HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1911-8-3, Page 3%ix/tbArtADICI~Ivib•MbAbADAP1b/RiAt.YibE1
Young Folks
)911)41vvelotelvereeeeteeteee
The courage of the little OROS, EA)
mall and helpless and et the mers
syof a huge world full of ItElktlOWD
trials and conditions, sometimes
'surpasses belief, A. Dublin man
tells 4)f the story of inviting his
bright little 4 -year-old son to pay
wait 1:o the cemetery with him,
The child hung back a little, - but
tnatty, when the serprised parent
coked a little hurt, accompanied
iin readily enough.
The vieit concluded, the child,
who had hidden his mother goodby
with strange fervour and clung
lightly to his father's hand all the
while, regarded this father go
strangely that the latter was im-
pelled to wonder.
"Come, huddle," he said, at last,
"let us go."
"Oh, am I going back with you?"
exclaimed the poor youngster, who
recentlyhad accompanied the fun,
brat train of a little friend to the
tame cemetery. "I thought when
people took little boys to the ceme-
tery they left them there !"
Many a man, the story is wisely
oncluded, shows less heroism in
the faeee of a sudden summons to
leave the world.
"I know how they could kill all
the hears in the world," said
thoughtful Bertie.
"Indeed, dear. Tell us how,"
encouraged hs mother.
"Get all the bears into the woods.
en' then get all the air out of the
woods, an' then they'd choke up
an' die."
"Mamma," begged little I3essie,
"may I carry the baby for a
while 1"
'No, dear; you aro too young
end small; you might let it fall."
"Then, manatee," with the pa-
tient resignation based on eXper-
fence, "may I have it to keep when
It is old and worn outl"
"Oh, yes, Tommy," said the
teacher, struggling to lighten the
density of the little lad's ignor-
a,nect, "if you have a dog you real-
ly are the owner of a, quadruped."
"Teacher, I ain't!" insisted ob-
stinate Tommy.
'Tommy, you must not contradict
me. I explained to you yesterday
that any animal with four legs was
a quadruped, and you say that you
own a dog, and of course the dog
has four legs."
"No'ng he hasn't!" came the tri-
umphant shout. "You see Rover
lest one of his'n fightin' a trolley
car!"
A teacher in a slum school was
hearing the class in arithmetic:
"I entered a department store,"
she said, "paid two dollars for
gloves, a dollar and a quarter for
a belt, and twenty-eight cents for
hairpins. I gave the clerk a five -
dollar bill, Ikey," turning to a.
little Russian Jew, "how much
money did I get backl"
"Teaeher," said Ikey, viewing
her with cold astonishment, "Vy
for you didn't count yer changel"
"No, Marion," gently negatived
a devoted but desperate mother,
"I'm not going to help you get your
arithmetic lesson any longer. 1
feel that you're depending alto-
gether tee. much upon my assistance
and you must learn to depend up-
on yourself."
"Oh, dear, oh, dear," wailed
Marion, disconsolately, "I'll just
get zero, I know it. None of the
alley kid's mammas can remember
fifth grade work either 1"
"Can you tell me, :fames," ask-
ed the prim teacher of the boy with
the twinkling, Observant eyes,
"why the .race is not always to the
swift 1 '
"Yessum," came the prompt ans-
wer, "lt's bemuse their tires burst
or their gasoline gives out."
The new minister was being en-
tertained by the .small boy of the
household, .and, seeking the way to
the little host's heart, he inquired:
nave you a dog'?" •
"ger,."
"What kind of a dog, and where
is he?"
"Ho's in the country," was the
sighing explandion. "He's a
dachshund, and pa crags that with
coal at the price ±1 18 now we can't
afford to have him hero until the
eummer. You see, ho takes solong
to go through the outer door that
the whole house vets cokl."
