidly. "Health is the greatest problem of civilization, Riches are .a curse to a person in ill -health, because he spends his time and money in doc- toring and staying at 'euros' and sanitariums, 11 he would rough it in a tent ho would get well. The horrors of inferno are nothing to what I have suffered. I have spent thousands of dollars doctoring and have visited all the famous spas and health resorts. But my first relief was experienced under these oak trees. "A spring bubbling lz'om the earth near our camp supplies us with pure water, and I insist that puroyspring water is a primo remedy for many ills, 1 lounge about under the trees, read, take my siesta. 3f I feel a bit strenuous 1 take up an axe and, eel - lying into the woods, cut down a de,xal tree. HAPPIEST MONTHS Ob' LIFd9. "In the morning my wife and 1 turn our children loose barefooted, and the rest of the day they run wild through the Woods. They are so healthy that I believe contact with poison oak would not show up- on their skins. I have existed in luxury all my life, but the two months which I have passed in this tentav h e been the happiest ha test of my career. I might add that by this mode of life we have solved the ser- vant girl question. We aro wild here, have no Work, and do not need Servants." "The novelty of camp life was not fascinating to mo at first, 1 must confess," said Mrs, (Henderson, "but it grew upon ine, and now I thor- oughly enjoy it. Tho children romp among the trees dike little red In- dians. 1 go about in comfortable wrappers. We made the experiment for the sake of Mr. Henderson's health, and the results have amply repaid us for all the inconveniences we have been put to," For the two eldest girls Mr. 13e,n- derson has made leather sandals. The other children run barefoot. The grocery man visits the camp every day, and Mr. and Mrs. Henderson collaborate in cooking the meals, Shortly after the Hendersons went into camp the Berwyn village board received word that gypsies had piteh- ed their tents within the village. The marshal went over to investigate, and remained to dinner. The village board passed a resolution welcoming the new kind of gypsies and giving them permission to damp where they pleased. Young Wile (dreamily )—"}row lovely it would be if all things in this world would work in harmony." Husband (thoughtfully)—"Oh, yes! For instance, if the price of coal would only go up and down with the thermometer.'' CRMTTON SAN SPEAKS ANT TO LET THE PUBLIC Kls?teW DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS CURED HIM. John Fletcher Had. Lumbago and. Kidney Disease and Could Get No Relief Till Ile Tried the Great Kidney Remedy, C'ranton, Ont., Aug. 31 (Special). —"i am glad to let the public know that Dodd's Kidney Pills cured me of Lumbago, and I am now perfect- ly sound.,, nese are the words of John Flet- cher, at well-known resident. of this village, and similar tributes to the great Canadian Kidney remedy can be heard on every side. "I had been troubled for a year with Lumbago and Kidney troubles," Mr. Fletcher continued, when asked for particulars. "My urine was, of a very bad color and I could got nothing to help me. I consulted the best doctors in Granton and St. Mary's, but got no relief. Finally 1 bought a box of Dodd's Kidney Pills and commenced taking . them. They helped me almost from the first, and I was soon completely cured. It is cures of this kind that have given Dodd's Kidney Pills their po- pularity. You can't find a neighbor- hood in Canada where Dodd's Kid- ney Pills are not known by their cures. If the disease is of the Kid- neys or from the Kidneys, Dodd's Kidney Pills never fail to cure it. RUBBER SAY BE CHEAPER IF A SUBSTITUTE IS FOUND TOR THE ORIGINAL:. Experiments Are Being Made With Greasewood or Chico Brush. If experiments being secretly car- ried on in Akron, Ohio, are success- ful; the rubber industry will be re- volutionized, the price will be reduc- ed by at least 50 per cent., and in all probability the result will be to give the company the exclusive con- trol of the market. This new preparation, which, is said to equal the best rubber, is made from the sap of the greasewood or ehico brush, which is so plentiful In1 t ro south-west, and which has ]rtirotofore boon considered a great nuisance. Most of the brush has been shipped to Akron from South- ern Ca111orxtia, and upon its arrival at the rubber company's exper'imcut" al station is maished so as to bring out the Sap, which is ehernlcally treated and ]uses a glutinous sub- 569000ommedWef f will be paid' by Lever Brothers i,imited, Toronto, to any person who tan prove that Ibis soap contains my form of adulteration whatsoever, er contains any injurious chemicals. Ak