HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1913-5-22, Page 3DOWN BY DIE SO01911101
BITS OF NEWS FROM THE
MARITIIIE PROVINCES.
_Item ot Interest From Places
Lai !tiled h7 Waves of the,
Atlantic.
The schools of ederietron. N. 0,
are badly overcrowded,
Ilegbaninr. this week, Halifax 'win
in future hay e a Boaed of Control,
R. W. L. Tibbits has entered on
his tath year as Deputy Trovinclal
Secretary ' of New Bruns-sviek,
it new I, 0. R. and St, John "Val-•
ley Railway statii will be /milt at
geully's Orove, Fredericton, N, E.
At Fredericton, N. B. the bedy
of an infant "was found in a wePd-
ile, with a eord wound tightly
nd eck,
. John, N. B., has nearly 700
,uits n
there ratepayers thanait had ha 1912,
and the number has increased by
1,270 in live years.
Houses are searee in Sydney,
y Breton, a d litoso in Jouch
he, situation aay that 600 new
dwellings are needed. ..
ctort, N. B,, bas take ever
as Property, whieh was
private company, The
priee paid was aetalea.
Oddfellows of Truroia.N. S., 'will
bnikt
three-stoneY lodge roonl.r
which will L ooe of the 4nest
ings in the town.
Tbe 00vernment of Nova Scotia
ProPoses an expenditure of
000 for good reade, Thii.* means
nlenaka lor each (verity,
IVilbara J. Starr, a promineet
' beat of St. John, Nr. 23,, is
ge was well knowu through -
the Maritime Provincea.
Pes Dillon, a, fifteeneyearso
St, Jelin', Nestfouridlan
ell the sleek and saved, aa
who wae eirov,‘eing.
ped Werthies
thtqek, N, B., to th
ietr hina aeroes
EreL E. 13e ne a llwn
farmer d af-
ter taking a,doe o *1t dnd.
lkorecl by hio wUe uli3eon-
d strychuine.
s (Beate of St. jolte, NT.
trying to buy Jernebac-
isi
sIdanL 'with the objectsof tun -
t 3ntea, ehep farm. Owners
of the island went Si00,000 for it.
Dr. W. 3. Irvine, a dentist a
F dericton, N. B., had an exciting
perience with Russian, to Whom
he had given gas, The man lmeame
delirious and sumped through a
dow.
William Osier, an Englishman,
lived near Charlottetown, P.
shot hirliaelf through the head
bet uuo the girl he Was infatuated
with refused to ina,rry him. Her
parents objected.
Two ealmon fishers isear Bolen -
town, N. B., killed tat salmon in ays`
hours. The salmon weighed as
much as 12 pounds each, and the
fishermen's luels is mild ,to consti-
tute renew record for the Miramichi
River.
Cod fiihermon of Cannel and Port
aux Basques are reaping a rich har-
vest this season. They sell their
fish -to Gloucester vessels at $0 Per
qtl., so the ,men who get in one
boat 10 to 16 qtls, daily are "coin-
ing money."
Workrnen made a strange -find
while quarrying on the property of
gudson Shaw, near Windsor, N. S.
At a depth af 10 feet they found a
dozen oilver plates, a cup, a large
dish and crucifix and a coin 100
years eId. There is no clue as to
bow the treasure trove came there.
Miss Margaret Enmari of Vernon
River Bridge, P. E. I., was filling a
lantern with kerosene: Joseph Mc-
Donald, a neighhor, had just finish-
ed lighting his pipe and threw the
math away so that it went into the
can of kerosene. An explosion fol-
lowed, both were badly- burned and
will be marked for life,
sno RT :WORD S.
STREIVGIII FOR
WEAK STOI'llACII
Can Oilly Be Had ThroUgll
Rich ,frRed Blood
When the bleed is poor and thin
thss stemaeli in consequence is
unperfectl3r supplied with Oxidized
blood and, nerve force, the diges-
tive pres s becomelow and fer-,
mentations of the food goes on, with
the forin-ition of gas and certain
acids, The pressure of the gas
causes pain in the itemaeh; some,
times it. affects- the heart: When
the gas -is belched out through the
meuth the patient s temporarily
relieved, the our risings in the
throat, ad the. burning sensations
in the throat end etomac'h are
caused by the acid fermentations.
