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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1904-10-27, Page 2HEALTH1:*. +4444+1;44414+4444+1+44 TTIE NEOESSITZ OF REST - Nature's demands for rest, are im- perative. They are often enforced nlirougli the infliction, ot pain, autl pereistent disregard of them is pun - sled at times with death, The un- reeistina infant spende emelt mere then bait les tune in sieep„, and it ebould be encouraged te do so. for sleep is the type of perfeet rest, and mQS t esseutial to grewth, In adult life, energy eela be made a substitute for re, to a remarkable extertt. The hours of sleep may be redeed from the normal eight to four, and the WOO: May be robbed of its Sabbath; yet not With Impunity. Such prace tics beget a predisposition to the eontagious and infectious dieeases, diminish the capability for efncient 'work,.ad often induce disorders a Abe nervous system. The penalty may be on defezTed, but it frequent- ly becomes more severe with deday, In all circumstances, rest should be eoramensurate with labor or exercise. The apparent demand for rest, varies witia the temperament med vigor *be Pers011i eometimes it is governed largely by habit, and it is eften in- ereosed by an. it:ability to obtain complete repoee. Ability to rest is with maw people, natural facnItea witothers it is an art. The nest step toward acquog it is gen- erally the systematizing ef one's du - lies so thee no unfinished taelea re- raain at ntght to oeeupy the mind. Lassitude at droweinees, 0Z3. tile other band. •*re °flea induced by re- tention of ptomains or other pOISOLle (MS matters in the sySteae, and rest o Uttle beaent 'until the poisoee have been removed. Benefit may often be derived from shortening of the intereans betwct.'rt the perieds of repose. A soured nap ouly feW minutes' duration in the middle of the flay, for exaneple, is more beneficial than several hours of sleep made restless or broken by ilralene AS a result of proloaged fa.- tigue. But tbe mind is more quick- refreehtel than the body, aud tlte apparent invigoration after a shier sleep xney prove to be or almost as sot duration. Tliere are xneny ways, too, 0t tail:sing both: roeutol and physical re- cuperation withotit increasing the hours of sleep; Mit Witlietit idleness. Some persons an obtain it best i reading, others in conversation, ind otbers, again, in solitude and thought with a couch, a hammock or a, rocking cbair or the sake of muscular relax - alien, In atldition to all ordinary rest every one ought to take a vacation f several weeksduration once a eYear er oftener, at such' times and in sueli manner as will give the roost complete relaxation and abstraction from accustomed worry and care-. Youth's Conipauicurt. ea -ea PfEALTII AND SUNSIUM It has for some years been known that sunligbe acts as a destroyer of raany of those pathogenic organisms which are popularly known as germs. Sorae time ago an ingenious experl- mentaliSte demOnStrated this fact in n. very convincing manner by pre- paring a "culture' of these germs on a flat stunace and exposing it to sun- light beneath ft stencil plate, with the result that he obtained an image of •the cut-out part of the stencil in dead germ life, the rest of the pre- pared plate being still alive. He call- ed it a "liVing photograph," but the same term has since been applied to the popular cinematograph picture. The Massachusetts Board of Ilealth have recently carried out a series of experhnents in order to ascertain how far sunlight is able to cleanse water affected with the undesirable germs wbich. result from sewage contamina- tion. The two organisms dealt with more particularly were the colon bac- cilus and that associated with ty- phoid% They found that botli species -were euleely destroyed by free access to sunlight, thirty minutes to an hour being sufficient to sterilize a culture, when spread out in a thin layer, as the pgotographic experi- ment already detailed. In the case of typhoid bacillus from 95 t�99 per cent. were quickly killed by exposure to direct sunlight, but there were al- ways a few hardy individuals which required for their destruction an ex- tended time. HOW TO KEEP WARM AND WELL. Persons who habitually expose themselves to an abundance of fresh air rarely suffer from draughts. Some •there are, however, on account of apparently inexplicable