HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1913-8-28, Page 3wee*
The Mouse Who Dared.
Little White Ear ran to his mo-
ther.
"What shall .1 4Q" he f3clueaked*
"A big Human Being is lying acroes
our do—on the other aide ! Vm
afraid to go out."
Stay' en, then, answered. his
.ce
mother. She wile 4 mouse of few
words. "The Bueoau Being will
MOTO soon. They never rest long.
"Bet, there's, some eheese near;
by," urged White Ear, "I waat it V
"Cheese!" said Mouse Mother,
alarmed. "Thee it'tn itap. Don't
go near ill"
"Wow tiresome!" exclaimed. Fa-
ther Meuse, who had just come
along. "We want cheese badly
enoegh."
Abe Wbite Ear crept, ba ele tee the hole,
elleme There be lay, . the strange big
thing who wee Pee quiet. He could,
eee ber white freck and her goldete
leair, with the blue bow ovee one
eye. He could eee„ one small foot,
with its openwork so*, and Week,
shiny eliPPer. What be could not
ee was any Sign of her ggtting 14,11
and a1kin WT. FatIlAr
too, and /Coked,
l'S'row it happened that their stores
below were low.; the piece of cheese
beside the quiet figure was exactly
Whet, they wanted. Nothing but
Alother Moteee'e warning& kept Fa-
ther AIOUSA frOlal Making a dash for
it.
"1 should get hack before she had
time to ra4re," he urgod, Bo, Mo.
ther Mouse shook her head. They
all had a short tibble.at a piece of
bacon rind, Whieb WAS the only
thing that was lett in the larder,
and then they all went7to bed.
Bright and early the ri6-,12t morn-
Whito Ear was at the hole.
There lay the Human Being, NO
-
thin; about her WAS changed et all,
The bow had not moved an intuit,
She eould not have turned her
bead! "She sleeps soundly„"
rivl Mother Mouse.
'The cheese is there," r
Vier Meuse, But his wife
head,
ncl by some neighborly me
mtg. They list -gilled to ti
IlOWSthuy peeped through t
bole;they discrersed the stillness
the sleep ig Roman Being, and the
SiZe Sala. flavoreI tbe cheese. But
they agreed 'thatib would be
foothill to try to get it, You never
knew when ft Itillilatt Being will
move, er what it, will do.
The visitors, who had eilled m
hope of l/eing asked to breakfest,
went away disappointed. White
Ear bad to Ine contented with
smell, and his father 'and mother
did not oven take that.
White Ear Was Ve1,7 hungry. A
well is nice fer the time being, but
at does not 'last long. He returned
to the bode, Very still was Human
Being; very large looked the 'cheese.
At last, White Ear could bear it
no longer.
squeezcd through the hole,
and made & bold dash for the
cheese. At the very anament he
started, his father and mother saw
him, and Mother Mouse snatched
at his tail --but she was too late.
White Ear grasped UM cheese,
pushed it towards the hole, and
through it; then he got tafely
through himself—and turned to
, look at the danger he had passed,
Heman Being was just as quiet as
before, and her blue bow did not
even flutter.
1.row thatshe was safe back with.
the theese, Mother Mouse had not
the heart to scold him. Fathet
Mouse gave. him a sly %pat with hi
tail. They 'ate some of his booty,
and put the rest away for supper.
As soon as White Ear had had,
not.enough, but all that they woeld
ret him eat of the cheese, he rush-
ed baelc to the hole. And then he
saw a strange sight!
Human Being began to "move—
but in sudh a funny way! She slow-
ly-, slowly passed out of hie sight,
without sitting up, or even crawl-
irig 1 She was being dragged away.
White Ear had to put his sharp
nose and long 'whiskers through the
hole, just to see how eho managed
it. And then he understood it all.
