HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1904-12-8, Page 2SPIES IN TIME .OF PEACE
PROFESSION IN NiTHICni SONE
LADIES EXCEL..
QUEEN OF THE HIGHLANDS THE STORY OF A,
Nearly, All the Commen. IIle of
Weak
TITP JUBILEE OF BEAVTIPITL.
Life are Caused 'by
Invalid German Took Photo-
• aphs of All the Worlas ot
Gibraltart
nnie mysterioes foreigner whose ar-
_ est near „Milford 1-Ieveri as an al-
leged spy was an exciting rincineat
Q f the recent It AV 1 xuauoeuvrs
briags back. to the memory ine in-
gennity of tliat other io.valid geutle-
man-tins time a. Genatan-who im-
posea on the bospitality of or gar-
rison at Gibralter net long ego,
The German, evno was suppoeed to
coneumptive, arrived at Gibraltar
equipped with letters of ineroducs
tion from. many influential people in
Eng -Jaen. Tb. Goveeeor arid other
officials vied with each other in line-
pitable entertainment of the stran-
ger; and it n'Ad 'With painthat this
request to be allowed to go to the
top 4if the sock "for the sake of the
pore one!. was declined. But so i
einuating ami guileless was the Ger-
Men that at last he 'lad leis wa•evy
eni tlais Wetter, and the rale
'ch forbids foreigners to walk
about tbe top ot the rock was re-
laxed in is favor, The regt-et when
ebe amiable visitor left was univer-
Sal; hot the Mint ef bis visit is be
be eeen at the German War (Mee
in, the form at perteet plane and
Pbotegranbst Of all
gur and
ilefeneee at Gibraltar.
Watery and 'Impure BloodBALMORAL..t
Bad blood ineana tied health. That The Place Is Full, el Happy
is why Dr, Williams' Pink Inns mean
good health -thy enthally Melte
new, rich blood, Bad blood poisons
the whole system, The nerves brealt
down, the liver goes wrong, the kw-.
Pens gen cloggeO and neleeeed, be
heart fluttees attO inmPs at the /east' WitiX /IS forty nears of linnnn
me-
eciteWent the stoomeb, loses its merles may claim the seemed place ia
Pester to digest food, the lungs are his affection,
uneble to throw oft the lingering Indeed, awl from long aseociation
eolds. in net the whole body gete it W011id he difficult for 333137033O Nat
out of feeder, Tenn you have head- to fall in love with the Xing's . beau -
can't eleep and can't eat and tiful end romantic goat the*Iiigh-
..
Memories for Queen
Alexandra.
If, of all the King's 'Mules', Sand-
ringliam is nearest to Iris heart, there
ems. be little debt that Balmoral,
SUCCESSFUL MAN
FOUND HIS LOST.B.StALTH
IN DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS!,
Leading' Business Kan o£ Welland
Gives His Experience With the
Great Oanadian Kidney Remedy.
Weil/tad, Ont., Dee. 5.--(SPecial) -
There na better tcnown or mote
hinbler resPeeted Men in Welland ellen
M. 4. J, Yenorn, Born awl browebt
acheS
feel utterly lineerable. And it a i an S, 0 ueen ic ours. , . up In the neighboring townentp of
ones from bed blood an van he always the "dearest place in all the °rowlarolby his own industry and
nand by the r 'eh, red blood Dr. world -the only place, in fact, where sterling honesty he has grown to
WilliamsFink Pills seeds coursing 1 ant permitteti to forget that I am be one a Welland's leading mere
te every, part, of, the body, Mr. A Queen," "Every yeer„." she wrote ellalsts. QousenttentlYk Nvlion lir- Y.C/kr
/2/AniP1 atwionoo. a worth Pelbam. in leer diary, "osy gone becones eeraes ow. coes om
nt with e, stateent trnit
Ont., eudnred from bad 1310ed, but mare faxed in this dear paradise and he was (lured of a, serious illness by
bas been Made well and. strong by tio much more now that it has be- l-ltnadss inldneer Ville. enerSbodynnowe
Dr Williams' Pink. Pine after oil come my 'rteareit Albert's own erne- itmust be so.