Sometimes children manifest re-
reerkable ingenuity in the way of
indulging forbidden tastes and
tendencies. Little Mary, .for ex-
ample, had been sternly reproved
for calling her impetuous feline
pot a "darned old kitty," but not
van the nasty taste of the soap
and vistas had erased had erased
freni her plastic mind the deep im-
pression left by the kitten's cruel-
ty. A little later another scratch
distressed her, and Mary was heard
to remark, angrily
"I &pose 1 dassent may you is a
darned old kitty,. hut—you is just
the same kind of kitty yeti was yes-
torday.'t
HOW TO OBTAIN
A 8000 COLOR
A Treatmeut to Restore the Dud
Supply That Has Been JAM
Suooessful
ENEMY TO TRUE CHARITY
wommits srioiam UiTI1EAT-
ED LIKE .3111,15/AN
Begging Prevents Society 1'E0111
' Paying Greater
There is only this to tell people Debt,
who are pale, weak and bloudlees. Of all the creatures that infest
You are pale and weak because the social system'perhaps the beg -
you haven't anomie blood and yeu gar is the most despicable, writes
won't be hotter until your blood Mr, Frank Crane in the Chicago
supply is kereasod. You should Tribune. And thei'for the simple
not hese any time in increasing
your blood supply, for people who
neglect anaemia, often slip into a
deadly decline. When you have
increased your blood supply you
can reasonably expect to have a
good color, to have lost that tired,
breathless feeling, to have a good
appetite and get good nourish-
ment from your food. Now the
only quiets and always effective
way to get a supply of new, rich,
red blood is to take Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. Every dose
helps to make new blood,
and this new blood coursing
through the veins, bringer health
and strength to every organ and
every part of the body, making
weak, ailing people bright, active
and strong. This has been proved
in thousands of oases of which the
ease of Mrs. George Clark, Ab.
boteeforcl, B.C., is. a fair sample.
Mrs. Clark says: "After spending
two years and ',six months in a hos-
pital training for a nurse, I began
to fail in health, was very pale
and the least exertion would leave
me out of breath. After graduat-
ing I came to British Columbia to
take up rny profession as a private
nurse. The first case I took 1
found I was not able to go on with
my work. Doctors' tonics failed
me, and acting on my own judg-
ment, I purchased a supply of Dr.
Williams'Pink Pills. Before I
had finished them I was really sur-
prised at the result. The color
came back to my tees. I gained in
strength and by the time I had
used nine boxes I was bank at my
work as a nurse. I have since
married, but still have my friendly
feeling for Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills." .
Sold by all medicine dealers or
by mail at 50 cents a box, or six
boxes for $2.50, frown The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brookville,
Ont.
OLD CHINESE WALL PAPER.
Haile to Order and Stamped, Hand
Painted or Printed From Blocks.
It is said that the European no-
tion of wall paper was imported
from China. There its ornamental
UEO for screens, partitions and the
like was shown as early as the
fourth century. Authorities on
this subject assert that it was Hol-
land during her naval supremacy
of the sixteenth century which first
began to adopt and hand around
the wall paper idea.
Tho early Chinese wall papers
were printed from blocks, hand
painted or stamped with infinite la-
bor and exquisite arb. They were
made to order—produced in sheets
of various dimensions according to
the uses to which they were put.
The modern rolls of well paper
with a continuous duplicate design
were unknown. It was not until
the invention of the modern print-
ing and stamping machines with
cylindrical rollers that a continu-
ous conventional pattern was fav-
ored.
As neither China nor Japan was
a communicative country during
the beginning of the commercial
history of Europe these wall paper
importations were few and fer be-
tween and considerably at e, pee-
mium. Yet they soon hit the Euro-
pean fancy as a good substitute for
the arras and tapestries of the
time.
Up to the and of the seventeenth
century the impelled product was
prohibitive in ,price, howev'
er ancl
ib was not until theniiddltt ofthe
eighteenth century that it was real-
ly a familiar thing on the market.
When the methods fur printing and
stamping wall paper from blocks
was introduced from Chine each
nation was jealous of its neighbor
in the wall paper trade and tried
to keep its own process a secret,
Toward the end of the seven-
teenth century the English were
the largest importers of the hand
decorated Chinese wall papers, but
only for a short time. .As the de-
mand inereaesed they began to per-
fect a process of paper Stammeg
and paper deem:a-lion to imitate
tapestries, and with improved
machinery soon cheapened their
product and popularized it all ov-
er Europe. By the time of the
Stuarts tiro arras of Shakespeare's
era was beginning to disappear.
The small son of a physician had
a babyish visitor) whom he sudden-
ly terrorized by abrupt display. of
his father's cherished anatomical
tikeleton.'