fee the Qledsagon Ear. . els t -t asaaeasOWN stance with all the qualities of rub- ber. SECRET PROCESS. As usual with experiments of . the company, their operations are being kept as far as possible a strict secret. Beyond the fact that it is first thoroughly boiled and all tho impurities removed, little hasbeen learned by the public. In its melted condition the substance can, be run into moulds and will retain any shape in which it is allowed to hard- en. A curious fact is that while this substance has xuost of the peculiari- ties of rubber it cannot be used as an eraser, The expense of rubber is such that there is a growing tendency on the part of manufacturers to introduce impurities in order to lessen the cost of production. With the new sub- stance, on account of its cheapness, this will not bo done. Rubber in its crude form costs at present 95 cents to $:1.20 per pound, while at most, Mr. Tullis says, the grcasewood pro- duct will cost only 35 cents, with theob iri r i p ab ty of this being reduced as improvements aro introduced. There is a large quantity of greasewood on the western slope of Colorado, but it reaches its most luxurious growth M the south-west. It grows best in rocky, arid and sandy ground, and is very hardy. The highest bushes are about .ten feet tall; and in some places " only grow to a height of one or two feet. NEW DEPARTURE'. As soon as the new product is proved to be an absolute success, M:r. Tullis says, it is the intention of the company to start a plant somewhere in the heart of the greasewood country so that the ex- pense of shipping the stocks to the factory can be saved and the finished product sent to ' any place desired. He says that experiments in growhig the brush in the east have been tried, but the shrub does not do well. The largest trunks seldom reach a dia- meter of over four inches, though with cultivation it is hoped to make them grow much larger. Greasewood has been used to some extent in malting the knotty canes which were fashionable a few years ago, but beyond this act use for it has ever been found. The stalk is very hard and brittle. Tn the sum- mer the branches are covered with short, pulpy leaves, wixiclt are quite salty and are eaten ravenously by cattle in the spring. During the tall these leaves drop off and dry up, and the cattle eat them in the win- ter, though they make very poor feed. AND THE DOG SPOKE,. Its Character Was at Stake, and it Prayed to the Judge. Tn one of the Prague. 'district courts recently, a foreman named Dastych sued a manufacturer named Weinert, alleging the latter's dog had bitten him, thereby rendering him unfit for work. The 'dog was produced in court, anti the services of a veterin- ary surgeon were requisitioned as expert evidence, Herr Desensy, in the presence of the judge, did his utmost to irritate the dog, and even struck it, but all to no purpose. The 'dog remained calm, and finally, finding the pro- ceedings monotonous, crept under a stool. "Quiet as a lamb !" was the find- ing of the veterinary surgeon: but "Olt, no," said the foreman. "the dog behaves itself because its master is present." So the dog was taken out into the corridor, among the public, this time muzzled, and the veterinary again tried his best to irritate the animal. Doggy wagged his tail, offered first one paw and then the other, and, its advances being rude- ly repelled by 'the unfeeling veterin- ary, ran back into the court sat up on his hind legs before the judge, and begged. Not even the hard heart of a judge could resist this appeal, and the animal left the court without a stain upon his character. A certain grocer enjoys the unen- viable notoriety of sellin.g the worst goods in the district; but rte has not recovered from the shock he got the other day, when a little girl came into the shop and said :-- “My mea sent me for two c uaiees of yer best tea fol; to kill rats with, am' a pound of yer finest ham, an' be sure to cut ' it in thick slices, because it's to solo an' heel , may dad's boots." C. 0, RICHARDS az CO, /)ear Sire, .For seine years T have had only partial use of my arm, ca.ised by a sudden strain, T have used every remedy without effect, un- til I got a sample bottle of MIN- ARD'S LINIMENT. Tho benotlt 1 received from it caused we to con- tinuo its use, and now I axn Itttitpy to say my arm is completely restor- ed. Giamie, Ont.' It, W. HARRISON, 738 ,fudge (sternly) : ' Tlie nex'- per- son 'irate, interrupts the proceotlings will be expelled from the covet 1" The Prisoner (entI usiastioally) "TfoOray t Now I'ye done it 1 Leni- me go l'e - MAKING ROOM FOR MORE, Wttat racndon is Doing For Its' Growing Pepnlation, The work of pulling down old and insar•1ita1'y dwellings of the