°tiler treatment hail failed, Mr. Me- tion, own work, own, building, owa "For a yeer or nnare 1 liad Xidney
Xinnon says 1 "Until last spring I laying o4 s Osharfa waa; pee his Trouble in all its Worst symptoras,"
bad been aillieted With a wnelc sto" greet teste and, the impress at hie ssns Mr- Yokonn "My 11°44 was bad,
bins, At, times I was couipieteky weer ke fest Ae times I was entirely flieft-
M4eb'' b'eadaelle'S 431'4 kl*11/PY tr()./11- deer hand have been stamped overy- I had, no appetite and I lost weight
e.
most severe nature. At different hneen victoria henetoy laid the foun- pacitated I doctored with a nhysi-
prostrated and my safferings were of nt is juSt over half a .ceotury .111e
glee I was treated by no less than •dation-stone of the Preseut holm.
MA doctors but irons none of
em did 1 get' wore -Olen temporary
As time went on I became
I ever behkg well again.
irieuel drew any atter,-
he, William' Fink Ville and
t' Pure soap 1" You've heard
the word. In Sunlight
Soap you have the fact.
5 LI
N
u
0Ap.
REDUCES
EXPENSIZ
MIK for the Octagon Nur.
MILKING BY ELECTRICITY.
There is a 131141130 farm near Paris,
whieli is I,nown as the electric farm,
for the reas,on. ttat nearly all the
worts is done by electricity. The
owner of the farm keeps a large num-
ber of cows, and they are fed by an
electric machine, which tliroWs the
proper ainount a food into the
feeding -box. They are also milked
by. an eleetrie milking-maehine, in-
vented by an -English mechanic. The
maciiine can milk- forty cows at once,
and recildres only two persons to
operate it, The French milkmaid
will new have to And ether NVOr.ic to
clan of vast experience, but got no ki •
good insult's,
,•••••••••••1,.
width, was -ta eene tee race 441 beeeme Oespoullent ofnver being "Yo father is a very dogmatic
I
of the pretty and 4-Siaiat old Scottish well again. wiles by good leen X man, isn't be?" "Pe only owns
castle, ehe survival or UlarkY celltnriee ClinlIced 10 trY Dead's Kidney Fille, about ten or leven of 'cm,"
10 end in tiie. autumn ee Ines. -though and from the first they eeeened to
tbe buildieg was neeelleii (lawn& stitit illy case. it
boxes cured um
A anOrt time ago e, Gentlest lien- titan
tenant enlightened ti world OS to, I nennied to try tbis nsediehle. I itliteten131101);:igiehnittthYg°19%tel°11:nrchtgEllth in- 11411ete'Y'''
, ,
Slie neetberis practieed by spies in had only taken tour boxes wiles I
tin10 a Ileneot For soroo n'eurn the found a 4.1eoaea iraproVerhga in lay INe°t11141-AS IT WAS,
tellent was emPloYed as a Sky co -edition, and 1 continued using the Itli,041311edn iwortoeteitiostiliklutausraptitenzel:sf, .Pernettle`
4 lUerWall W-ar Office, end ille ontil I had taken a di:nen baths
I sy418 a cured uum wee eee ACW hall%) 100kS benutiful. An old
gives
11 1 .10Te21ng5 1 had tornierly endured shoo was after liS for luck
re but, a dleagreeatfie 411enaory. I as we elaTelVil the hall, 'rho LOW is
'WIC? Mit belug an enthusiastic anmirer euerluingo the roOlus delightful, the
Dr. Williams' Fink Fills, but 1 furniture, papers, everylfaing, per -
G ACCOUNTe
is charaeter
0 he dogged. tho Moials of the
try et War with such succees
one of the attaches left
for a moment in the
0001 o ,the Gars de rEst•
taxed it -up, ianme
and the next day
the authorities -
as a major of al
regiment, he was
1802 manoeuvres.
ant $errets in the
and, changing
tt a pedlar, get e I
It valuable in- r4e1„ bleu own, utile its eetting of fir woods
Penetrated in- to have he genuine pills with the and pari sToping to the beautiful
Toulon by the fen name Dr. vAta: Thus Den of toWering bills. arid wild
for Pale PeOplo on the wrapper sweeps of purple moorland, Is Of line
onnt1 eve17 box. Sold by medicine rivalled beauty. In such a place the
lers everywhere or by mail at rinn world of Courts and ceremonial pomp
box or six boxes for U•00 bY of stress and unwire seems left far
riting the Pr. 'Williams' Me-dn
1e-1-41 behind, and the inoet lwiassed Soy
ereign in the world should lind it
easy to persuade himself that he
lint Is:Ing, bet a tree, untrannuellet
chatm
.e.