"Pa thinks a lot of that," he
proudly asserted.
"Whyl" asked the shivering
guest.
"Oh, 1 danno," wits the host's
uncertain reply. "I never aeked
him, Maybe it was pa's first pa-
tient, who gave him his dead old
bonee."
reason that ho is doing his hest
to destroy charity. The altruistic;
impulse is the noblest in the hum-
an heart, To strengthen and de-
velop it is to advance the happiness
and Neese of the race. The testi-
tution of begging tends to cut the
nerve of altruism. es prostrates
pity to a means of livelihood.
Begging is not had because it
costs so much; it is bad because it
prevents society from paying the
much greater debt it owes. People
become satisfied, and think they
have done their duty when they
hand a few pennies to the wretched
old woman In rags at the church
door; whereas, as a matter of foot,
their duty is to pay many dollars
to schools, hospitals, and the like
for the purpose of preventing ig-
norance and suffering.
I have had quite a struggle to
sorew my courage up to the point
where I make it a rule never to give
a cent to the professional beggar.
But I have succeeded. And I think
I am more just and more kind for
it. Also more liberal, for the mor-
al pang has bade me seek out hon-
est and atraight institutions which
are doing worthy eleemosynary
work and to give them ten times
what the beggar tipping would have
cost.
• •
BEGGING IS DEBASING."
Those who really care for their
fellow men should refrain from en-
couraging beggary in any way, for
the reason that no business is so
debasing to the character of the
one who follows it. A beggar must
cringe and grovel and demean him-
self before his folloevonen. He lit-
erally sells his soul to contempt.
He deprives himself of every man-
ly, eelf-respecting quality.
I am aware of the precepts of the
Bible about charity. I know the
commands, "Give, to him that ask-
eth of thee," "Sell all that thou
hast and give to the poor," and the
like, as well as the theorem, "He
that giveto to the poor lendeth to
the Lord," but it all depends on
how one reads the Bible.
It should not be construed liter-
ally. The book itself says: "The
letter killeth, but the spirit mak-
eth alive." Especially is this true
when a literal compliance with a
precept plainly defeats the object
which the giver of the precept had
in mind.
The admonitions of religion
should he mixed by us with all the
intelligence and common sense we
possess. Now, while in the clays of
Christ, in the middle ages, and in
all the eras plosions to this age of
popular government, it may have
helped cure the hurt of poverty to
bestow alms indiscriminately, it is
most certain that such action in
this day of the world increases pov-
erty, debauches souls, ruins char-
acter, and tends to prolong iniquit-
ous and unjust social conditions.
There were no public hospitals
for the sick, no blind asylums, no
deaf and dumb institutions, no
places to care for the insane and
feeble minded, and no public em-
ployment offices in existence in the
age when thel%Tew Testament was
written. Before our era there were
no public schools, neither were
there legislatures for the redress of
public grievances.
All theso modern institutions do
bysystem and intelligent order,
A Triumph
Of Cookery--
ost
Toasties
Many delicious dishes
have been made from
Indian Corn by the skill
and ingenuity of the ex-
peet cook.
But none of these tree -
tions excels post Tama-
les in tempting the
palette.
"TOostleS" aro a
usy that make a deligire
in het -weather economy
Tho first package tells
its own story.
"The Memory
Sold by Grocers.
Lingers"
Poshtm Cereal ConlItanYi Limited,
and hence do se thoueenehe times
better, the work of humane help to-
ward the unfortimate, My Arst
duty, therefore, if I want really to
be a humane and kind man is to
pay my just taxes to the govern -
Meat. The man who dodges his
taxes and doles out eoecalled char-
ity to the poor is a swindler. It is
as if he gave the poor a loaf of
bread and destroyed their bakery.
Ite gives where it can be seen end
noted, or DA least where he eau feel
11 direetlY, and withholds where it
cannot he seen and where he can
feel only through his reason.
I look askance upon every pri-
vate endowment. 1•Tothing is good
through and through that is done
for a people that is not done by
the people themselves. I believe
the State to -day is doing more real
eleemosynary work than all her
churches, benevolent private or-
ganizations, and generous million-
aires put together. I hear no hard
word e for Carnegie and Rockefel-
ler and others who 'have, endowed
colleges, libraries, hospitals,
and
the like; but I cannot help think-
ing that the time will come when
the millionaire who has found him-
self in possession of more money
than he can use will turn it back
to the people whence he got it.