There are plenty Of things to neu-
tralize these acids, or to "sweeten
the stomach," as it is called, but
they do pat cure the troubbs, Pure,
riCh h1404 which will tone up the
tornaell and enable it to do the
naturo intended it to do, its
the only road to a cure. Dr,
Wil-
liams Pink Pills make new, rich,
d blood -that is why thee` core
even the sliest obstinate cases of
digeetion. ' The following is e bit of
preel, :Vise flrmie fireseie, Of
Ffall's Bridge, Out., says: "Alsolit
a year ago I was greatly troubled
with 711y stomach. Everything I ate
ed me pain and distress,
veuld feel as though I was starved,
but ,ffrhen meal time came the sight
of toed Caused a feeling of loathing.
Tbere were days when I eoaisi not
en hold mill; on lily stomach, and
my head would aelte oo that I could
hekdlY keep from sereamine. Only
those -wile have suffered from sto-
tnaeh trouble know the torture I
offered. I tried almost every re-
tly recommended, but fond not
e lest benefit until I began telt-
Dr, Those
ed for a couple ef menthe and
v worked a perfect cure and
*eying good health and able to
07 all kin.ds of feed!:
u are guttering Irmo indes-
thn or eater trouble due to
poor watery blood, begin to cure
oureU tesday by tho use of Dr.
Pink Pius, sold by ail
tlealera or. by mail at 60
x or six boxes for
Tho Medicine
OR LOE1 40
, Writer's to Impress People Must
Use Sirriple English.
A man who acts As tutor' and
companion to a young boy wrote
this indor,semerit on, one of the boY's
compositaons:,-` Use,shorter words --
fallow the eXbanple •Baratie Sey-
. .
rnour, This as part .of an addresS
delivered by him tosttidents, ,in
1812-: 'Short words, like love, hate
r zee have, a "clear ring 'which
Ft" - Air rmucls or touches hearts.
Th a.,,BUT tell of joy or grief, of rage •
or peace, -of life or death. They
are felt by al, for -their terms
mean the same thing to all men.
WO learn them in „youth; they are
on our ,lins through all days, and
17C.0 irtte'r them down to the close' of
our life. They are the apt terms
With which we speak of things
which are high on great or noble.
•
They are the grand words of our
tongue •; they teach us how the
werld was nsade. God said, Let
there be light and there was -light.'
*ails the words of niers) than one
lla hie.'
A Berlin Charaeter Dies la Charity
Hospital.
Linden Julie, who took her nauio
from the tinter den Linden bor-
oughfare,Berlin, Gerraany, on which
she kept a vain watelt daily for 42
years for the eeturn of her soldier
lover, is dead. .•
A mild hisenity seized Julie when
her aweetheart failed to return from
the Franeo-Gernian 1Ver ie
She /lever lost faith that be would
sortie day turn up, and, rain or
shine, huddled up in. a shawl, she
kept watch in the streets, each year
growing mare -ragged and white-
haired. The police made an excep-
tion of her case in the rule which
doesnot allow loiterers on the
street, as they had compassion upon
the faithful Julie.
A. little more than a year age she
was so worn with age that she was
taken to the Charity Ifospital,
where she died recently.
WHEN BABY CRIES.
'When the baby cries continually
do not put it down for pure ugli-
ness—that is not the baby's nature
--it is to be happy and laughing.
Every baby should cry on an aver-
age of fifteen or twenty minutes
day—that is how he strengthens
his lungs. But mothers if your baby
gives sharp piercing cries or low
sobbing wails, he is in pain and
needs Attention. ,Nothing will re-
lieve the little one so quickly as
Baby's Own Tablets. They regu-
late the stomachs and,bowels, expel
worms, break up cold, and will
make baby healthy and happya The
Tablets are sold by medicine deals
ers or by mail at ne cents 'a box
from The Dr,. Williarns' Medicine
-Co., Brockville, Ont. .