of Nate.
queen Victoria, when slut first look-
ed on it, painted its therms exoul-
sltely in these words: "The view is
of Ids adventure
ink I have jast CAUSe for my en- feetien, The view front the tvindOWS
USlanil a"' will labvaYS reec'zumend' ISAgatdd,te ibtiQd4euertli,flaihue
nniCOuld not paint her new home in
tete blight celors, for there is no
home M the Iiieg'e don4inions mere
picturesquely and romantically
pieced than Balmoral. The house, it
to my ailing frieues."
as surely as Dr, Williams
iUs wed Mr. MeXinnou they
ia indigestion. bead-
, kidney trouble,
hag°, eciatica,neIW-
. general weakness is true, with ite gables and mullions.
ilinente et growing turrets and enliven tower, its magni-
ficent oriel window and its imposing'
portals, may not satisfy the demands
of scientifie. architectere, but none
can deny it a ebaren and beauty
011 won: . All these alt -
80 from bad blood, and Dr.
Pink 1-4313 coot cure them
e veins with new, rich,
But, vou most be sure
eUent af apseUlug his 000t auu
$lAU0kl to tho 4oehs, where be
won rezoned inan apllarelltb! uncon-
scious condition-Init really suffi-
ciently wide-awake to take stock of
all that was going on there.
In 3894 he traced the undergroUnd
egrapb seetem of the French army
disguised as a ellecolate pedlar; be
aged ifousolt s coadorooll to at,
er, and in that tharaeter anon's.-
el Limon his tour of inspection
of zailitot7 roads lending to the
Alps; and on another occasion h
escaped detectien at Nancy ley rus
ins into a furniture shop and hid-
ing in a wardrobe, in whieh be per-
suaded the shopkeeper to dispatch
hire
OVER inrn FRONTIER.
13ot entith of the most effective
'work in spying has been done by
women, Ono of the most dangerous
of them all was Mine. Bastien,
thee -woman at the German Embassy
In Paris. It was inadaine's practiee
to enter the Embassy every morning
at six, o'clock, ransack drawers,
eoat-pockets, 13,nd waste -paper bas-
kets, and hand over her spoil daily
to an agent of the French Eplonage
Department, who sorted the papers
and found much of value in them.
For many a long year Mme. Bastion
plied her profession -without arous-
ing the least suspicion.
As a rule, however, the most dan-
gerous female spies are those who
possess a, formidable weapon in their
personal attractions. Su& a siren
was Baroness de Inaulawho ,did
elich excellent work for 'her Father-
land. The baroness east her spell
Never General de Clesey, Minister of
War under AfacMalion's. Presidency,
and „while the senile general was
basking in the baroness's smiles in
her drawing -room her agents were
ransacking his portfolio innatother
retail and taking copious notes of
its contents. It was another beau-
tiful woman, an adopted daughter of
General Pciranoff, who so infatuated
several Russian staff ofncers that, at
her bidding, they sold to Austria,
the Russian plans of mobilization.
The officers all, including General
Paranoff himself, paid for their fool-
ish infatuation with their lives.
CANADIAN ADMIRALS.
Sir Charles Drury a Likely Suc-
cessor to Lord Beresford.
TIME" IN ALL THINGS.
Peculiar Religious ect in Eng-
land.
The Conners, a eurioue retigio
sect, snay itilluerne the reSult t th
election in Northwest Sepses. Fowl-
ded in 1850, the seet holds aloof from
politics, but an effort will be made
'to get tbe 333013113erS to go to the
Pella, and as they possess about $00
votes they are an election aseet not
to be despised.
%le derivation of the word Colceler
is enveloped in mystery. It is sure
posed by some to liaVe relation Us
their Inintielea o tvomerante and
their fondness tor eocoa, and by
others to a lwality described in old
"ords as "Coicleyt" The Coicelers
ly to he found in tine Weald of
ssex and In a tew Surrey villages.