"Mether 1" he cried, as he ran
back to Mrs. Mouse. "What do
you seeppose 7 She was a 1E111113,n
Being, but—she was thatalways
quiet kind' they call a do11'.1"—
Youth'eeComPanion... '
The Largest Chrysanthonuni
•
Th ere seein s Ito be -almost no limit
to the siee of fruit and'floevere that
plant:breeders can ° produce. They
have:doubled or trebled 'theeize of
some of the common vegetables,and
many Qthe flowers' ruiat fill the
florists' 'shops but in no case, per-
haps have they accomplished more
remarkable ioiafls than in e ha t of
the cheyeanthemem, By removing,
all thellower-buds except the ter -
mime, they. have produced the large
globular heads with whiCh eve,ae?,
'
all familiar. A cco rain g t;(5. Hotta
either°, a French -amateur; has re-
e'ptly succeeded in winning a pieze
or, the 1 Wr o'C $1; Chrys a,ntheinum,
with a flower thatr measured „mere
than ,siity-four inehes in c'reurneele
mice. That is many times the size
of the oxiginal flower -head. What'
willhappen when the dame methods
are „applied to tomatoes; ehaerries.,
and ' and ve,getalles 1
EAMON WOMEN AVIATORS
A SWISS 'WOMAN FIRST TO AS--
CENWIN AEROPlet.liH.
There Are Many British Wome
Avsleterel Wite et e, NeveIist
e One 'of Thein.
The issuing of 4 enanifeeto the
other day by the W011ielt'7e Aoriel
League of Great Hritain initiating
the national crusade for the previse
on of aerial weapons, reealls the
fact that the first woman who evee
Ascended in , an aeroplane is believ-,
ed to be &Ghent wolesea who anyee_M-
Panied Henry Farman on flight
eutaide her own, eitY in 1908. .
The firet aertificated woman pilot
in the world was the Baronage de In
Roehe, who, after breaking bee
shoulder by running into a olump of
peplar treese during practice, ob-
tained her brevet at Heliopolis, go-
ing thence to Saint Petereburg,
where the Czar personally eg)Kfra-
tulated her upon her skill. In Julys
/911, while she was leading in a big
race in Franoe, her machine end-
elieurly1 fel; 0:,44pe,t tep ea jaa olikf,eb 1.-ts taoim
a long OQUTAlewenee she began fly-
ing agail&inFCbrItary, 1012.
Exactly who was the first English-
woman to fly in an aeroplane is un-
certain, but the hOrior lies between
Mr6- Ooder, Wifo of the late
aerepiaeieb, and Mies Haetens
daughter of a hallooPiet. The for -
Tiler made several flights With her
husband during his earlier experi,
wilts, and the latter at nebula in
:19138 made Ler teitiaiaeroplane
trip.
Glorious SenSation.
Ile!" Paye Miss Bacon, "4
bliOyaUlt sensation without
214
I and, therefore, mdeser212.
it is delicious beyond
irons British women
. Maurice Hewlett,
le popular novelist. Mrs,
holds the resord et being
other in the world who
or own SOD, to fly. tie
F. E. T. Hewlett, R.
his brevet last
Ids the view that in
will he starting
*planes embers an -
hey do now en their
MO
"TIM
aerophene,
quite imagine
The sensation w
I went on an
lett says, "I
waetatiO11417.
realized the
motaon was the inost wflorions X
have, ever experienced. At ilrst 1
'WaS a little bit afraid, but the per-
formance eta a 14, has he, effect of
e.trepgthexting ney terves."
-Tel'the mere man in thee sirect
such a ,view might at first appear
Qnixotie, but MISS Trehawke Davis,
who has crossed the channel in an
aeroplane more ften than any obli.
r woman pays aviation a. sirailar
complirael4.
"I eould hardly bear to look aver
a precipice," she confesses, "yet 1
find my eress-ohannel flights partic-
ularly excellent nerve bracers, the
only thing sometimes troubling me
being the intense oold."
So far as is known, the only Soot -
'Ugh WOMaal Who has yet flown in
Scotland is the daughter of Profes-
sor Biles, a founder member of the
Royal Aero Club. During theeLien-
ark meeting, Miss Biles had a pa,s-
senger flight with Drexel.
The Sensation of 'Motion
she deseribed as "almost that of
(eating, with the air and the earth
rushing by atea. tremendaue speed,"
the motion downward -being "like
descending a long toboggan."
One .of the best-known French
aviatresses is Mlle. Helen Dtttrieu,
who, as the human arrow, perform-
ed daring leaps of 45 feet threeugh
epees) on a, bicycle in the music
halls till the police prohibited the
feat as dangerous.
Mlle. Dutrieu rejoices in the nick-
name or the bantam of aviation.
She weighs only as much as a small
boy.