- Entertains An 'Opinion. •••
"What kind of an 'entertainment
does our -,friend, Mr.,F4welheda'pre-,
"I., think he 'manages t ,divert
both himself and his friend," re-
plied Miss Cayenne by entertain-
ing a, remarkable opinion of him-
self.
,
Ceinstipation
an enemy w'tl.
tia ticamp. It win
undermine the strengest constitution
and ruin the most visorouts„healtin
It leads to incligestiora-bitieusness,
frapute.bloodebildeematedoir, sick
headaches,. andls one of the moot,
frequent aaasaa„ of...aisiseadichls; • To
negitat (tie WOW 6 • r. MOSSO(
- Indian Root o th
ea
-flock of ,rnicaelSen. PAL.P..09er-9‘°
age 11; fljj e1ephant
B.W. R'Es PA". All the Tired
lter Hinea Page, the newly- ,
-Nervous Vfoluen
named ambaisador to the court of
St, James, lives at Garden City.
L.I. Years ano Gareeu tasty wae
e.,
founded by A. T. ;Stewart, the
. R111e8 Page.
great erc a
te
hoped to make cntre
leSrrwttr
cois,
itmaly inclined perseus, To that
end the first building erected wass
a great eathedral.
"Thee," S'aid Mr Page's friend,
Stewart bad built twelve big,
hip-rQ-oLe{1, high eeilieged, wide -
ed, egly, old-faelnoned heuees,
No hcuses c0),134:1 more eonfer.
table, provided their ocenpants do
not ttudaly worship beauty. Gardea
City promptly named these the
Twelve Apostles. Then Mr. Stew-
art built twelve other houses on
leseer plan, They are knows as
Minor Prophets,"
Mr, Page livea
Twelve Apostlea,
"Ilis frieuds used to
St. james," said
"But laet winter the f
out, the pipes were froze
nisei sprung a leak. 'Whereupon
was rechristened Judas, Iseariot,'
CA.7.4f FIND A CURE IN DODD'S
KIDNEY PILLS.
ladame Perreault Tells How She
Cured lifer Kidneys With Dodd's,
Kidney Pills, and .Found Health
and Contentment.
Verner, Ont., May W (Special a
""1 am very content, Dodds Kid-
ney Tills have naatie me
Those are the Words of Madame
Eugene Perreault., g. highly -respect-
ed lady of this place and napther of
a large family, For twenty years
the was a sufferer. But, let her
tell her own "Story.
"I was always tired and nerv-
ous," she states. "I felt heavy
and sleepy after meals. My limbs
•e heavy atal 1 bad a. dragging
nsation across my4oina. My skin
had and 'burned at night. I had
a bitter taste in my month, espeei-
ally in the morning. In twenty
years I hardly knew what it was to
ilave a, well moment, Then I com-
a to use Dodd's Kidney 1111.a.
xes oures1 me,"
ose dame Petreault'a essnantemsWere
of kidney dieeeee. They are
;he syrnpteiris of nine out of ten
le nervous, rundown, pain -racked
women ef Canada. Madame Pe're-
nit a speedy and toinplete
own in Dodd' e Ridnen Pills, They
; simply ured her kezlneye,
PAINT PRISON CELLS VIOLET
Russian Form of Punishment Stu-
pefies Prieoners' Brehs.
Musiertl.
don'tbelieve the s sy, do
Yon " I'What story V' "About
Mrs. Youngbride. They say she
went into a buteher'e shop tile
ether day, and seeing a aide of
spatrThs on the tounter, she *r
niarked 'Why, I didn't kuow you
xylophoues here. "
HOW TO POP CORN;
t la done in different Wars, but tho
woe, unnroved, method_ it to ix* Tour
eorns with, Putnam'e Cora Extraotor —
corns nor, out tor fair. anti stay nut, tee,
when removoci b °Putnam's,' Try tbia
Val mesa rereesia aoursou, eso, at su
tioaloro.
"OLD ST. PAUL'S,"
Present Cathedral Was Begun In
Charles II.'s Reign.