They have a treed of a pronounced
Antinornian type, built upon a num-
ber of tents/ tanen away front their
eontext and thus rendered eapable of
any interpretation which may be pot
on them In cash chapel there are
Wean or "etalwartS," plaited from
contaregatiOn; but there are 110
tors in the aecepted sense a the
term, and tile order of service is
elosely akin to that of the Quakers.
Tho Cakelers are not total aleStain-
ers, but Very few of Mein touch in-
icating /kitten and in regard to
wedlock, tlieN bold that, while mar-
riage le a, thing to be avoided if pose
sible, immortality is a greater evil,
In these circiunstatees, although they
have no marriage serylee of tlieir
own, the elders raise no Objection to
lumbers of tile sect going through
the ceremoey elsewhere,
Mr. Olitmfberlain wants to see "free
trade within the Empire," and the
Coldelers' Weal is free trade within
their, own business limits. In every
village where tbey have taken root
the Coltelers have their own store,
which is mainly sunpiled by- members
of the sect, and sells to all-eolners 10
the profit of the sect. But these es-
t-ablislianents pay their Way and bene-
fit all who have dealings With' them,
Weause their managers Will not coun-
tenance "dumping' of any kind; end
it is not surprising that a proposal
to evolve a. national scheme from the
same germ as their parochial ex-
periments should be looked upon by
there with approval.
0., Jrkvfl2e, Opt./
1
Irrxrxe S.
The autumn is the time wizen the
newspapers take up the subject of
atbletiew especially college athletics
and dIseuss its bearing upon the 1u -
tyre of the individual and of tile enarmIng% To the left you look to -
vac°. This discussion is renewed 'N'ards the beautifel iiills surrounding
eavh year during the football season, Lochnagar, end to tbe right, to -
and each year it is abandoned with
tbe question no nearer a solution
than at its beginning.
It is contended that athletes live
as long as ,if not longer than, the
average person, that exercise never
harmed any one, and that nothing
can be more hygienic or more health-
givieg than hard training. To this
it is Tolled that statistics prove
the fact tbat few athletes live to a
green old age, even if by claance they
reach middle life, that over -exercise
causes bypertropby of the heart,
bardening of the arteries and kidney
-disease, and that the gorging, the
tobacco -smoking, and sometimes the
beer -drinking to seinen the athlete
turns as soon as the contest is over
and the trainer gives him freedom to ;banns of the Dee, and when slie made
her that friends among her lowly and
devoted .Scottish neighbors. There
are those still living wlio can recall
the rst, visits of the beautiful young
Princess to their cottage, how she
*would take the little ones on her
knees, help some lialf-blind old dame
with her knitting, err minister tender-
lyity the bedside of the sick.
One of the earliest favorites was
-under medical snupervIsion. es old °•nock" Simpson, a pensioner
course-ewithout darn -age to the heart. who, at Copenhagen, hen. fought
The clanger will come when he leaves against the Princess's countrymen.
college and enters upon the profes-
sional or business career, which al-
lows little time for athletics. If the
enlarged, muscular heart, which all
athletes must have, is suddenly re-
lie•Sed of all its extra work, it will
make haste to diepose of its surplus
muscle, and ;this by a process of
fatty degeneration, most dangerous
to the present and lunette integrity
of the organ. But if the ex -athlete
continues his -training and 'his excer-
weeds Ballater, to the glen eloPg
winch the Dee winds, witlx
BEAUTIFUL WOODED BILLS,
wbicli rendnded me very moth of the
Thuringerwald. It was so cabre so
solitary, and it did one so mewl)
good 00 one gazed around; And the
pore mountain air, was most refresh-
ing. All seemed to breathe freedom
and peace, and to mane no forget the
world and itS sad turmoils. The
Scenery is and yet not desolate."
For Queen Alexandra, as for Queen
Victoria, tbe place is full of baaPY
memories of the early years of wed-
ded life, when she rambled over the
moors and plucked the heather 'with
her husband by her side, When lie
taught her to wield a rod on the
do -what he will, not only undo all
the possible good of training, but
work grave harm, by sudden excesses
after absternibusness.
As is usally the case in all con-
troversies, there is right oe botb.
sides. Given a young man with
sound organs,. supple arteries and
well-lealanced nervous system, it is
probable that he can work with the
college team for the entire four year
Co:nastiest-born anizairals are well to
the fore now with Sir A. Douglas as
corromander-in-chief at Portsmouth',
and Sir C. C. Drury as second sea
lord at the Admiralty. It is now
stated that when Lord Charles Beres-
ord retires frora the command of
tlie Channel fleet early next year,
his successor in tliat most important
position tent be Vice -Admiral Sir C.