Unique in its way is the entrance
of Miss Mathilde Moiea,nt into avia-
tion. Acoording- to all tieaditione
this charming American should
dread the „every t,hought of aerial
navigation,' as her brother was
edashed to death in her Presence,
-while flying in. Deeember, 1910.
Though 'small in" staeure Miss.
Moisant is big in spirit. Some -em
ago tile police were informed that
she had been flying on a Sunday,'
and set .o.t to appeehend, he 'fees'
contraveniug a, state by-law. But
t.hey •had' r eel; oiled without their
'host. Just as the reptesentatil,eS
of the law hoese -i-sight Miss Mei-
sant started her engine and Cleared
of into the air, out of „their juris-
diction,
,
'Of c9,4d sai e'
hut i-.0:.3;.'
wiliinaan you li
BABrS GREAT DANGER
DURING HOT WEATHER
Moee little one die -daring 'het
weather thai at any 'other time of
the year, Diarrhoea,' , dYeenteXXI
cholera lefantam and eltoneeeli `die -
orders come without and
'when a medicine hi not at hand tro
give promptly the ehortedelaY teo
Irequentley mune ,that the child
has Passed beyend aiI Baby'e
Own T'alelete aleva'ye be kept
the, home where there aro young
ahildren, An ocoaeieeal dose of
the Tablets will Prevent istemaeh
and beewel trenleles, or if thetrove
ble Melee suddenlY the Prompt- uee
of the Tablete will cure the baby.
The Tablets axe sold medne
dealers or by mail at 25 cents, a box
from. The De. Wiliam& Medicine
Co., Breekville, Ont,
TAI..UE OP GOATs.
Butt of Oer jokeOne of the Mo,t
'Useful of Anietels.
Somewhere tho legend exieta thet
he goat was created be the devil;
whteh, perhaps is lustified by the
animal's pernicious activities and
his fondnese for things not enjoyed
by any ether living creature- In
Artent times the honor of being
seerificed to Itaeeltua was conferred
mon it, and in modern times the
t, no matter how venerable, is
onored, when Prc-s,ented on the
diuig table, by beiug given th.e
name of one of the moei, docile en
is kneels. Fri= tiele, iennentor-
al hes the animal been used as
the butt for jokes in comic papers,
there have heerLfew who have
shewna williugness to espouse the
-outlee a this really teeeful but pm,
lined member of the animal kine -
dem.
At last a champion has been found,
ono who cornea forth bold!y, with
out fear of eribeism, and tells a
the 'unsuspected value Of th0 goat
and proclaims that the animal le
more satisfactory and profitable
as a milk producer than it COW. A
physician of Ilieffele'with the ap.
propriate name of Dr. W. Sheldon
Bull, reused by the base iesitnia.
tons and injustice clone the (4.pear
miufs cow," says that instead of
having our CAW tested for tuber-
losis or worrying ourselves to
e.ath for fear our dairyman, d
spite his solemn oath, has not made
the tests he should have made, why
not obtain eur milk from SU animal
that could not have ttlberettlOtiir4 if
it tried, Ho .calls the goat "the
ordy dairy animal immune to tuber.
culosis." Ho believes the virtes
of.goat milk and the ease of ob.
taming itare too little known in
this oountry, and he is applying
himself to the task ef filling this
need long existent, but apparently
not sufficiently felt.
Anybody can keop A goat, -Dr.
Bull tells Us, and everybody ought
to. From a hygienic point of view
it is argued that the owners of these
hardy little creatures' may enjoy
greater advantages than does the
possessor of a. pampered, pedigreed
cow of the most fashionable breed.
It is well known that goat's milk is
richer, more nutritious and more
easily digested thin cow's milk,
and a,s a diet for children and inva-
lids it is stated by the most crain.
ent physicians to be unsurpassed.
STOPPED SHORT
Taking Tonics, and Built up On
Bight Food.
The mistake. is frequently made
f trying'to build up a worn-out
nervous systemon so-called tonics
--drugs.
New material from which to re-
build wasted nerve cells is what
should be supplied, and this can be
obtained only froin proper food.
'Two years ago I found myselif on
the verge of a complete nervous cal -
lapse, due to overwork and study,
and to illness in the laimily," writes
a young mother.
"My friends became alarmed be-
cause I grew pale and thin and
could not sleep nights. I took vari-
ous tonics prescribed by physicians,
but their effects 'wore off shortly
after I stopped taking them, My
food did not seemt� nourish me
and I gained ,no flesh nor blood.