reasons, wfina are supersensitive to such conditions. But these, above all other persons, lInd their best protection in habitu- ating tennselves to a plenary supply of fresh air under all circumstances; by woollen clothing and by particul- arly avoiding small bedrooms i.ind all such conditions as are engereleten by th e:n, People generally rel3r altogether too much upon the house to exclude cold air, instead of warm clothing, by which they exclude fresh air. By habituating tliemsele•es to close rooms and impure air they create and in- crease their liability to disease which they exert. themselves in the. wrong •'direction to avoid. IIOW TO WALT. There is no virtue in a neva-Ili:1g saunter. The slow and languid drag- ging one -Poen, after the other. whicla so rri e people, 6612. walking, would tire te; an, athleit:i1.1-1-A;erly exhausts a weak person, and !..tliat' is the reason, why 80 many •delicate paeans tbink they ca nn ot wa 1 ice 're 'derive any beneet from the ceercise it is necessaaar to Walk with a light, elastic step, which swings the weight of the body so easily- from one leg to the other that its weight is not felt, and which pro - 'duces a healthy glow, showing that X.he sluggish blood is stirred to ac - Mon in the namt remote veins. Jay SUCCEEDS BEM IANY CONVICTS MARRY IN TH HOME 0F MR. JOSEPH atenTON, TMOROLD, ONIn His Daughter, Floxence, Was All Bat Iled PTO= Dr opsy-Ker Doctor Kad Given Her Williams' Pink Pills Were Then WOltienN TAKE TBE DI FOR BET- TER OR WORSE. Girl Xarried a Dying Prisone New Caledonia ConvietS Intermarxy. 'Though marriages are practieally unkeown 13ritiele prisons, in other Ileed and To -day She is Well couotnes 41 they are sometimes allow and Strong.; especially before the accused is cO Vieted of his crime, says Pearso Weekly. Deethe Dagueneau, with the right to call Min husband. As Goirand was not convicted, the magistrate who was judging him had no option but to give his con- sent. He sent for 13e.rthe Daguenea.0 wild asked her if a.e were wining to marry Ceirand, She replied that she loved him very much, and tnat the wedding day would be the happiest in lier life, A edays afterwards, in the ne- ed, cal inayor's Q1iCC, witli four stalwart Alt policemen as 'witnesses, the couple were joined together in matrimony. After a loving farewell the bride - as groom Was led away to his cell, at whde the bride went out to emelt oi the release of her husband. t - Or is THII1ETAN S-UPERSTITIOE. re- ---- Ke Strange Beliefs About the Sun, Noon and Stars. From, the poet, 'Moral, 0114t. Evereexody believe* in a dreamy Not. long ago all New York sert Qf eveY of the elca.ev nf a. aeU tal1ug a a reanaatie marriage th erud Wisely advertised nnedielnee when bad beee, (mealy celebrated in one the recorded etiges of restored health it prisons. A lawyer immed Pa are at a nistauce; but 'ellen a 'ease rick was foteul gu4tyoi the ward comes up in the home town, Wbfl -e-- of an old man and the forgery of le tbo Patient Is kl3own to eyer-S°1, win, and lay awaiting the death se and when tbo cure is not only post- tune in the n'ombs Prjson. tive nut matvellone the efecacy of protested his innoceuce, tvWeli was be - o euedleitte bee0Mes a fact -a de- en/en thing. For many tho lieved in by a Mrs. Frauds, wid- Post bas enverti.sed Dr. 'Williams' °w* 10Vedun 1„.int: pill., for pale people; large To elicev her faith in her lover she ""titios of thew. unee been eon ay Made application to tile prison of- eciais for permession to see Iiire. the local drug stores, and many zoarkahla cares have been effected.. This was granted. ar.d under the very One of these eatracted the attention lnoses of the authorities, our reperter and he innestigated. ignorant of the Ceremony thus bweiezf: Miss Florence Kilton, the eighteen exiacted, 'ho married the lawyer - year old daughter of eeeeph awl Accompanied by Patrick's fettber Mrs. Hilton, liviug in the west part,and sister and her lawyer, Mrs. Fran- ot tide toup, w44,0 taken early last Cis WAS told to waft in the mar summer with dropsy, ceupled we% tron's room. Ilere the prisouer was heart trouble. Sbe was eorneellen brought to her. The now had in te Q uri tiuty after auother. her poeSet a marriage contract, re - rend finelly became unable to wain or quiring only the signatm•es of the bo down. 1Ier sufferieg was in -i parties and witnesses. While the so end medical snill (lia all that'reatran was busy with Ifer duties at Ulla be done. Florence, however, one end of tbe room the prisoner and ew woree, sitting in her chair day the widow were legally joined to- night for are long months to +1, ge....er as man end wife the other. breathe awl the parents dPg- A few days After the brine Again At last the dector gave her became a widow. Mid further visits were A marriage that was not only cele - noes s limbs Were pitifully „ bratell priSOn, but With a dyin len and AnallY burst below we bridegroom. was that of a youn 1 $110 sat belPless and weak elerie and his employer's daughter i i'ng for breata Aril at tiraes a Berlin prie:on about a couple o uln breathe at all ooly with the years ago, tea enflicUlty, One einbt the bbers caitee is anti said she could ot live till Mortaleg. Belt to -day • s alive and well, moving about Th e Thibetens have numberleea strange Inntles, one, the most curious pertaining to the Sun. 311004 and stars. The sun is believed to be en immense ball of yek-meat and fat, vhereon tile seirits a departed an - tors are euppoeed to feast. the light being caused by its heated con, dition. The stars are portions of tens inmeenee feast, which,. dropping to earth, give bb-th to annuals for the sustenauce of suffering hureenity. The incem is a lesser bell Of similar texture v.s the Sall. In use while the larger one in being replenislted ter he morrow, Wben $un and moon ils to appear in cloudy days and eiglita it rtleanS that the deities are undergolog a period of religious ab-. And the parched and ster- ile condition of bleak' regioes is as- cribed to the fact that many thou- sand years ago the sun Den glipri from the hands of its keepers, g eeznied too near the earth and, gtore being re -captured scorched th • ' parts with winch it came be coati Ili These illustretions out of hundr I ' that might be cited, at least give Ilont of the ignorance, suporetiti and brutality of the Tbibetens, ‘a well as of their heterogeneous trib a , e one mr lack f. aiiiy re:21,1 u tional union end thetr umbility Y MARRIED TO A DYM ING AN, Tbe youm ng en vs engaged to b naeried when his master diseavere ner ,yeelna comp:on:Ma e . re- .7- art be bed been s stematicall and unnaelnous eontrast, to ". •Y•- e then The reporter swindled. -teeing found guilty th one akem t the Hilton der k won sentenced to two ,vears but Miss Fl co was (3ot vie_ imprivonment; and, of course, the era - The father anl 'ever, and freel re, whien they at ibute entire- WIIIiares' Pink The b e brought to her by her gra c who urged their use. Then bei remembered t she beelith previous winter been • d by Dr. Williams' Pink rills of slight attack of drOpSyr and also membered the many cures allvertis- ed tbe Poet. She bought two boxes and Floreuce took them, three pills at a doee. In two Nveens she felt a slight decrease in the pain in her limbs, and more pills were pro- cured. For Ave months -live long paln-laden months -the weary girl had sat day, and nigbt innier chair. lett .now she bean to feel the pain lea'ng her and to see her limbs re- sume natural eize. Foorteen boxes of the pills Were taken and at rible colintly in order to be near lest her petseveranee WaS rewarded. he rose from her chair; her former strength gradually eanae back; one by one her household duties were taken up again, and when The rost repre- sentative called he was met by beatairg faces and thankful hearts and A gratOftll readiness to give to the World tete facts that had saved a bright young life and had brought JOY instead Of grief to a Thorold home." In thousands of other homes, scattered over the length and breadth of Canada, Dr. Villlia.res' Pink Pills have brought health and jay and gladness and in every home in, the land where sickness and suffering en- ters new health and strength can be had through a fair use of this medi- cine. ROM eTnber 'that substitutes can't cure -they make the patient worse, and when you ask for this medicine see that the full iaame "Dr, Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People" is printed on the wrapper around the box-tben you oxe sure you ...toe: t e genuine pills. Sold ly medicine dealers or by mail post paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.60 by writing The Dr. Wil- liams Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont. =other !nom rloYer forbade his daughter any In old him of tiler intercourse with the worthies amp. His hepe that the gienes love would be shattered by tile pronounce- ment of her loVer as a thief was in vein. News reached the girl that her resist aggression; a hint also t greatness of Engiand's task r; TREY WE THIS COUPLE IIAPP •••••••.