C. Dewy. • Born Paiebec, Sir
Charles Drury has Earl a long and
nistinguislied paean Career. In 1E303
he was a n:ember. of -the Ordnance
Committee, and in 1896 received tlie
thanks of the Foreign Office for ser-
vices in Crete. He was elected a fel-
low of the Royal Geograpiiical So-
clety in 1860, and in, 1902 was ap-
pointed comm,ancter-irecliief of the
East Indies Station, receiving the
nonce! of K. d. S. I. the following;
year. He wasappointed to secceecl
Si- JOhn Fr.,lier as second. Naval
Lord 01 the Admiralty oe Aug. 31,
1903.
OTS OF" T DD.
iicticeenWliatti nave you to say -et
rrisoner---A whole lot, if you'll just,
give me .
J-ustice-1 thirty,, will
e enougliy,
For Over Slitty Yenta
Mar, llrnho ow's,Soormso Svour has been rp
sno mothers for their eaildrea while keetlatut,
Itasetheathe 010(3, softens tba goals. allisYsPam. carol
whidcetic. notate' the iitoniselt elle hawse *sae
booreraedyfor 13autheia, Ttreaty-thre cents a Coale
esee Ineleke egieekonouseoet no world, l uro one
Or- atm. ye fS SCIOTO'S ZiCIS VIt 1IP."
•
Stern Parent -"Quite so, quite so!
You tell me that you have proposed
to rny daughter, but -ere -you say
nothing about your position,'" Ner-
vous Suitor -"My position, sir? Oh
--er--thee-the usual one, I believe, -
on my knees you kuow."
incocestlan, that menace to ho.
man happinesep pitiless in lta assaults.
Mud no reepector el persons, Ilea met,
its eonoerer in aouth American Nen,
vine. sem greet stemach and nerve
remeds etimulates eigostiou, tones
tee lierven Aids circulation,. drives out
impurities, dispele erne -era -Oen, and
hrlags back the glow of perfect health,.
cures Inualret's of "cerouico" that, have
bathed, phenicieus,-en
But this past antagonisannonly in-
creased her interest in -the old 'veter-
an. and she insisted on seeing tho
cutlass and musket he carried and
on hearing the story of the fighteng.
No wonder that nook's heart was
quickly, won, or that to his last nay
he treasured so proudly the chair
which was "the bonnie Princess' ain
Amid suoli lOving and loyal neigh: -
hors, and surroinaded by the richest
l'es—" He had heen waiting
tor that little word, And his heart
beat faster as it trembled on her
lips. "Yes—" How he hinged to
take her his arms; but elle epolte
as though there was 11101T: Silo wish -
d to say. "Yes," she continued;
"to -day I promised to be an-
other'sl't
WHEN FRANCE FIGHTS.
M. Roche, Frenth ex -Minister of Com-
meree, gives statistics of UM expense
that France would ineur in the event
of a European war. Ile takes as a
basis M, do Freycinet's calculation
pat the 600,000 men who were en-
gaged in the Franco-Peussian War
cost 13 francs a head a day front
September 15th, 1870, to February
lOtli, 1811.
To -day the expettse wooed be far
greater. 'There would be at least 2,-
000,000 men, in the fighting line;
while to gain numerical strength
equal to Germany alone, France
would bp obliged to appeal to the
six classas of the territorial army,
c
cise in gra,dually lessening degree, treasures of scenery Scotland can 000,000 men
men 900,0w00uOmen.Thusldhavet8
o 1;-
0
tapering off, as it were, to a normal show even to so fair a lady, who mobiliged, transported", and nourish -
existence, the reduction in size of see doubt that queen Alexandra's ed. Six hundred thousand horses
the heart will aLso be gradual, and
the heart is lot down siowiy and
very gradually, it will keep its tone
--otherwise it will probably be ruin-
ed. Herein lies tbe secret of the
good and bad of athletics, in sane
moderation, for healthy men, -
Youth's Companion.
"
BAI3Y4S WELFARE.
I Believe TOWARD'S LINIMENT
will cure every ease of Diphtheria,
Riverdale, MRS, REDDEN BAWER,
I Believe IIINA.RD'S LINIMENT
orcitince growth of hair.