, "Reuling of Grape -Nuts, I deter-.
mined to stop the toiams and see
what a chatige of diet ' would do.,
I ate GraPe-Nuts four tienee a day
with cream and drank milk, also',
went to bed early after eating a
dish of GraPe-Nuts before retiring.
'Iii about ewo weeks Iswas sleep-.
41ng soundly In riejsheit "time gains
edd 20 lba rn weight .and, felt like ,a
'different woinan edaugh-
• Y e
,
ter whom I waaolaliged to keep out
of school 'last spkifig on acceeme of
ehronic catarriaahae changed from
a thin, pale nervus child ton rosy,
healthy girl and has gone back to
school This fall
' '"Gi‘ape.:Ntile and fr.eshr Were
.'he only 'agents' used te.'reeeeeniplish
' ,
s valu
eraertee ie'
eat the hippy' results., , ,,,, e ,
itY-,, '
inc 'fox inonAy
Name- by Canadian Peseum
yen-
enMO:
"NITindsor, On Read the let -
She—‘ eard the etory-
, _ . e
of a mant. p. Obeetered,his
,
"wiea). f e i ou wouldn't'
,
swan' nie fol would you ,
e
,d ` sieng `I e . coulee nate
dhate to have anYene4enlb
t gooderha r_
'The' .4e
ville,? ie pkgs "eThereeS,
Evor,react,she abeve Iettor
appears from titris to (line. Theietkite •
Geflulflo, ,trus,,,and tuil etllernan',inteteei.
singr bet traseatedleY:
aennl'Onie;;': hi,64e
'ponate of
if a Or,"potaSh.'-.''
"BUFFALO, Brix', CODY,
Made Over' a Million 'Dollars With
His Great Show.
What boy' e beartee-boye up fo, the
age of fifty, we mean—did not sink
as the owner ,cef it read that Buffalo
Bill's Wild We Show had been
forced to elsase up rshop, and that
the eheriff was he poesessionT I3ut
it is, a relief to now that Cole
F. Cody, "Buffalo Bill"
hineeelf, is not. eeriouele' affected by
the (heather to once reat show
'which iti1jbeare leis name. Be re-
tired, frorn the business a 'couple of
years ago, having aequired aneat
fortune of oyor a, reellien dollars, A
fere, -weeks ago there was a inizeoe,
that he was (lying in Knoaville,
Tenn., but happily it was uet. eo.
He is, only 70 years of age, too
young te paes in hie cheeks net
The meet pieturesque figure of
Aener.iean feontiee life never knew
the edneation of the i schoole. Three
weeks of regidar school traiping
was all he ever heel, aed bis wide
knewledee of ehe world waa gaiPed
by travel,
Hes .eariy life, as a eluld Was spent
in the freighting business, He
oroesed tho plainmany times as a
boy, He filled every pase ocou-
pation in the border life. h
been freighter, mule-drever, popy
express rider, trapper aael hunter,
etage driver, eeout, raecinuaa,
miae-ewrier, justico of the peece.
member of the Nebraska Legi.eire
pny
written by Ne4 BuTttaw and later
one of the Tweet P3100;340, showeeea
of modem times.
When he, waa a key a be killed
his first Indian, He and a p;Art.y
other wagon drivers. \rare being
pursaed bya band of Indians, who
had broken up their caravan Th
whitesoveromaking their wayalong
a. river bed to a fort Ifei
re s hew
he tells
-the youngSter of the p
I became somewhat tired
wttliout noticing it 1 had talle'
,seine little 'rdistance behind 1
otlierS. It was abotit ten eoo
Ifici„,w4trer keeping very quiet sat
I na the hank eloSol$, '0100
11AS11 ON FACE POISON IVY.
Distinguish It andAtew
Wardi Off Its 111 Effects
Fusey saye: 'Tolson ivy Is a
trailingegreen vine with handsome,.
Skin Would Cake Over and Peel;
Spots Large. Used CutieuraSeaP'
and Ointment. Has Not Had s.
orMk an, Her Since. They Also
Cored Mother of Pimples en Face.