CHARITY IN TRUE SENSE.
Another means of real charity is
to furnish employment and to treat
employees like human beings. I
believe a man like the late Marshal
Field, like Milton Wilson, Paul
Friedemann of Limbach, in Sax-
ony, whose factory is a model of
humane contrivance for the welfare
of his workers, or like any one of
a hundred others I might mention
who give honest workers a fair
chance to earn a competence and
not sacrifice their self-respect, is
doing infinitely more good than the
medieval saints who gave bread and
pennies to the beggars.
e What eight minded and right
hearted people watt is not a chance
to grab but a. chance to earn.
Give a man justice and you give
him noblest charity..
Give a man opportunity and you
help him -without breaking down his
self-respect.
Give a man work and fair pay for
it and you give him something with-
out at the sante time robbing him of
that sense of manhood and useful-
ness which is "the immediate jewel
of the soul."
THE PROOF 01? THE PUDDING.
Little Ethel had been very naugh-
ty. It was certaieriy wrong of her
to tie the cat's tail to the chair
leg, and pour ink into her father's
slippers. She deserved to be pun-
ished.
So her mother sent her from the
room without any dinner, but when
the pudding came on the scene her
conscience smote her, and she de-
termined to give Ethel another
ehance.
"Tell Ethel thee if she will be
very, vet— good for the rest of the
afternoon, she may have some pud-
ding," she said to the servant.
The servant delivered the mes-
sage and returned in a, few min-
utes with Ethel's reply.
"Please, mum, Miss Ethel wants
to know what kind of pudding it is
before she makes any promises !"
THE WRIGGLER,.
"Ferdinand, what is the mat-
ter?" cried the young wife to her
husband, who scented to be trying
te tie himself into a knot.
There was no reply save a few
gurgles, as the either.-- man bent
his body backwards until his face
grew red.
"Let me share your trouble, Fer-
dinand," pleaded the young wife.
' Still the man bent his body over,
now twisting one way, now an-
other.
"Tell me. What is it?" begged
his wife.
"It's only a collar-stud that has
slipped down my back," growled
the man, and once more he pro-
ceeded to stand on his head.
"What lo the greatest get -rich -
quick scheme you know of 7" asked
the Ilkley financier of his partner.
Taking the money away from
other people who want to got rich
quick. '
Minard's Liniment Cures Dtphthorla.
"My work," remarked the bald-
headed dentist, "is so painless that
my patients often fall asleep in
the chair while I am operating!"
"Huh, that's nothing!" retorted
his rival, "My patients nearly all
insist on having their pictures tak-
en while I am at work, in order to
catch the .expression of delight en
their faces!'
The female house fly lays from
120 to 150 eggs at, a time, and these
mature in two weeke. Under fey -
°rabic conditions tee descendants
of a single pair will number mil-
lions in three. months. Therefore,
all housekeepers should omelette
using Wilson's Fly Pads early in
the seeson. and thus cut off a
large proportion of the summer
crop,
Missionary (explaining to visi-
tors)7--Our Sittati011 'VMS so remote
that for a 101010 year my wife novel.
WY a white face but my own.
Sympathetic Young Woman — Oh,
the peer thing 1"
felIBUP ANI) SWINK,
Psi�es higher Ceneda Than in
United St Rtes.
Prices of sheen PAT inuelg lower
in the United Shane than in Can-
ada, due to the feet that Ont
specializes on pedigreed flocks .as
appears later on, in the Ifel,•d1
States they range from 112.111) per
prod ill TEMPI to $5.30 in .Tiliteer
and Iowa, while itx Canada the
maga is front $4 in Nova, Seulia
to $7 in Ontario, Manitoba, aud
Saskatchewan,
Prices of swine are slightly high-
er in Canada than ingthe United
States. In the eastern border
States, Maine, New Hampshire,
Vermont, and New York, they
range from $10 t, $11,50 a head;
and in tho central border States
the range is about the saute. Xis
the western bolder States the
range of .prices 15 4"pon $10.40 to
$11.10. In the tercet agricultural
States of Indiana. Illinois, and
levee nrices of, swine .vary little
from those already quoted. lel
western Canada from $12 to $13.
prices is from $10 to $13 0,nd in
western Canada, from $1 2to $13.