MRS, CHAS. ANDERSON.
Stanley, D. E. T.
I 13eliese MINARD'S LINIMENT
is the best household remedy on
earth,
MATTHIAS POI,EYS
011 City, Ont.
'Elvery mother is naturally anxiouS
that her little., ones shall be bright,
good • nattfred and healthy.. Every
mother can keep her children in this
condition if she Will, give them an
occasional dose of Baby's Own Tab-
lets. 'llaese Tablets 'cure indigestion
and stomach.troubles, prevent diar-
rhoea, cure constipation, allay sim-
ple fevers, break up colds, destroy
wormS and, make teething easy. And
the Tablets are guaranteed to •con -
tain no opiate or airnful dr ug. Mrs.
R. E. Long, Pea chland, B.C., says.:
-"I have found Baby's Own Tablete
unsurpassed for teething troubles,
breaking up ecilds and reducing fever
and they make a child sleep natural-
ly. They have 'done my little one
so much goad I would not line to
be withoutthem' Druggists evniert.
where eell these 'Tablets, or you can
get theta by mail at 25 cents a box
by writing The Dr, Williams Medi-
cine CO. 13,1' 0 ptt.,
,
visits to Balmoral are
"FULL OF qUIET DELIGH'it"?
She loves to renew memories of the
neigeboring Abergeldie Castle, with
its Iiist,oric square keep arid round,
clinging turrets, where she has spent
so many happy days with the King;
and of Binthall, a charming little
pla,ce, where her husband made his
bachelor home before he sought his
bride in Denmarla
Then, within, an easy walk or d.rive
are some of the' most. romantic and
beautiful sights to be seen in Scot-
landv
-the lovely falls of Garrawalt,
in their ernes. setting of trees; the
Linn of Dec, with the dark.- waters
swirling and seething deep down in
its rocky girge; Braemar, 'reached by
the beautiful "Queen's Drive" through
the romantic Forest of Ballochbuie;
arid the Earl of Mar's Punclnbowl,
once Mien to the brim with whisnY-
t,ondy for the followers of "I3onnie
Prince Charlie.'!- Not -far away is
Mar Lodge, the home of the Queen's
da,nghter, the Duchess of Infe, with
the neigl orang Comenaulzie Falls,
Calclerocli and Ben Bourd, mountains
towering over ' 3,000 feet, to climb;
long stretches of glculaus moorland
to tui over; the tenepting watero
of the Dee to fish in -and a hundred
otlier charme to explore -all prepared
to ,i10 their part in makine an ideal
hOlinay for a Queen.•
oh
would be necessary, of whi500,000
would have to be bought and paid
for. Taking 15 francs a head daily
for each soldier, and estinrating the
expense of provender and the repair
of material, M. Roche arrives at the
colossal .figure of .$6,000,000 daily as
France's expense in a, big European
warunder present con,ditions.
+.—.
• CHARM „Or ROSES.
HE.
She gave me a rose
Tlia,t she wore on her breast;
Of all any treasures
'Tis dearest, 'tis best.
When its petals are dust
And when 1 am no more
My soul will still cherish,
Where'er it may shirr,
Tlie joy that she, gave me with
The rose that she wore.
Stint.
I gave him a rose
That another gave e;,
gave it, intenkling
That other to see;
I gave it to rouse
In another alarm—
Why not? in such scheming,
There's surely no harm.
Ali, rose, take my blessing!,
You worl,..ed hibe a ellarol•
npur.44x,. ioace,b
if jay
v,t4e-al 4412
44471,01, --
We can handle your poultry either,
alive or iiressed to best advantage.
Also your butter, eggs, honey mil '
other produce.
THE DAWSON COMMISSION CO .1 Limited
Cor, West Market and Colborne St, TORONTO.
BAD TEETH', BAD SOLDIERS,
,•••••••••I
British Recruits Must Show Sound.
Molars.
Dencient teeth are not in the fu-
ture to prevent enlistment in the
I3ritish army. of otherwise suitable
recruits. Would-be eeldiers found
suffering from deertned teeth ittalSt,
however, be prepered to put down a
sum pot to exceed $15 towards the
expense of fitting them with artifi-
cial teeth.
