HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1904-5-19, Page 61:004•40:•tM:0e: r:•4 e.o;%n:. qo
HEALTH $'
• t
T112ATM1 NT O1? BURNS.
Aburn is sch a frequent accident
and is :withal so painted that any ane
who makes the slightest pretense to
"first-aid" wisdom should know what
to clo to rolleve the suLTeret• until pro-
fessional medical air/ can be obtained.
Writers or surgical works usually
divide burns into three degrees of
severity. In the lirst there is nothing
more than increased redness of the
skin, with more or less smarting ((-
the affected mut, In burns of the
second degree the surface is still red,
but it is also more or less covered
with blisters of variable extent. In
the third class are placed the burns
which are really burns—canes in which
the tissues rase charred or completely
destroyed.
Ile clanger of a let rn varies in gen-
eral with the extent of surface affect-
ed rather than with the degree. Thus
a burn of tho first degree, inducing
only redness mahout blistering, but
intolving about two-thircts of the
surface of the body, has caused death,
whir° the actual carbonization of en-
tire foot and part of the leg has been
survi s ed.
The most desirable thing in the
caf,o or a burn of any extent or do-,
gree is to exclude the air and pro-
tect the part from pressure or rub-
bing. Cloths wet in a solution of 1
ordinary washing -soda or cooking -
soda and covered by oiled silk to ,
prevent drying serve the purpose all-'
mirably; and the soda has the further
recommendation of relieving the pain
better than almost anything else. A
mixture of equal parts of linseed -oil
and lime-water—the well-known Carron
oil --is a. time-lionored remedy. II
blisters have formed, the wakes may
be let nut by making a little snip of
the rolsed s1Cin near the edge of the
blister:. but great care must bo taken
not to tear off the covering skin.
If the burn has been severe the con-
stitutional symptoms Inas be narked,
and treatment may be needed to ward'
orf shock and prevent collapse. If '
the skin has boon destroeted to a
grater or less depth, antiseptic treat-.
anent will be nefedc-d to promote heal-
ing and prevent exhalstior suppura-
tion, or even geugerene. Of cut
if the burn is extensive or deep r my
""ret -girl' treatment sronid to given.
Medical assistance should be seee.ed
as soon as possible.
BLOTCHY SHINS.
A Trouble 'Due to Impure Blood.
Easily Remedied
Bad blood is the one great cause
of bad complexion and blotchy skins,
This is why you must attack tho
trouble through the blood with Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills. All blotches,
boils, ulcers, pimples and Paleness
are the direct, lunlnfstakable result
of weak blood loaded with impuri-
ties. T(r. ICfllia2ns' Pink Pills con-
quer the position; they drive out all
the impurities; they actually mal
new, rich red blood; they stri
right at the root of all conplexlo
troubles; they are a positive and pe
manent cure for all virulent skin dis-
eases like eczema, scrofula, pimples
and erysipelas, They give you a
deer, clean soft skin, •eo from all
blemish and lull of rosy health, Mr.
]Matthew Cook, Lamberton, N. W. T.,
tells how Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
cured him of erysipelas after oth
medicines had failed, Be says: "lily
skin was inflamed; my flesh tender
and sure: my head ached; my tongue
was coated; I had chills and thought
I was taking fever. I tried several
medicines, but nothing helped me
until I began using , Dr, Williams'
Pink Pills and drove fho trouble
from my system, and I am now in
the best of health. 1 think these
pills tete best medicine to the world
for blood troubles.
It is an every day record of cures
like this that has ,Niven Dr. Wil-
liam's Pin's Pills their world-wide
prominence. They cure when other
,medicines fail, but yen must get tli,z
genuine with the lull panto: Pr.
Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo-
ple, on the wrapper 1: ound every box.
Yon can get these 1 ills at all drug-
gists, or by mall al 550 cents a box,
or six boxes for 42. i0, by writing
The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
BUODISM AND SDI
TOM
31000 GODS FOR THE JAPAN-
ESE TO WORSHIP.