% fiance was eeriously ill. On visiting DODD'S EIDNEY PILLS DOW ll the prISOer 'he lotted that be wa 'dying, and, at the risk of for eve displeasing her family, deternained t sbow devotion by marrying ban Permission was obthined, and th traaplitill stood by the dying min a bedside to read tlie marriage service Within an bour he had to perform a. More solemn diltY, and the wife Of a few minutes became a widow. So great was the love of a young IttinSian woman for a convict sen- tenced to ten years' labor in the salt minee of Siberia that, after marrying him, she followed him to that ter - r GOOD WORK AROUND PORT ARTKUlte 4 Once on a time two youths were suitors for the hand of a good, ',eau- tiful, sensible, bright, tactita, can- did, soulful, womanly girl. One youth made love. The other made money, Puzele : Which youth mar- ried the good, beautiful, sensible, 1 MAY SELECT IIIS BRIDE bright, tactful, candid, soulful, wom- anly girl? A THOUGHTFUL PRIEST. lion and to await the expiration of his seutence. Their marriage tooh place at Witebek, a town, on the Dwlna CONVICTS INTERMARRY. A local watchmaker, engaged to be married to the daughter of a priest of his native toWS, was con- victed of coining, and was about to be transported when the girl made application to the authorities for permission to many him. Mer fa- ther and friends tried to persuade her to desist, but she was bravely ob- durate. The convict, shackled with heavy chains on bis hands and feet, was brougbit to the prison ebapel, where the bride Was waiting, dressed in deep mourning. Under these gloomy conditions, with warders all reund them, the couple became man and wife. The bridegroom was taken back to his cell, whence he started on his honeymoon to Siberia, while the bride returned to her home to make preparations to follow him into exile. Marriages among certain classes of convicts in the P'rencli penal settle- ment in New Caledonia are very common, being encouraged by the au- thorities. The convict, who answers to our ticket -of -leave man, save that he is not allowed to leave the is- land, may send for his wife if mar- ried; but, if a bachelor, from among the convicts of the other sex around him. More often than not the couple es- tablish themselves in business, and frequently become well-to-do. If after a period of probation the selected wife does not come up to the anti- cipations of her spouse, he can, with the permission of the authorities, makeuriother selection. A marriage that was dramatic in its sadness was eelebrated a few years ago in Cuba. The wedding was fix- ed and all arrangements were made when tbe bridegroom, a Cubae, was arrested on a charge of conspiring against Spanish t•ule. Being found guilty, he was sentenced to be shot; but his bride, a young Irish girl, de- termined to show lier faitli in the in- nocence of her lover lay marrying him in spite of his own protest. 'legging a grudgingly -given perinission from, the authorities, she was actually married to her lover on the -very clay of execution. Before a guard of soldiers the pri- son pliaplain performed the ceremony and at its conclusion the bridegroom was led away and blindfolded. Within thirty initiates the bride fell fainting to the ground as the report of rifle shots reached her ears, for she knew then that she was a widow, A EIAPPY PRISON MARRIAGE. A wedding with a happier +ermine- . tion, however, took place a few months ago in a Paris prison. The clever and notorious Frencle swindler, Goirand, immediately after arx eet. finding that he had no loophole of escape from a Ilea sentence, de- termined to rewarcf, his accomplice, Points Out to Mothers the Way to Keep Their Children Well and, Happy. „Rev. K. L. Prancoeur, Ca.sselnian, Ont., is a kind-hearted perieet who lias done much to alleviate suffering among the little ones in the Lollies .or his parishioners. Writing under a recent date he says: "I must say that Dr. 