1178 Gl&astpupAYen Taranto. Orte,--Air
be,bre trouble began as a rribh mad, the elkin
used to soravtireee'peel of and baa U SO
IMO gotAg to set Usttsri
,aut would fast ca area
againnatlpeoL Thespote
were large -and It used to
Like her faze leery red
and Innamed a the time-
oehin• face> hands
and arms, and It used to
=aka her reefter niebt•
She got the malt In March
and how X hated to see
at her Ettlea face and
hands iX fried a lot. of different thinza.after
thatbut nothing did any good.. 1NSW the
advartiaeMent and sent for saioldee or Onti..
.tra Soap and Ointment and It started, to
Eat better 1'414 away. X *sod them only
about once a ear. end, tit =ore vii -.21
two weeks sae Pften't a 005 on her e,...‘ry.
wheee, Abe had it throa niontiza berets X
rm,fl the treatment., ?he hn no hs4
k en hee'ree and &he is two and ribat;
yeare olet new, crittlanra Sottp and Oint.
ent also mired pimples at my face.l.
PPM) Mia, istc)Tatitht., 4'5a.
Tor treating pow' eumuleriene. red, ranSIX
hands, mid etrY. ttso sea roan beta cute.
tea =xiQotI 0tvet
tbe worltl's rewrites ror =ea, 113.4 a sine,
retio,e Sold tinvezhout the world. L144
oral sample or esoa mailed free. with 3,2-p,
SkinncAddress neat card Petter r41,1
Cheee,DeDto, Sal). Iieettaa,IL taat
the hiedqual
surnp of the buffalo.
this was -to :be dapgerous
cork, on account of the Indian
o were riding all, ever tItat, eece
of the country, and as w0ald
bliged to gel front RIM to ten
rara the read each da,y
A ti
„„aoes, accompanied lr,),
• n with a light wagon,
poration of tile meat,
gorse, demanded a large sal -
They eeatild afford to renanner.
o well, because, the meat
d net east them anything.
"They agreed to give me $00 a
month, provided I furnished them
all the fresh meat required, and 1
iediately began my career as
mffelo hunter, and it was not long
before I acquired considerable no.
"ety, and was given the 114100 of
.o Bill,
uring my enga
linter for the company
of less than eighteen maths, -
killed 4,2$0 buffaloes and bad man
exciting adventures with the I
diens.*
mesais.
bright green foliage, which turas
a. brilliant yellow to red 2n early
autumn (and is very„ themptingi by
the way, to eoh1eotor af0,-.414:wa
leaves). It is veisy easfly distin-
guished from other similar looking
vines by the fact thab Ra leaves oc-
cur in groups of three on a stem)
and not five
"It and other poisenOttsplants-
,
are MOM irritating Itrroiet;i nnolet ano,
should especi:ally be a,voided in the
ie;:r4IALf-ftetlineortarzixcainpo;niLur,bwelletwnoallxiolvetisoodwintholyikobw7-
prompt removal of the irritating
substance„ This can fli)e. done be
vigorous washing with soap and war,
ter, preferably using ft, hand .brush,
and after that with akoholJf
-
P.e measures, are carried out
for the the effects on the akin become
rnanifet, the usual rearefion in the
skmn can, as a rule, be entirely, or
ina great part, preveated., And
even after dermatifci.fts has begun it
can often be reduced to slight in-
tzent-Ituyre-zd cut short by the same
"Of coarse, after
erne intense, vigorous washing
rine cannot be dc,ne, an
sponging wtth ;alcohol is painful,
To relieve the itehing, sponging
wtth <tool„ water o distilled extrapt
ef hamainelis hazel), forIAw-
ed by an applieatien of dusting
powder, is contorting, Sielvere as
. aro not well borne."
Teddy Lost the Bear.
ora1:0-capytru
tet;urevae Yfic„0/74
E.
'-'1211"Ttisnist'tatb!: ljnee7aristrcutL17'
teai
tractor,
I C9P744 au
VagQ O
can plan,
rclm rd.
Po meal.