Some Small Villages Are Sado
Up Almost Entirely of
Temples.
Imagine trying to keep track of
and pay homage to morn than 3,000
gods, to offend ono of whom might
bring down the direst disaster on the
ca aRonder's head 1 This is the task
ke the brown little people of Japan
havo set before them, and a busy
n time they must have of it.
r-
Oue 01 the most picturesque fea-
tures of the landscape of inner ,Japan
is the multitude of quaint temples
peeping out from the shrubs and
grotesque trees on the tops of gree
Sills or tucked beside dusty road-
ways. The two great. religions of
the country. neo Buddhism and til-
er dent Shintoisnt, each with its pecu-
liar Ceremonies and beliefs, those of
Shinto/sin consisting largely of tl:e
worship of dead ancestors. There aro
small villages made up almost en-
tirely of tiny eeniTlh'n, he it It gay,
peaked roofs glistening brightly in
the clear Japanese sunlight amid
beautiful gardens.
In his book on Japan, Lafeadio
Hearn describes the temple of the
great 101(1' of the Dead. Mime of the
Shadows, Elmna-0, surrounded by
gun intly clipped trees and bright
beds of dowers, Within its shadows,
almost !lidded by dark draperies,
glaring in ail its hideousness, is the
image of the god, whose face is so
terrible that When the Japanese wish
to describe a person of horrible ap-
pearance they say : "17is ince is the
face of Enrnia-0,"
The 1lgurc towers above all other
humble manges In the temple. Prom
the wide open, wrathful mouth flows
a bright red beard over a vermilion
robe. t)n his head is a three -lobed
crown or black and gold, and 10 his
hands he holds a sceptre.
According to a legend about this
- image, there was once a noted
lnlayrnzaker who died 01111 visited gee
a ; 1:(011 0f souls, where he 10u1111 the
• Lord, leenz:a-O, his terrible face dis-
. ' torted r il]t metre 1:eeause the demi
s man re1e'1• it his life had carved his
o statue. Phis frowq was so frightful
e to behold that the poor shrinking
s soul execs tett instant remitlll,lti on.
t Great was his relief, however, when
• the outraged deity pronounced his
• sentence in the following words :
• "Living you made no inloge of me.
t?o 1t,. to earth met nlnl,e 01:e, u0W
t -1 o 1 has looked upon ole,"
t f - :'4 y the image -maker found
. i ...�:.: ,.lite again and the horrible
FARMER CHIVES
THE REASON WHY
HE PINS HIS FAITII TO DODD'S
KIDNEY PILLS,
TheyMade e Him Strong and Well
t g W 1
After Years of Intense Suffering
From Lumbago and Other Hid-
uey Troubles,
North Pelham, Ont„ Itfav 10,—
(Specfal)-11tt•, Joseph L. 'Phomas, a
substantial farmer of Pelham '1•own-
s111p, well known 10111 highly respect-
ed throughout this neighborhood, has
joined the runlets of the greet army
of Canadians: who pin their (pith to
n Dodd ti kidney Pills. Mr. '.11iomnas
gives his reasons for doing so as fol -
!owe:
"For several years I was sorely af-
flicted. with Kidney Trouhle, having
10al8 of its worst symptoms 1n an
aggravated degree. I had Lumbago,
nod was in such n comlition that 1
was unfit fur anything for weeks at a
t idle,
"Insomnia resulted and I was on
Intense sufferer, 1 had almost per-
petual headache and grew thin ill
flesh,
I llnd been treated by a doctor
without ;moll results, so upon the
recommendation of a cousin, who had
been saved from a life of misery by
Docld•s 'Kidney Pills, I begun taking
1110111.
"17rt first box gave me decided
benefit x1111 after inking five boxes
tho old trouble was a thing of the
!past and I was again in esery way
stroot; and well,"
Ask those who have used them if
they ever heard of a case of Kidney
] lisease Dodd's Kidney Pills would
not cure.