The highest American price is M-
ao it head in Wisconsin. as agalest
the highest Canadian price of 13 a
head, which is quoted for Quebec,
Manitoba, and Saskatehewan.
---,I.--
Little Janie had been guilty 'of
some act of trifling unkindness, and
her mother, wishing to point a
timely moral, reminded Iter that
"true ladies are always kind."
Janie's younger brother Steph-
en sat by bet said nuthiug at the,
time. But some days later' wish-
ing to express unmeasuredcom-
mendation of a rather effeminate
young man who had granted him
favors, he convulsed the family by
ruminating aloud at dinner:
"Dr. Johnson is a perfect hely.
He is so kind."
A Medical Need Supnlied.—When
a medicine is found that not only
acts upon the stomach, but is so
composed that certain ingredients
of it pass unaltered through the
stomach, but is so composed that
certain ingredients of it pass un-
altered through the stomach
find aetion in the bowels, then
there is available a purgative and
a cleanser of great effectiveness.
Parmelee's Vegetable Pills are of
this character and are the best of
all rills. During the years that
they have been in use then have es-
tablished themselves as no other
pill has done.
"How do you find things, my
man?" "Very clull, I'm glad to
say." "Glad! Why 1" "I'm a
knife -grinder."
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Etc..
An Irishman and an Englishman
were arguing as to which of their
respective countries possessed the
greatest seaport. The Englishman
said, of course, that his • did.
"For," said he, "more steamers,
both screw .and paddle, arrive at
Liverpool in one day than any Irish
port in a week." "I doubt that,"
said Pat. "There is Cork, for in-
stance, Thousands of screws enter
it daily."
There is no poisonous ingredient
in Holloway's Corn Cure, and it
can be used without danger of M-
inn'.
Flatte: "I thought I'd practice
on my cornet last es -ening, but to
save me I couldn't get the right
pitch on it."
Brett° : "Couldn't you get the
window open 1"
"What's the window to do with
it?"
"Well, the right pitch would have
been through that."
REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AHD Mlle.
Mits. WINALoW's Soornmo Starr has been
used for over siXTY 1'10A1(5 by MILLIONS of
MoTillittS for their cHILUBEN. WHILIf
TEETHING, Aritll SUCCUSS.11
SOOTHBS the CHILD, soFTRNS the 017MS,
ALLAYS all PAIN ; N'i) 001.10, and
is the hcat remudy for DIARRIICUA. 11 5 nb-
solately harmless. Pe awe and ask for "Mrs.
winalow's Soothing Syrup," and take uo other
kind. Twentr-fiye emits a bottle.
The dinner was over, -and the last
man to leave the cloak -room saw
Pat, the custodian of the coats,
looking vtry miserable. "Well,
Pat," he said, "what's the matter 7
Haven't they paid you very well for
looking after the thittgs 7" "Sure,
sor," replied -the dejected one, "it
isn't that they haven't paid mo,
but, begorra, they've taken the bob
I put in the plate.as a decoy!"
ED. 4
ISSUE 80--11
It7
If.RALT.4011,MKEL
When the wind blows it le well
to open your windows; when it
stops blowing it is wise to keep
them open.
Give your ,skin a "show" when-
ever son can; the sunhouses of the
ancients are worth imitating,
Decaying matter about your
house robs you of your lung -food.
Water is the universal drink of
the animal ereation ; "th•e water"
is man's; unh•ersal seourge.
If yon always et -emelt books ab-
uttoma
emediet you "sentence" your
The trees and the grass are mak-
ingilife giving air fur yuu; go get
Worms feed upon the vitality of
children and endanger their lives,
A -simple and effective mire is Mo.
W.her Craves' Worm Extermiea-
tor.
Oracle studies music, and has
rectutly become acquainted with
sharps and flats and their nature.
One day her grammar schoolteach-
er 10 the. pewees of trying to bring
oht a certain fact, inquired
"When two little babies came to
a family .at the same time, what do
we call themi"
Class chorus, triumphantly;
'"Twins.''