Pee and money
etreegia prod
raass rea
R. W. cswsOini, tiinet3f se r St
Toronto.,
Ftion2:.UZIp.:TOGR GRATN 41r1)
Parma all seetiOas o
FAinT0n.ty47e2Tntra.,„;rrra wrrtv,,Thttou'e.
sa
t towns tr
MSIDMV171,41.4
33v-zi:npr,Opt 4n4 do
H. W.PAWSPI.4 Pelham& St To
77-7,744,4ti:OrAun
Genereele,
"Buffalo Bill" Cody.
happened to look up to the moonlit
sky and saw the plumed head of an
Indian peeping over the bank. In-
stead of hurrying ahead and alarm-
ing ‘tho man in a quiet -way, 1 in-
stantly aimed my gun At the head
and hred. The report rang out
sharp and loud on -the'night
and was immediately followed by
an Indian whoop, and the nort mO-
inent about six feet of dead Indian
came tumbling into the river. I
was not only overcome by astonish-
ment, but, was badly frightened, as
I could hardly realize what I had
done. I expectedate see, the -whole
'force of Indians come down upon
us. While I was .standing thus be
Wildered„ the men, who had heard
, .
the shot and the warwhoop and
seen the Indian take a tumble.,
came rushing back., 'Who fired that
shot cried Simpson. I did,' re-
plied rathee proudly, ze my con-
fidence returned swhen 1 smw the
men corning up. 'Yes, 'and little,
Billie has killed an :Indian stone
dead, 'too dead to ,skin,' said one, of
the men, who, had approached
nearer than the ee,st.. From that
time forward I became known as
an •
Indian killer. This was, of
course, the 'first Indian I had ever
shet, ,and I was then not m,oee than
eleven. years of age."'..
: Reseteed as a'scont in the Anaer-
ican ',Civil, War, and. subsequently
juthe seine eaPacety 'agametalif./ne
diens Who made life.inieerat"' 'e foe
settlees in 'the Seartle-Weetern
Stiet6e: ' ,
When, 'seised hew he gained: the
titia of Buffalo Bill, he rep:teach:a'
"It was in 1867, the time that -the,
,end. of the Kansas Pacific track was
in the hearteof the buffalo cbuntry;
and the empany was employing
about 'twelve hundred men. 'In 'the
conStrue,tion:6f the road. A s he
Indiarits were very -troublesome,it
was difficult to Obtain fresh meat
ferethe .woekinemeta, and the
ah y th eretOre,, conclude ci to en ga g e
"sthe services of hunters to kill'bufe
qaloes. Goddard, Bretheis, w'ho had.
e
••.r4ijgood
off(ir to he oome th'iey
said that they would .e.equerebieut
twelve' b u fi al e&S per day, They' ei ee re:
Thin le
411D'ii Unit:nen
end contider It ill
unirlset, 1 here fo
horse deeh.
ZE GOES BEGGING.
Woman Leaves $20,000 in Will for
Planet Iteseareli.
A prize which will perhaps never
be awarded is among thO'se offered
by the French Ataderny of Seiemes
for the .,eneouragement of research.
Twenty thousand tiollers lie in
the coffers ef the academy and will
be paid to i•ho first astmlomor -who
pate the earth in communication
with any planet of the solar systein
other than Mars.
This curious prize Wag instituted
by a voillan name.d Guzman, who
died in 1899, and left, the 32-ioney for
founding it in her wiul. The reason
why Mena. Guzman excepted the
planet Mars' ie,not expla.ined. She
nia.y have thought this task too easy
o accomplishmeatt to be rewarded
with $20,000.
minaecre Liniment Cures Colds, Eo.
Oh, Woman, Thorn Art Vain! •
Berlin's (Germairi' y) daily use of
face powder, .c.old crease, scented
toilet water and other toilet aece,se
series has been set forth in tons and
pounds by a. local newspaper, and
the results are striking. Three-
emartees ore ton of face premier,
and 350 pounds of black and brown
eyebrow pencils axe used daily in
the city, according to these etatis-
ties. Seven hundred pounds of cold
'eream are the figures for one day,
and the .. Berlin women --one as-
sulnes that it is the women—require
40 sticks of red lip -pomade every
twenty-foue hours.
He—The hand that reeks the
,cradle, rules tleee wOreci. Don't for
get that. She—Then, you eeeme in
and rule, the world aiehile. I'm
- ,
ge
Midell ugs,
MEN WANTED
T0UN 3L ME A "DAX/X1R7h X TAP011
yen weals% eeeelee. elteeeettlele *al
Irs\.panoorop:tob7peteerlis=co,er„, 7trtans
ogt15,1teai
lroO, X,O1(tir CoMOSO, VI Queen St, XA,,
MEN WANTED
tie
TV V
uteet eteee.
ter yeere
setteene on the
exoellent to
. S. PMEO,
Often tbe Case.