'Williams' Baby's Own Tab- lets are deserving of the higli praise they have had as a cure for the ail- mentsof children. For the Pest eight months I have been introduc- ing them in many families, and al- ways, the moiners tell me, with per- fect results. Their action is always effecttve, without any sickly reaction, and they are especially valuable in allaying pains in the head, fever in teething, nervousness, sleeplessness, spasms, cramps in the stomach atcl bowels, colic and other troubles. Their regalating action gives almost instant relief, and gives speedy cure. This is the conn'erting experience that lies come to my knowledge out of their judicious use. I am glad to give you my sincere testimony, and I will recommend the Tablets to all -mothers and nurses of sick children as I Have done heretofore.", The Tablets are sold by all medi- cine dealers, or mothers can obtain theta by mail at 25 cents a box by writing to The Dr. Williams'. Media clue Co. Brockville 0 te Mr. Dick Souvey and Wife Bot }Tad Kidney Troubles and t Great Canadian Kidney Itemed Cured Them. rort Arthur. Ont,, Oct. 21. (Special). -That Dodd's Kidney Pil cure the Eidney ills of men and w men alike nas beeu proved time an again in this neighborhood, but is only occasionally they get a, chime to do double Work in the same hoes Teis has happened in the case of Mi and Mrs. Dick Souvey, a fatexter his wife, living about seven mile from, bore. Be an interview M Souvey said: "My wife and myself have use Dedd's Kidney Pills and have foun them a big benefit to our nealtli. W had La Grippe two winters and wer exposed to much frost and cold. Ou sleep was broken ou account of uri ary troubles and pain In the kid eeys. We each took six boxes ta Dodd's Ridney Pills and now enjo good health." --+ — WORLD'S MANUFACTURES. The value of mtumfactures enter ing the international markets of tIi world amounts to about $4,000,000, 000 annually, of which about $0 000, 000,000 is supplied by the finite Kingdom, Germany, France and th United States. The four countrie could easily form a commercial trus and dictate prices to the rest of th universe. sircrig wards by a Now York seeolare -".After years of testing and coffipar ion I lia,ve no hesitation in saying tha Pr. Agnew's Oure for the Heart is th quickest, safest, and surest known t medical science. I uso it in my ow/ practice. it relieves the most acut forms of heart ailment inside of thirt minutes and never fails." -35, Father -"That cat made an awfu noise in the back garden last night." Arnold -"Yes, father; I think that since he ate the canary lie thinks can sing!" , Use Lever's Dry Soap ta powder) like owatslh woolens and flanvels,--you'll i Trairm-e-"Hones' sir, I don't know where my next meal is comin• from--" Citizen (gruffly) -"Neither doll It is certainly not coming from me!" sait Rheum, Tatter, Eczema -- These distressing skin diseases relieved by one application. • :lir, Agnew's Ointment is a potent cure for all eruptions of the skin. Jas. G asten, Wilkesbarre, says: "For nine years was disfigured with r.L'etter on my , bnads„ D. Agnew's Ointment cured cents -Si SMOKERS AND MADNFS.S$. An Egyptian smoker of hasheesh is even a more helpless slave than the Chinese opium Lend. I -Te kaiewns that in the end he will become a madmen, yet he rushes towards the awful goal with unrelaxecl si cod. With the strange exaltetion nnich first, comes to the smoker, ax feels himself floating from cloud to cieud or alighting,' in the gardens of aces - aces all his own. Most of the lies- heesh which Egypt consumes c( Wes from Greeee. Front the huSks el the hemp seeds and theender hops of the hemp plant e_th Greeks fr,,i fluff, c - 'Lure a greenish To der, whose :limes bring the ecstasy i victims riesi 14/ Illea.fnsts of .-..-- e 12 Years' standing I. Protracted Catarrh produces deafness in many cases. ()apt., Ben, Connor, : of Toronto, Canada, was deaf for 12 years from Vaterrh. All treatment reeled to relieve DA% AgneW'S Catarrh- al .Powder gave hint relief in QM day, and In a. very short while the deafness left him entirely. It will do as much for you. 00 cents, -4/0 The festive bob() tails not, neither does he spin: yet. Solomon ill all Ili$ glory Nr0A not arrayed like one of , tbese. A little Sunlight So qp will clean cut glass and other articles until they shine arid sparkle. Sunlight Soap will Wash other things than clothes. AD CORK CURTAINS. A curiosity to be seen at Berlin is a pair of curtains made of cham- pagne corks, each cork being still covered by the gilt paper