"Correct! And now, when three
babies come at the same time, what
are they 1"
Silenee. then Gracie's voice rais-
ed in shrill pride:
"-Please teacher, accidentals!"
I bought n berme with a supposedly in-
curable ringbone for 530 Cured him with
81.00 worth of MINARD'S LINIME12 and
sold him for 885.00. Profit on LI recut,
554.130,
MOISH DEROSOTL.
Hotel Keeper, Bt. Phillippe, Que.
Mn. Brown : "Is that dog ofyours
smart?" Mr. Ridge (proudly;
"Smart? Well, I should think so.
I was going out with him yester-
day and I stopped and said: 'Tow -
ser, we've forgotten something.'
And bothered if he didn't sit down
and scratch his head to see if he
could think what it was."
Ame-rican and Canadian scien-
tists tell us that the common house
fly is the cause of more disease
and death than any other agency.
Wilson's Ely Pads kill all the flies
and the doseese germs too.
"Do you think it is .becomiegl"
she asks, appearing in her newest
gown. "Don't bother about that!"
gushes the friend. "it is perfect!
It is simply delicious. My dear. it
makes you look absolutely help-
less."
. TRY MURINE EYE REMEDY.
for Red, Weak, Weary, Watery Eyes
and Granulated Eyelids. Murine Doesn't
Smart—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists
Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c,
50c, $1.00. Murine Eye Salve in
Aseptic Tubes, 25c, $1.00. Eye Books
and Eye Advice Eree by Mail. se
eMurine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
In Turkey, Persia, and some oth-
er Oriental countries, the bow-
string is the method of execution.
This is a stout cord of catgut plac-
ed around the victim's neck with
two slipnots, which are suddenly
drawn tight by two strong men.
This kills the criminal by strangu-
lation.
Minard's Liniment Cures Carpet In Cows.
Some of the brewers of Vienna,
having combined to advance the
price of beer, a member of the town
council gravely proposed that the
city government .should at once
establish a brewery, and sell the
favorite German beverage at cost.
Some persons have periodical at-
tacks of Canadian -cholera, dysen-
tery or diarrhoea, and have to use
great precautions to avoid the. dis-
ease. Change of water, cooking,
and ereen fruit, is sure to bring
on the attacks. To such persous
we would recommend Dr. J. D.
Kellogg's • Dysentery Cordial as
being She hest medicine in the mar- Vo ur Overcoats.
ket for all summer complaints. If 11
11 few drops 111'.0 taken in "tel.' °V,f,AT;.10=Iar,1:1=41aeraNalte
when the symptoms are noticed nn
Everybody new adealltes
ZaeresBuk best for Geese,
Lee. Its give Y01/ easel
and comfort.
Przortith and Stows. oneryrubs
.' ..,-'•
„,, 4, 4.y. . ' ,... ,
4 ,* •
0, ' ..,,,,, ' $ ; $5 II .•
4.1r0.44 1104425*194` .0},ik
The doctor stood by the biedside
and looked gravely down at the in-
valid. "I cannot hide from you the
fact that you are very ill,” he
"Is there anyone you would like to
see?" "Yes," said the sufferer,
faintly, 'Who is it1" "Another
doctor."
Pills for Nervous Troubles, ---
The stomach is the centre of the
nervous system, and when the sto-
mach eleventh healthy aetion the
result is' manifest in disturbances
of the nerves. If allowed to per-
sist, nervous debility, a dangerous
ailment, may ensue. The first con,
sideration is to restore the stomach
to propel' action. and there is no
readier remedy for this than Par.
melee's Vegetable Pills. Thousands
can attest the virtue of these pills
in cueing nervous disorders.
"A great many people owe their
lives to that doctor," said Kicklinge
ton.
"Is he a clever physician?"
"It isn't that I referred to. He
is never in when you want him."
Minard's Llnin.ant Cures Distemper.
"What're ye coati& home with
your milk -pail empty for I" de-
manded the farmer. `Didn't the
old cow give anything?"' "'nee'0 •
replied the boy; "nine quarts and
one kick."
FARMS FOR SALE OR PENT.
N. W. DAWSON Ninety Colborne Street.
'Toronto.