These faets are set fOrth in a ci
elder by tam seeretaxy of tbe army
Simileely afflicted Men
lo would be otherwise discharged
fromethe army 00 wilt for further
service, owing to the state of their
teeth, are to be retained on tne
equivalent contlition that the sum
to be paid the dentist is to be taken
out of their pay,
Tile British Medical Journal, in
canuneoting on this order, says it is
a step in the right 01rection. The
NapoleouM (Bettina that an army
marches on its stomach has been so
long admitted as A military antom
that It seeine strapge that ouly now
hes effeet been given to it.
It is the South African war Which
has largely contributed to mane the
reform acceptable, a glaring' liglat
having then been thrown upon the
losses Which. 00 army euffereS
-through the liefect ire mastication of
a large number of troops. These
troops were kept at the base ot sup-
plies or sent home because of the
bad state of their teeth, which made
it impossible for them to digest the
rongli food necessarily served out
to men at the front.
The bee is an artistic upholsterer.
It lines its nest witlf the leaves of
flowers, always elibosing such as
have bright colors. Tliey are inVafi-
ably cut in circles so exact that no
compa.es would Make them more
true.
'EVEN THE UNDERTAKER 0
"And so be's dead? And be was
very populer Man, wasn't lk,"
"Yes, in(1eed; why, even the mule
taker was sorry to see Inin go."
People win) loon over the affairs of
tilers are very apt to overlook. their
own.
Help the Overworked Heart. -Ts the
great engine which pumps life through
your system hard pressed. overtaxed.
groaning uncles Be load because disease
has clogged it? Dr. Agnew's Cure
for the tleart is nature's lubricator and
cleanser, and daily demonstrates to
heart sufferers that it is the safest,
surest, and most speedy remedy that
medical science knows -67.
Dusty Dennis -Ah, lady, have
faced the dangers of fire many a
time, The Lady -Were you a fire-
man, law poor man? Dusty Denniso'ni; I smoked a cigar butt in 'a
haystack.
Lifebuoy Soap -- disinfectant - is
strongly recommended by the medical
profession as a safeguard against in-
fectious diseases. 22
Rather then become a spinster the
average girl will marry the wrong
man.
Minard's Liniment Believes Neuralgia
Little say, pa, I'll be
very glad when 4 get old enough to
do as I please." Pa -"Naturally,
my son; and when you reach that
age it's probable you'll 'get married
and not do it."
NO Breakfast Table
complete without
An admirable food, with all.
its. natural qualities intact,
fitted to build up and•maintain
robust health, an.d to resist
*winter's extreme co/A. It is
a valuable diet for children.
'The Most Nutritious
and Economical.
A Cry palm In the basic is a
cry et the kidneys Par help. South Ams
enema Venditey Ouse Is tee 01113'cure
thee hasn't e. failure written against it
hi VMS of Dright's disease, diabetes, in.
iltimmation et the blander, gravel and
other kidney ailments.Don't neglect
the apparently Inslgeiecant ''signs."
Olin powerful liquid. specific prevents
end eures.-70
"As Shakespeare says," remarked
CaSsitly, who was fond of airing his
'book larnia'," occasionally, "what's
xi
' a name?" "Well," replied Casey,
"call me wan that 01 don't loike,
Oi'll show ye.".
Minardis Liniment Cures Dandruff.
••.••••••.•••••
13(
A
says
"Did you seem that 00001101 to
Xrdup again to -day?" "Yes, sir."
"Did you toll him it had been on
the slate long enough, and I'd like
to rub it out?" "Yes, sir." "What
did he say?" 4`1 -le said it looked
as if you were trying to rub it in!"
South American Rheumatic Cure
Cures Consumption.—It is safe. harm-
less and nets quick -gives almost in-
stant relief and an absolute cure In
from one to three days -works wonders
in most acute forms ot rheumatism. One
man's testimony : "I spent 6 weeks ia
bed before commencing its use -4 bot-
tles cored me." -66
What is claimed to be an effective
substitute for leather ha n been in-
vented by a German engineee at
Ma,nnlieim, in Baden. The patent has
been sold to an American nem for
$200,000.
0,1451722'92322/M21515m15127., ,....,
orlIE ARNOTT INSTITUTE, BERL; N, ONT.