associated witli the premier brands, The corks hang in lengths of sixty each, the rows being separated by strings of Chinese turquoises. The eurtain ties are also of blue silk. The value of tbese unique curtains is estimated at 2$,000 fraucs, fifloard ie. se Mrs, :t. 1 Thomas, [1R under a don't nt "'Yee, es so neany al to IP nter is the turio, Grand Nord): ring be had by addressing ite Montreal, Children er who who le Minard's e Wife y him. him Wife - exactly s F... Sciatica, Li Smith, t writes: a from t withstanding . I must ., I ani e American s the credit. "Phis 1 anything / present—" a “Because anything s Liniment Relieves Nevelt ----- Oldun--"Tbere was a tine' when you IISW to chuck 0- the elibe soreetitees, But yo do it BOW." Mr, Oldute my lova, but you didn't has china then." MOOSE MINTING Oast region he Canada for th who wishes to secure Moos Tel:impute region in New On and now easy of aece&S by til Trunk Railway System an Bay. All loformation regard guides, routes, rates etc., 041 on application to agents o G. T. Been G P. & 7 omm••••?..... soon learn that it is fat)) has the money, and mothe has the generous disposition. — Liniment far sale everyther -4 hope you talked plainly tl Iiushand-/ did, indeed. I ton he was a fOol, 4 perfect fool (approvingly) --Dear .Tori'n, bov like you. put him on Crutches.- .Jas deeryman, of Grimsby, Ont. "My limbs were almost useles: sciatica and rheumatism, and, net- ley esteem for physicians, give credit where it belongs. a cured man to -day, and South Rheumatic Cure must have all It's a xi:careen-34 --- year, dearle, you can wish you want for your birthday "Oh, how charming!' X haven't the money to buy at all for you." r -To - i f FI Om manufacturers Imonials tom what I et your II dealers air, prove to yen that TM Cheson Ointmentle ecortaire and absolute cure for ou r eS and. every form of Itchitua bleedingand protruding idles, have anareateedit. eeetee in the daily press and ask yournendr they think of it. You can use it and money back if not cured. Cee a box, at or EnAIANsortBetzs a: Co...Toronto Chase's Ointmeni .. It is - decision ! that a : '.". Yetgaticlolicisail°forrirtlirri 1 ltsooth es windeolie, bestramody Bold b9drucgists 212tor"3Iics.v.i.vsLows5oontrigaSySto.p," t . "The would this rescued." having dren.'' easier to secure a unanimous that a bad thing is bad than good thing is good, .........__ FOt Over Sixty Years seltuheiimeaticent2atil the child, softens the gums. allays pain, carer recut ates the stom itch and bowels, audits the for Diarrhcen. Twenty-five cents a bottle throughout the world. Be sure end 22_40 dog you sold me yesterday have eaten my little girl up morning if slie had not seen "But you insisted on a dog that was fond of chil- Dear Sirs, -This is to certif3r that I have been troub/ed with a lame back for fifteen years. I have used three bottles of your MINARD'S LINIMENT and am com- pletely cured. It gives me great pleasure to re- commend it and you are at liberty to use this in any way to further the use of your v e ee medicine. Two Rivers. ... ROSS. — A lady was looking for her husband and inquired anxiously of a house- maid, "Do you happen to know any- thing of your master's wheveabouts?" "I'm not sure, ma'am," replied tb:e careful domestic, "but I think they are in the wash." '-'" r Coughing is an outward sign of inward disease. Cure the disease with _ 0 ,... g . Con s mptilcon CureThe Lung ,_ Tonic i and the cough will stop. I Try it to -night. lf it doesn't ibenefit you, we'll give your 1 Inoney bach. Prices: S. C. V,Tntts & Co. 367 25c 50e. 51 LeRoy, 1.Y., Toronto, Can. a ight,edien, 4,1"&e, alceellexb .e)/d IOXISOMMACCIII. • USE—. "ISLAND CITY" ROUSE AND FLOOR PAINTS Mil My in Houma en Sale at ail Hardware Dealers Iontreal, Toronto, Vancouver. pou 1. r R y :ix: co7 dressed -;Ot our urbe:Qtlflry adva:tage. other prodeee. THE nAWSON COMMISSION CO. v Limited Oar. weet Market and Colborne StsTORONTO, STAMMERER- manomminemosonewommumnsmoimaimana ornE ARNOTT INSTITUTE, BERLIN.ONT. For the treatmeut of all forms of SPEECII DEFECTS. We treat tho cause, not simply the habit, andtherefore protIticonatimitl speech, Wnto forpartieulan. o e 41 'ae-P1 married in haste." euelope-“Well, 1 suppose you ought it would be better than not marrying at eill" Minardis Liniment Cures 'landfill, Kind Lady-Tlere isgla,SS of wa- ter. Certainly you can drink