The history of "Old St. Pa,uPs"
is, proba•bly the most remarkable in
the history of the churches of Lon-
don. It was the church of Whit-
tington, Sir Thomas Moore and
Erasmus, while Oolet was one of its
famous deans, There was the
noted "St.' Paul's Walk," and the
./.yryb used after 1256 as the parish
church of St. Furths, was the scene
of the taaiedy of Ainsworth's novel,
The ts' resent building is the „third,
possibly the fourth, church that has
occupied the present site, and by
some it is thought probable that a
temple to Diana preceded the
church. .
It is said that Ethelbert, King of
Kent,, built the first .Sta Paul's in
610, whieh was etndowed with the
manor of Tillingharn in EsseX,
endowment retained ,to -day by the
Dean- and Chapter. a,
The chuieh in which Kings Ed-
mu.nd and Canute were, crowned
was destroa-ed 'by fire, but the date
of this fire is uncertain. t was en-
tirely rebuilt in 962, but was again
burnt down in 1087.
The same year was began by--
Bishop Maritias the aura that is
know -n to, ,history as "Old St.
Paurs."
It was in• the Gothic style in the.
form of a Lahin :arose, 960 feet long
130,feet broad, with a lead -covered
wooden Stria% rising to the height of
520 feet. Old St. Paula was, much
damaged' hy"afire, again in nay, by
lightning in. 1444; .ama agairt' by fire
in 1561k; and was totally destroyed -
by the gre,at fire -Cf, 1666. .
To those who lave :their Londena--
and where is the Englishman:that,
does not! --the great fire of 1;6:n40n
was a blessing When
consider how iniserably.o.ut Of place -1
to -day would be '-"Old s
, ,
Plans for the present building
were takenin hand- by the- GpVern-
ment of Charles II. With the emu-
pletfon. ell the done in 1710 .the work
Was done at a cost. of' $7 556 010
e.beautiful building, which has se,
letiOy been menaced by suffra-'
gettes, is also built in the form of a
treas."- -Ite length Is 61.0 feet and
Lsesneral. height • 00 feat,, and, One, of
t 'eleisif features lathe/ stately ,pcsr-
' withzitis lender thian I
hat seho!
epetialists--ala
site, that t34MNLN
eurioua areas
After It. MN
Me years nso a
me out -that the
t to eeveral*f
er 'stopped to think
part that eolor
fo7 Poseibly nets
aad wane medieal
re
bav staxibijooectri4
oufotbrIvak
the leo
t meted
of the
mg was confinement n cella
whore walla were painted violet. A.
few weeks spent In these cells turn-
ed keee-witteci nest -les ta 1110.11 into
dull, stupid fellows, who moved and
spekea.a dying men do after they
have lost the power over brain and
body,
The effect ofaed,,,ie oven more
trilting. 'Red is :said to produce
astleesnees and excitability, and
no 67001413iSta Will allow a. highly
nervous patient to remain long in a,
room that iss either papered or fun-
niehed in that ;shade. And drees-
makes= complain thanabse -work for
any length of time Upon a, garment
that ia tinted red will cause the
seamstress to beoorae tired, iiave a
headache, and feel nauseated. Per-
haps that is why blue, brown and
white have their turns as the 'most
popular color
,
" while red, is alwaem
a matter of individual taste,' exeept
in „the matter ,of oceasional trim-
ming.
—
HER `,`BEST FRIEND."
A Woman Thus Spealts of Pestuni.
We usually consider our best
friends those who treat us best,
Some persons think tea and cof-
fee are real friends, but watch them
carefully awhile and observe that
they are two ,of the meanest ef all
enemies for they stab one while pro-
fessing friendship.
Tea and coffee contain a Poison-
ous drug--eaffeine—which injures
the delicate,. nervous system and
frequently sets up disease in one or
more organs of the body, if its use
is persisted in.
"I had heart palpitation and
nervousness for four years and the
doctor told me the trouble was
caused by coffee, Ito advisecnne -to
leave it off, but I thought I could
not," writes a Western lady.
"On the advice of a friend I tried
Postum and it so satisfied me I -did
not care for coffee after a few days',
trial of Postum.