laboring classes and the provision. el brighter and sanitary homes is leaking good progress in London: A return just issued by the L. C. C. shows that iri the district north of the 'Thames, with a population in 1901 of 3,884,054, no fewer than 4,- 650 56 tenement houses were provided at an average weekly rent of 2s. 21d, per room, 38,418 persons being thus provided for, South of the Thames, with a popu- lation of 2,093,303, tenement hous- es to the number of 4,746 have been built, at an average rent of 2s 2d. per room, providing for 83,72,2 per- sons, The number of /louses demolished was 1,042, and the population there- by displaced (,469, whereas the new dwellings erected provided for the housing of 65,071 persons. Inquiring Stranger : "3Vllat branch of education does your teacher pre- fer, my bcy ?" Boy : "He don't else no branch, sir; he hits us with the ruler." Catarrh Cannot Be Cured with ,C,OCAL AI'I'LICA; :3, as they cannot roach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and rat order to cure it you must take internal remedies, Hall's Catarrh • Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. flail's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this coun- try for years and is a regular prescrip- tion. It is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood purifiers, acting directl:r on the mucous surfaces. The Por fect combination of he two ingredients i a what produces such wonderful results in curingCatarrh. Send for testimonials free. F. . J . 011EN 1+1Y O GO., Props., Toledo, O. bold by druggists, price 75c. hall's Family Pills are the best. Wife -".Did you like the minister this morning, dear?" Husband-- "Not 'Iusband—"Not in the least." "Poor ser- mon?" "Droa' fully so; I could have preached as well myself." "In-' deed! T am sorry it was so bad as that." THE BANNER ROUTE. There is nothing more assuring to the traveler than his knowledge of the fact that he is traveling on a firm roadbed, upon which is laid the heaviest of steel rails, made true in all their curves, and that the train which carries him is of the highest standard of excellence known to rail- roads and is being guided to its des- tination by experienced minds. These are the conditions which become ap- parent to the frequent traveler on The Wabash Line, and which have made that lino justly famous. The Wabash has its own rails direct to the World's Pair Grounds in Saint Louis. All Wabash through trains stop at- World's Fair Station (For- syth) in order to give passengers an opportunity to view from the trains the World's Fair Buildings. J, Richardson, Dist. Pass. Agent, To- ronto and St. Thomas: A paper, in pairing a certain soap, says: "It is the best ever used for cleansing a dirty man's face. • We have tried it, and, therefore, we know." ENGLISH SPAVIN LINIMENT Removes all hard, soft or calloused lump rind blemishes from horse, blood spavin, curbs, splints, ring bone, sween^y, stifles, sprains, sore and swollen throat, coughs, e•o, Save s50 by use of one bottle. Warranted the most wonderful Blemish Cure over Lerma. Jones : "Brown is an unlucky dog." Strath : "how's 'that ?" Jo:.es : "His object in marrying was 'to get out of a boarad'ing house." Smith : "Well ?" Jones : "Now his wife is running one to support the family." NO HOT NIGHTS IN COLORADO. The nights are cool without damp- ness from dews. The air is pure without undue moisture. There is no excessive heat in suninter, the average temperature being 80 de- grees. There are no continuous, sat- urating rainfalls, but rather brief showers, which pass away quickly, leaving clear skies behind thein. The summer nights are invariably cool, inviting rest and refreshing sleep. Splendid train service with accom- modations for all classes of passen- gers, and very low rates, via the Union Pacific. Ask or write for pamphlet, "Tho Rockies, Great Salt Lake and the Yellowstone," describing in detail the attractions of the west. I. F. Carter, T. P. A., 14, Janes Building, Toronto, Canada. P. B. Choate, G. A., 126 Woodward Ave., Detroit, lliich. VERY NEAR WINNING. "I proposed to ]friss Gladys Beau- tigirl last night." "Ali! And she accepted you?" "Well, no -o -o, not exactly; but she came so near doing so that a great deal of the sting was taken out of her refusal. She said she would have accepted me if I bad had plen- ty of money and a perfect disposition and my eyes were brown instead of blue, and my hair curly, and I was two inches taller, and was winning fame in my profession, and possessed personal magnetism, and came of an old and blue-blooded family, and would always let her havo her own way, and never smoked or wanted to stay out late at night, and did not belong to any lodge, and would keep a