that, Tramp -No, mum. lave got on iron constitution, axxd e water would rust it Or. Von Stares Pineapple Tablets. --Medical .5C ieZICQ by accident discovered the potency of the pineapple as a, pan. twee for etomath troubles. Tho im- mense percentage of vegetable pepsin contained in the fruit maims it an al- most indispeneable remedy In cases 01 dyspepsia and indigestion. Ono tablet after each meal will cure most ebrOnle Cau.s, in a box, 05 cents. -311 "I wonder why this gun kicks so?" remarked the amateur SportSrattn, af- ter missing another easy shot, "Pro- bably it's kicking at your liard luck!" replied the guide sarcastical- ly. lin&rd's Liniment Cures BUMS etc, WISE TECOUGIITS. Be nobody else but you, °When in doubt, don't even whisper. A word to the unwise is superflu- ous. It is always safe to suspect the suspicious. Be generous in tliought but miserly in words. Successful men are not of necessity good men. Vanity is often mistakett for pride in this world. Get the prize. Let others explain how they lost. Every rnan is compelled to pay his debt to nature. Courage is simply knowing when it is wise to be afraid. Most of oer earthly pleasures are due to our ignorance. The less scene people have to say the more talking they do. 'The duties we owe ourselves are generally performed first. The sermon that earns most flat- tery may win fewest souls. A man loses force as soon as lie begins to worry over his feelings. The best way to educate a bright young man is to put him to work. Often you can sell a worthless thing easier tlian you can give it away. Useful education is a gradual eli- mination of knowing everything. The men who are satisfied to take things as they come never get mucli. The man who says lie only wants justice • is often sorry when he gets it. Ill luck is sometiines better than good luck, as it xnay cause a refor- mation. Boys make their own way better if they' die not always have their own way. When a man is working for himself he doesn't have to employ it time- keeper. „I'liese who borrow trouble multiply it and then lend it to their friends. Larceny, embezzleme.nt, and defalca- tion are merely misapplied business acumen. Many people think they are living for character who are only fighting for reputation. If your enthusiasm lasts only forty minutes, you can't expect it to do anything for you. There is nothing makes a woman feel so proud and a man so foolish as to read old love letters. "Do you know," remarked the pes- simist, "I think that I have experi- enced e -very kind of misfortune except hanging?" "Well, you shouldn't be discouraged," rejoined the optimist. 'it is always desirable, you know, to remember the old adage, 'Wlaile tliere'S life there's hope.' " 'They say she spends twice as much money as any other %vermin for complexion powder." "OS couree she does. She is to Dominion Line Steanaships MONTREAL, TO LIVERPOOL, t4r Mocierato Rate ServIce.la Second cabin passeozers berthed lir tea neconnao dation ea tkO oteNner at th a low rat* 0 Ve LlYerP901. or ease to Louilon. Third class ter Livorpool,Zondou, elaszaW Or QtlolulA'w+cr $13'" e'er en particulars apply to ICKaInClat5, or 1:10412f10:1 LINO 01,f/fends 41 3Clng44t, 15, TOT40:17a 37 131. SAVAPICIAIG1.,Noutroal Diraing I Cleaning! 7*4'o....17frittoraisou work to Um niernse AMIR10AN DYEING 00.* Zook fir scoot la rear loan, or seal &reek Moutre4 Tomato, Ottawa, Qtacbms WANT TO LEARN MT 6 Tben write at once for our txGw Book on TELEGRAPHY uw111 cottele•, intend ytu. Address Central School of Telegraphy TORONTO, ONT. To afilllation with Central /Anthem Colleso. W. I. SHAW, - Pilnc12,1 13114120k SHIRT Made big enough for a big man to 'Ivork in with comfort •••••••••.11•1•11••• Has more material in it than any other brand of shirt in Canada. • _ Made on the H.B.K. scale it requires 3934 to 42 yards per dozen, whereas common -shirts have only 31 - to 33 yards. That's the reason why the H.B.K. "Big" Shirt never chafes the armpits, is . never tight at the neck or wrist- bands, is always loose, full and comfortable and wears well. Each shirt bears a tiny book that tells the whole history of the "Big" Shirt, and also contains a notarial declaration that the H.B.K. " Big" Shirt contains 3934 to 42 yards of material per dozen." Sold at all dealers blit only .iivith this brand:— HUDSON BAY ICNITTIrila Montreal Winnipeg Dawson ISE NO. 43--04.