"As weeks went by and I con-
tinued to use Postum my wieght
increased from 98 to 118 petit -ids,
and the heart trouble left me. I'
'have used it a year now and am
strozagei than I ever was. I can
heath) stp stairs without any, heart
palpitation, and I am free from
nerVo usness.
"My children' are very fond of
POStannaarid. 'it agrees with them,
Qv 'isfor 1:Ired it when she drank
inyhouse; now she has Postum
at home.' and las become very fond
Of -it. You -may use my name if you
w`Tsh as I ara- net ashamed, of prais-
ng my 'best fiend—Postum"
Name given - bv Canadian Postum
Co., WinciserOnt.
Post= now comes in new concen-
trated form called Instant Postum
It is regular Ydtitilh4; so processed
at the factory that only the soluble
portions -age retaieed.
A spoonftil of Instant Postuth
with hot water, and sugar—and
, , .
cream to taste, produce mstantly
delicious beverage. -
Write for the little book, 'The
Road to 'Wellville."
are'S'asie•ason'nfku
Treatmert
CUTICU
SOAP
And Cutictun Ointment Directions,:
Make a Parting tati4 rub gently with
ntiCAraOhAroerkt. Cootinue wtU
whplo scalp has been. one ()vet:,
Next morning Sharapookwith Cutt-
cam Soap.' Sisarapoos alone may
be used as often as agreeable, but
ce or twice A. month is generally
fOcient for this spedal treat -
for women's, Lana
Concurs Sespand Plataiest iiresciatannwboul
the ire04. A 114end Wimple or #41,41A, w1A4 t2e'VgAl
OCKAAA4tcli 1:14M 4A4,14 treatnuat .pf 14,15X.45 NIA
reP. VOt4Trtf, dOrVit4 roster vrua cum.
4DW.2410. Poston, V fir s).,
TkEAtiKERV IN JP -REASON.
'aro of Seerets Are Sure te
Meet Violent Death,
Ilooaneo he was a traitor to the
traitors with whom ho was leagued
411 InditkIi Anarchist was reoently
shot <load by two of his. .00107S4SS
alcutt4,
Ills fete is a common 0110, with in -
f mom Not, all the power and
, bolded the British Govern-
ment
was able to teeuro imermasitY
for Carey, the Irish "invincible,"
who turned approver in connection
with the Placennt Dark murders.
leather Gapon is now known to
have been hanged as a traitor by
the Rusidan Terroriets. Ile was
lured to a house in 0. aihtirb of St,
Potersisura, eubjeeted to a. mock
trial, sentenetal, staal eateeated, In
the mine way Dr, Oronie was put
to death at Chicago, in 1880. He
WaS a member of an American -Irish
roeiety of dynamite= known es the
ChanameGael, mad he was also a
British Searet Service agent.
Bow were the 111011 betrayed!
No one knows exactly, An iricmt-
tiouii look A carelessly -uttered
word 1 Sir Ilebert Anderson has
left it sen TeCOINd how one *f his s
oret agents in Dublin, a supposed
Fenian, lost his life heeause of a
ehanee remark uttered over the
dinner -table by a highly-plassed
oraciaa who ought to have 'mown
better.—London Answers.
Jeremiah in Trouble.
"A good wife is Heaven's great-
est gift to man and the rarest gem
the earth holds," remarked Mr.
Jarphy the other morning. "She
is his joy, his inspiration, and his
very soul. Through her 'he learns
to reaeh the pure and true, and her
laving hands lead him softly -over
the rough places. She is "
"Jeremiah," said Mrs. Jarph,y, sol-
enanly—"Jeremiah, what wicked-
ness have you been up to now 2"
TO CUREiA COLD IN one DAY
Take LAXATTYS BROM° Quinine Ta.blets.
Druggists refund 'money if it fails to cure.
E. W. GROVE'S signature is on each box.
"I asked your husband last night -
if he had to live his life over again,
if ,he would marry,you, and he said
he certainly would." "Be'certain-
ly wouldn't I"
Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
Sir' Walter Raleigh and his com-
paniOns Introduced into England
the 'habit of smoking tobacco on
their return from Virginia in 1585.
tilfilaid's Liniment Our Carget in Cows.