.1,- F)r tilt.: treattikent, of all forms of SPlinCli
DBFBCTS. We treat thc cansc.,, not 8inply ,t1:c
hal" and theretrCieW.c•IITZ.1"rarTs1 sP'eec'• `
Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, etc.
Mrs. Harduppe-"nohn, the butcher
we had who lived, at the other end
of the- town has found out our • ad-
dress. He called with that last
year's bill, and was very imperti-
nent." Mr. IIarduppe (hotly) -'`Ira -
Pertinent, was he? Well,now, we'll
just let hini wait for his moneye"
To prove to you that or.
Chase's Ointment is a certain
and absolute cure for eack
and every form of itching.
bleedlngcnd protruding piles,
he manufacturers have guare /aced it. See tes.
hnorilals in the daily press and ask your nel3h.
lora what they thiak ofit, You can use it and
et Tour money hack if not cured. see a box, at
ai dealers or ErnuaNsON.B.1.7Es & Co..Toronin
Or,.Chase's intrheril
nen.•••••••=re01.1•••••••••••••••
USES FOR POSTAGE -STAMPS.
Tlie monks at , the. Hospital of St.
Jean de Di eu , at Ghent, have in their
leisure moments decorated tthe walls
with go egeou s I an dscapes, glowi
with color and full of life, formed err.
tirely by means of the postage -
stamps of all the nations 01 :the
world. Palaces, forests, streams and
mountains are represente.cf, butterflies
flit about in the air, birds of beauti-
ful plumage perch on branehes,
tonnes and I isai s ghifte about, and
innumerable animals tied places here
.and there. The pictures aro most ar-
tistic, ',in the style of Chinese lane-
scepe gardening, and already be -
'ON eea „Mae and ten million* of
stamps have been -used: •
--
Life'sgreat opportunities are never
tnnelled.
SHIRT
Made big enough for a big
man to work in with, comfort,
Has more material in it than
any other brand of shirt in
Canada, Made on the
scale it requires ag
to 43 yards per dozen, whereas
common shirts have only 32
to 33 yamls.
That's the reason why the
B.IC. "Big Shirt never
chafes the armpits, is never
tight at the neck or wrist-
bands, is always loose, fun
and comfortable and wears
well
Each shirt bears a tiny book
that tells the whole history
of the "Big" Shirt, and
Iso contains notarial
declaration that the MIL
"Big" Shirt contains 3934
to 42 yards of material per
sih
dozen.
Sold at all dealers but only
with this brand:—
'HUDSON BAY KNITTING CO.
Montreal Winnipeg Dawson
"Don't you think that every not
sbould have a voice in the affairs
of Government?" "Yes," answered
Anse Cayenne; 'but he ought to ex-
ercise it in some Other way than
shouting at ,election hulletins."
Dr. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder. -
Rev. W. B. Main, pastor of the Bap-
tist Emanuel °burnt, thiffale, gives
strong testimony for and is a firm, be-
liever in Dr. AgrieW's Catarrhal Paw
Be has tried many kinds of rem -1 ies
without avail. "After using Dr. Ag-,
iiew's Catarrhal Powder 1 was benefit-
ed at once," are his words. It Cs a,
wonderful reniedy. to cents. -65.
Customer --"The man AVE.0 killed
this chicken had a soft hearan
Waiter_' 'Why, sir?!' Customer -
"Inn, must, have spent three or lour
years hesitating before he wrung its
neck."-
tn* —
Minard's Liniment for sale every0efe
Mrs. Casey -So poor Mary Flan-
nery's man was kilt at the quarry.
Mrs. Cassicly-.Aye! Shine she never
was as lucky as, ner 'cousin, Mag
G allagher. Mrs. Casey -We at are
ye sas in'? Gallagher was bl (Avec'
U p in a quarey, too. Mrs. Cassidy
--Three for ye! But he was Wowed
into sich small bits his wife was
spared the ixpinse of a funeral.
You can't cure a cough Or 'co
from the outside. Yea must
cure it through the blood.
11 h's
Cowman /ft, tiiqn
vitt- sl.DIA „The Lung
Tonic
is the onlyremedy th at will do this.
It gets eight to the root' of the.
trouble. It is guaranteed to cure.
Prices: `, E. C. WEx.ts ez Co, 312
2.5e. 50c. $1. LeRoy, N,Y., Torotto, Can.
ISSUE NO. '49-04
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