"And a very sidtable
you, WO, old eh n
4'Why
"Well, you say ha brain
enough ,for two,
SUMMER TOURIST RATES TO THE
PACIPIP CO.AST.
Tim Chicago and North Western BY'.
Special low rate round trip tickete ez
tale from all points in Canada to Las
Angeles, San Francisco. Portlaiad, Beattlo,
Va no:rarer, Victoria, Edmonton, Codgers%
Banff, Yellowstone Par, et., durinx Aug-
ust and September. Excellent tram err.
vice. For rates, illustrated foldere. time
tablas and u11 particulars address. P. 11.
flennott. Goners(' Jiarent, 46 Yonge Street,
Toronto, Outurfo.
*unable
Plants,
Weed
for S
Wood Split
ler 2 16118
Wood Sigh PA:4110y,
for 3 711.4 in. slitafti.
.Wl SjlL,
Pufle
tor711U n4 abet,
Usually Does.
"Si you went teethe big outing 7"
replied Mr. Groweher,
"and 1 want to say that there is no-
thing lie a picnic to mak-e a man
realize what a. nice eool place his
office is."
Minaret's Liniment cures came* in Cows.
Can You Guess?
What is a young woman who re-
fuses you I—Much too no-ing.
Why should a teetotaler not have
eei.fe e—Because he Won't sup-
porter.
Why is butter like a cowardly sol-
dier —Because as soon as it is un-
der fere it runs away
Why did William Tell shudder
when _he shot the apple from his
son's head ?—Because it was an ar-
row escape for his child.
-Why arebirds in spring like a
banldng establishment ?—They is-
sue promissory notes, and rejoice
when the branches are flourishing.
Minard's J.Iniment Cures Distemper.
Only Salting.
Johnny' was rather apprehensive-
. ,
ly awaiting his eaeher's return from
business. Be had a curious little
feeling that more .would be heard
about the broken pane e of gl.ess in
old Grime's 'glasshouses. .
"Take off your Coat, illy on, and
come along- with me !" said pa,
after he had rested from dinner.
een'Ou'ie not going to give me a,
hiding, are you pal' inquired
young hopeful, with a nervous
' "Didn't ,I tell you this moruirig
at 1, woiid settle with .you for
your bad beliavior when 1, came
home queried'.father.
Yes said Johnny hopefully
' (hut I thought yeti were only jk-
ing lika when yaii told the gsroeer
you' would .settle
The Lisi utd iral ditivei ite or,m,h,
from an Arabic word, &niral-bahr,
Mean' "lord of the sea"
Bo a,
Nertlean Pribitsbing Co., Toronto,
The likeness.
"Miss Dicky, the public speaker,
is a fOlintain of eloquence."
"Well, all the Melissa 1 Can eet
in her to a fountain is that they are
both gus.hiug."
Try Murine Eye Remedy
If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes
or Granulated Eye/ids. Doesn't Smart
—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sea
Murine Eye Remedy, Litluid, 2Sc, SOc.
Merino Eye Steve in Aseptic Tubes,
23e, SOe. Eye Books Free by Mail.
An rya Tionta Cmod far AA Aye* tAott Atimmll Cars
Morino Eris Reined"' Co,, Cbtoag*
An Ohl Friend Reaches England.
Excited Old Lady (a.s expres'a
thunders through etation).—Oh,
porter, doesn't that train stop
here 7
Patient Porter.—No, Wye; It
don't even hesitate.
minaret's Liniment cures Disintheria.
Virtues of Vegetables.
Lettuce has a soothing effect on
the nerves and is excellent for suf-
ferers from insomnia.
Tonaa,toes are good for a torpid
liver, but sheuld be avoided by
g
o
u
ty
peoapnle.
0elerydonions are nerve' ton -
Jos.
Spinach has great aperient quell -
tries and is better than medicine for
.constipation,
Beets are fatteeing and are good
for ,people. who want to puteon flesh.
So are potatoes. '
Parsnips possess the same eris"-
.tues as sa,esaparilla.
Asparagus stimulates the kidneys. '
Bananas are beneficial to suffer-
ers frona chest complaints.
You Val 'and relin Zam-gult
It bases the burning atin
pato' stops bleedi and brings,
ease. Perseverance,tvoth,;ain.
J3alt, means ettrii Why notproli0
This:? 4U Druggists.alux Meresk7,,e,'