She --"And don't you go in for
sport of 6;ykind'l, 3 a s
ddli't;cnowhaw—Ps
sSanat;0ndoi dominoes."
More than 600,000 men are em-
ployed in working the railways of
the United Kingdom:
MOVING
AY FOR MBS. LYNX.
ow She Coaxed Her Young On
to Follow,,Her.
me domestic life of the Ameraean
lynx is not often exposed to the
observation of a syraParthetie hu-
man bng. 411 the more intere*t-
ing is this littlo incident, of Whiah
a contributor to the Onang Maga,
zino wa0 a Witness.:
watched a built familY znovirg
out one day. It was azs. interesting
sight. I was eruisi,ng up a moun-
tain road to a clump of eedar tim-
er, and bad no weapon except my
N. While I was creeping silently
through the timber, I heard a ea,
alowing. I seated myself on a fall-
en log just all the edge ot the dense
timber, and WPited. Presently
,deeideri that the pound caxae froln
fallen hollow cedar, a few
from where 1 sat -
A lynx appeared at the *peeing,
**Iced Wok into the hoRow, and
mewed encouragingly. She was
joined by two half -grow -a late,ns
at atood }Ail/king at the baight
unliglit. The *Id one moved for-
ord a few feet sad. oalled, to her
rood, They toddled out, 4n4
ned her. She played with -them,
them about, and bit 446 theMi
Alta litiotring the while, ex-
bby doe4 with her tam-,
jeleat grade beans kepawnele
and mealy by perfect tusking,
retaining their full atronath.
'Flavored with delieiou,s sauces-
Thentlavo no actual -
short tixne she -inoved ei
again, stopped, and coaxed tin=
/low, It toor her half see hour to
lewi them into the protectioai-of the
forest. My ax -was not ;au effective
weapon, hilt had I been otherwise
8414,444 1 000ld nat havo brought
myself to molest the mother and 'her
young.
Do Your
Quite
Yo
GLOVES
That Are Quaraxtteed
1why take chaeeee a bualeg
ep,,g4wZ4o you CAP get *pan'
goaranto* backe4by ctozt
lugest glove faotoly in the
11.111. Pinto Shell Gloves
prop
speetally tserted houto-
itect wet proof, wind
aral heat proof. $euci
ON 13
A%lEti5gr
111117.NG Co
e Iwo mit% Avows.
A
If Color Thd,t You $0
tei Erout
Good Advice.
Flint II
Its In Two %Hike,
Miaa ettisallagbatt., wei
young lady in litchileton,
lowa: "1 ICTAO. aficetea
for two years with a. rash, and ugly
looking Pimples that spread over
my 'face. -my color was poor, and
my blood evidently tompletely out
o order. Certainly it was a most
despairing sort of a ease: because
various treatment„s did but little to
hel me. A friend of mine in To-
ronto, Ont., advised MO to get Dr.
Henditon's PilIs, so I sent at once
for ftvo boxes. In two weeks I felt
like tei.—looks improved, spirits
rose, and I felt I was getting well.
I have used this remedy for a long
thne,and now wouldn't be without
If you are in ailing health, have
blood d,isorders, st,cnnasob trouble,
or headaches, Dr, Hamilton's Pills
will help you quickly. All druggieis
and storekeepers sell Dr. Hamil-
ton's Pills of Mandrake and But-
ternut. 25c, per box, five for $1.00.
Sent postpaid by the Catarrhozone
CO., Buffalo, N.Y., and Kingston,
Canada.
Models.
Suitor—I have no bad habits. I
don't smoke -or -drink. Father —
Neither has my daughter. She
doesn't play or sing.
tOt
IWO; Try ffittrine Eye Remedy
No BruartIng—Fects F1 11 o—Acts Quickly.
Ye, ra r
IA. in once Vlickage. com-
grY e S reCIT1T44)LTir.?en?g-JAti;141192
Nee d TerCliCe.rencrg"th7rPitill117a.);1";%Id cl;
)rttgglttoot 26c-Fec par bottle. 7+1111111e
Care F.ye Salve in Montle Tubes, 250-D0c.