AreLBP,RTA, Manitoba, Saskatchewan
or small parcels.
and British Columbia Lands in
FE:1,331Z. the Niagara Fruit
OILS fine Hundred and TWO Hundred
A:, Acro Farms in Ontario.
you wanteto buy or sell a farm con.
s
W. DAWSON.
SASKATOON
et, PPERS prosperity to Farmers 151 every branch, Get a farm in Basks,
toon District, and your own family's
future need worry no more. you were
not intended to live and die striving
merely to make ends meet. Half theworlf
here would goon fatten your bank loo.
count. Be fair to yourself. Don't waste
=ratline. Write COMMISSIONER BOARD
OF TRADE, Saskatoon, h'askatchewau.
Western Cana da.
AGENTS WANTED.
TART TEA ROUTE To-ny. Soul
03 postal for circulars or 10e for emu
p10. and terms. Alfred Tyler, London.
A GENTS WANTED.—A study of other
Agency propositions convinces all
that none can equal ours. Yon will at.
ways regret it if you don't apply for
particulars to Travellers' Dept., 130
Albert St., Ottawa.
MISCELLANEOUS.
II"
Seale Works, 9 Esplanade, Toronto.
and FARM SCALER. Wilson's
,.71LOUll. and Feed. Business for Sale.
One of the best in the City of Ilam.
Iton. Bargain for quirk sale. Twenty,
five Hundred buys everything. Apply
Walter Hayward, Hamilton.
T TTMBER, interior trim, doors, flooring.
1.4 sash. Price quoted at veer station.
'Small or large orders. P. V, T. Rose.
Toronto.
noT YOUR GIMSS AT ICOMIL—Our new
"Red Devil" Glass Cutter cuts wired
glass, plate glass, smoked and windoW
glass. By mail tit, W. E. Potter
45 Benoit St„ Montreal.
AWMILL MACHINERY, Portable or
173 heavy, Lathe Mills. Shingle Mina
Engines and Boilers, Mill Supplies. The
E. Long Mannfncturing Co., Ltd., Wesel
Street, Orillia, Ontario,
CANcEit, TUMORS, LUMPS. ete. In. ternal and external, cured without
pain by our home treatment. Write us
,od,o
be0fore tnote. late. Dr, Ballmati, Coiling.
,
,t-tt TON SCALE GUARANTEED. Wilson's
It..) Scale Works, 9 It:splenetic, Toronto.
1E17 RITE as to -day for our choice list
,1•' of Agents' Supplies. No nutlaY
1.10VOSSO.17. They are mono, makers, AD.
Co. Ltd., 118 Albert St.,
Ottawa, 0111.
1 PECIALISTs AVVICE PRET). Consult,
0 518 inlir1,4ita,ii;i4530 an ditto (I. Towost
gf alt 5,ledn.
l'PLunats.esuiliat, tihtty,onnti. a. Send measure.
b rft`;:gaitg thd1141
ali)trtresant7otIbinr.g' t,1111ind a n. Colli g wood. (Int
future trouble will be experienced.
0 t.
-----
WAY THE 'WIND FOWLED.
Side by side they sat, at peace
with all the world, whilst the cruel
wind howled around them, rustling
the leaves in the' tree under which
they sat.
`'How the wind howls." yelled
the maiden, shivering violently.
"Yes," cried her lover.
'°Why does it. 110101" shouted
sho.
"I, don't know. Perhaps it has
the toothache," replied the nutn,
holding her close.
"The toothachel What clo gem
mean 1"
"Yes, the toothache! Have you
never heard of the teeth of the
gale 1"
And thou the wind howled with.
increased fury, and the maiden
broke off the engagement.
Earitish Arnertomn Dyeing Co.
When buying your Piano
insist on havInq
TT* MIGE
Piano Actior‘
03
0 s.
rnweacycaurammuk v. ma:map
• f
$1 a box
as 6 for $5
The most highly efficient application
for the reduction of Swellings, tIctitre,
Think Neck, Glandular Enlargentets,
It's Positive,
piLgR of all kinds,10 any and all
LES stages, culleklyolio/ I
rld
it
positively cured. Ceff."Cs Waif qi
and live cptiolly. "C6nimori Sense f
Files will do it, $1, a box, 88 for
boxes, Mailed co reaelpt of price.
LYLE mmlw"floitaitTO '
COMFAN ,
718 WEST Quititt STOW w