stylish turn -out and plenty of servants, and really wanted her mamma to live with as, and, a few other things I havo forgotten. But if a fellow must fail in an undertak- ing, it is encouraging to hint to think that he came very near win- tting,l, Lives of iishormen remind us We May strive for prizes grand; And, departing, leave behind us Tales of fish we failed to !and, nY Meal not VITator row Mum Ribbon Tc Not merely �, — must simmering must be fresh and must boil vigorously. Then it will absorb the delicious: .ess and Blue Ribbon—take all the good out of it, Let it steep at least six minutes—eight if earthenware teapot, and you'll have the -best your life. fragrance from possible -in an cup of tea in LH31a c , Mi xerat �Isavir'1 Pier Asti fortt:ara Cey$oxra Greela o 440eFifty fled LabaS -- rimarza OM BRAM•.y t00es "eEtaet�cSll ,Il� er 800s -- " Eagle " — 44772asa is Victoria n "Little Cornet" Experiment with ether and inferior brands, USE - Coin to Paint this Fall ? If so, you should procure the best Paint Brush on the market, abso- lutely the most satisfactory Paint Brush made to -day. Flexible Bridled Brush The bridle can easily be removed or replaced. It is not affected by fvater, oil or paint and works on a pivot, thus keeping' the bristles elastic. The name "Boeckh" isbranded on each a brush.. Sold by all reliable dealers. • "We solicitors," he said to his friend, "are much calumniated. 1 have now been at the business for moro than ten years, and I never knew but two solicitors who deserved the name of rascal." "And who is the other?" asked the friend. Inord's Liuimeai Cures CrlrCei iu cows. Figg—"You have seen Jones' wife; what is she like? Should you call her pretty?" Fogg—"I might if I were talking to Jones." Miami's 1In1rneat Cures Distemper,: According to latest returns there are 702,088 paupers in England and Wales. Wash greasy dishes, pots or pans with Lever's Dry. Soap a powder. It will remove the grease with the greatest ease. In France there are 4,000,000 autres devotctd to the Culture of tate grape. Por Over Sixty Years itnn. twnasrow's 5001018G gravy has been used by pillions of mothers for their children while teething. tteoothes the child, softens the gums, allays pain, ogres rind ceiic regulates the storasoh and bowels, and is Cita test remedy for Dlarncoea. Twenty -flea cents a bottle gold by druggists throughout the world. Be sure and isk for "hfi 3. WxxsLow's SOOTtriSG Sraiup.' 2344 "Is Brown happy in his marriage?" '"Welt, 1 think if Brown were to see Mrs. Brown to -day for the first time, he wouldn't even ask for an introduction." etastalatitergesenentatearieles it meket no difference whether it 1s chronic, acute or Inflammatory' eu admit of the muscles ex !ewe cures sad cures promptly,, . P r'icee 25c.., 4U4 O ywated tateeeetj t -f "Foor man!" she said, stooping over the victim who had just been dragged out from under her car. "Have you a wife?" "No," he groaned. "This is the worst thing that ever happened to me." Mlnardts Liniment Cures Colds, etc. "So Alice has decided finally to marry an officer?" "Yes; she cap- tured him in what she positively 'de- clares to be her last engagement.". Minds liniment Cures Diphtheria, Bluffer : "1 undeistarid you called me a liar behind my beak, sir ?" Differ : ''I didn't like to ]iur't your feelings by teinirg you the ;erten right to your face." We are getting them, lotsot them. When no other truss will hold tb,m they mune to us. what we get vso kohl." Thobeet lathe cheapest" That's our patent pneumatic pad S'rure. It myth the edges of the wound together s0 *at with stir play it must /tead. You mop aet volt; yen eau% get worse white yon weer It. Procurable only from THHE BELT AND TInUSS s�B(.CO., Hernia roaisiitt, d33 jimdiaa TEST RS OUTMAYBEE 103 nay st,,ToaosrrO MALL ALL COUNTRIES, 8P401/41. A7 UITION TO PATIENT' LIT1aATION. Send for Handbook on Patents, &o. FEATHER DYEING Cleaning and Curling and 1113 Gloves cleaned Thez Olin be sent by post, lo per oz• tho beet place is 11111TISH AMERICAN DYEING C06 MONTABAL. 1-44 Dominion Line Steamships Montreal to Liverpool Boston to i,ivterpool Large and Past Steam:dups. Superior eccommodattote br all classes of papaengere. Ssloona and Stateroocma ire amidships. Special attention has been given tO the Secnjtd Saloon and Third-0lam accommodation. Fos•ate,. of passage and all particulars, npply to any ages if the Company, or to passenger agent. 9.9 D0112INi0S1 LINE 0)lP',I0E5 t 7 State St., Boston. 17 St, Sacrament St.. blontsed F r k'1111` Ray, utter, Honey, mss,. THE AU. RINDS 0 FRUITS And Farm re- duce generalrye. consign it to 119 will 1l gti s l k sic t 1 you good pricer,., Dawson Cornnmission Cog 915 Tt;31-1.0 IN'TC . I.1i311t&b .ISSUE NO.