Marine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
Mrs. Mater—"I wonder what
makes that dog so afraid of me. He
always acts as if he thought I was
going to kill him." Little Daugh-
ter—"I daresay he's seen you
spankin
fdInard's Liniment Cures CMOs, 'Era
Italy's War 8trength,
The figures for tile year 1911 give
Italy a peace strength of 225.000; a
war strength of 525,009 and "avail-
able for duty unorganized," 1;200,-
000. The latter figures fl,re, of
-course based on -C110 estimated maiol
population oi mulibwry age, and are
probably correct. Fag -arca for the
same year 'give Italy 7 modern bat-
lleshipa, 6 ether battlleships, 7 fest-
elaos 111,160, S, 3 sacond-class
ere, 13 third-class cruisers, 3 gun-
boats, 33 destroyers, 75 torpedo
boats and 19 'submarines. Person-
nel of navy, officers and men os
41.
Tomniy—"POE, What is a theory V
Tommy's Pa ----`(-A: theory, ;my son, is
anything that , is easier . for., us to
preach than 'to,...practi„Ce)a"
ni Esrnto Eraaa
0
A T
T'
trade; expert
roetice; motet rree
et tor brorber.
Collet" 211,
le
lo
cue.
00t5,
A
TA
fcre4 Foreig
onhe Seven Gent
Cortimmy, _Toronto.
E.L.LA 0
tfl
atologus.
Stamp
ANCER. Ti3610118. DUMPS.
'V internal and arternsi, cured COltk•
eat rain by our borne trentmerit Writ* -0.
no before too late. Dr. Benmon Ittedloa
Limited, flollinerowl Ont
GALL STONE, R.13)Ntlr an der Stones. Ritiney -trouble, Gravel.
Ltuntmire lend kindred ailments DoAitIvolt
cared rolth the TI CI, Dorman Remaly.
"Rama,' price $1.60. Another nen remelt
for Mabetes.Mellitns. and stirs earn, Is
"Sanore ArithDlabetes." rIce $200 irogi
druggists or direct. The Strict ISanufse•
curing perspsny of cgoado.., muutoci,
Winnipeg, Man.
Careless.
Owner of the Car—Why did you
leave your last place? Chauffeur --
The guy I worked for went crazy.
Started shingling his house when
his car needed new tires.
Minard's Liniment Co.. Limited,
Yarmouth, N. S.
Gentlemen,—In Iannary last, Praneis
Leelare, one of the men el:or/107Ni bY mo,
working in the lumber woods, had a treo
fall on him, crushing him fearfully, tfe
was, when found, placed on a sled and
taken home, where grave fears were en-
tertained for his recovery, his hips being
badly bruised and his body turned black
from his ribs to his feet. We used MIN-
ABE'S LINIMENT on liina freely -to deaden
the paiu and with the use of three bottles
he was completely cured and able to re -
tura to his work.
SAtirEUR DEVAL.
Elgin 'load, L'Islet Co., Que.
In a Nutshell.
A Man remenabers a woman's epi-
gramS as long as he loves her. Ile
remembers her compliments as long
as he loves himself 1
PILES CURED IN 6 70 14 DAYS.
Your druggist will refund -money if PAZO
OINTMENT fails to cure any case of
hag, Mind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in
tO 14 days. Sae.
When a sea -captain marries a wie
slow he becomes second mate,
filinard's Lintrnont Cures Distemper,
The Parting.
id him'1 Wonld not .see him
again, . said the fair girl. ,,
He evidently thinks. you meant
what you said."
'Well, that's ,to reason why he
s.lioaldn't call nie up by, 'phone.'"
• .
NO RHEURiATI LkSTWINTER
Montreal Man Conquered his Old
. Enemy by using GIN PILLS
Mr, A. Beandry of 597 Pallet Street,
lloutreal, thus expresea his great
satisfaction with GIN PILLS.
It affords me great pleasure to inform
you that 1 have used GIN PILLS for
about six months, and that they have
done me a great deal of good. 1 have
had Rheumatism for a couple of years,
and last winter 1 saved myself from it
by lasing GIN PILLS."
soe. a box, 6 for $2.5o. Saluple trec if
on write aitstiontil Dru tuid chemical
,st