ADVANTAGE OF DSee
On' of the great s_
life is illness wit . _.. _ -
of work, and of :- _ -
ter,Uan. Ir. meg etemean
and
-
and anxiety, w:.. e e _
to the illness. ie
and makes more :: __. tie -
mess itself.
Suppose, for '.- _ mem
is taken down with :se eoeesee
he feels that I;a remen 1
office, and that his , -
tndt in serious loss to hiemel1 _
others. If he begins leg Setting
in his body and in his :Merl, and Zea- ,
lizing that the illness is beyond his ;
own power, it will soon occur to him
that he might as well turn his illness -
to account by getting a good rest nut
of it. In this frame of mind his
0111110es of early recovery will be in-
creased, and he may even get up from-
-
his Illness with so n2Ueli new life and
with his mind so 10(3111 refreshed as
to make up, in Part, for his tempor-
nry absence from business, But, on
the 0t11er hand, if 11e resists worries,
complains and gets irritable, be iri-
tat::s his nervous system and, by so n
doing is likely to bring on any 0110
of the disagreeable troubles known
'to follow moseles: and thus he may
keep himself 1lnuse11 for weeks, per-
haps months, instead of days.
MOUTH -BREATHING.
Liability to Diseases of the Bron
chis)! Tubes and Lungs.
Mouth -breathing is mere than
habit; it is an evidence cf deformit
or disease in the upper air -passages
1 child 00101 it: t es through hi
l0.)Oth from choice. ITe deer
either became° the rasa'*..s of tit
nese are lhi:tre ted or ie.:cause ' In
tonsils are e^r'-;ed, and Ito ctnnc'
be esti:o1,. to nmathe remerain-
metre
^ the i ruct Pn -'
,:irs. 1
572: i•' terf ..^.ee th-it:
dee ec tern.'ty o
t - of tee ..Or' la?, t its
cases is c_;, :1 by to
reteem. ..as ire the pharynx
p 011:"clcon-
,.- f:,.: _•,
t-Seedger. teem breathe timmeg
tieSe meeths ene alwen s more lien/
emeeses
el theeronehial tubs
sThey often s- too
.. e ,; i the ears, . d' 111e
'.,he Stem e._, o teen-
-. - . :1I rs, for
meny e gain e: ranceethrotgh
tee . B::_ rte from sec
,.i:e a ace with
s. ,n - _,...c_s a r-erge in
th• e e' .d a anent agor-
Tf the /Meet (mite like that
., ._._ - erly more; -bun now ryas
_ar de•1 a+ 0.1 ev:det:ce of an int:or-
mod 'stridency to c'.H:Eon etitle.
These abnelmal conditions of the
nose and throat often. bec0111e evident
in early infancy; they are considered
as clue in a measure to hereditary
ransmicsioa, for they often appear
n severtnl generations of a family.
T&'ir existence in a child is some:
reveaied during recovery from
neasles, scarlet fever or other acute
Ilness.
A tendency to catarrhal disease of
lee throat may develop and persist
even after tho cause has been remov-
ed. This must be overcome by ex-
rcise, cool bathing and other hy-
gienic measures in addition to ouch
local treatment as the physician
may direct. The neck sho1111 be
bathed with cold water morning
and evening. The cold sponge -bath
every morning is better, but habi-
tual cold bathing should he begun
during the summer -time. lfufiiing
of the neck should be avoided as
ulncb as possible.
Graduated physical culture is al-
ways beneficial. No child is too
delicate to take systematic exercise
touter a competent instructor unless
t is suffering from some organic:
iseasm. A most important part of
he course is the cool shower, m•
Autlgebath at the tepee of each par-
ed of ceett .(110, -and it soon becomes
he part tient is most enjoyed,—
Meths' Companion.
IN AN OLD TRUNH.
aby Finds a Bottle of Carbolic
Acid and Drinks It.
While the mother was unpacking
n old trunk a little 18 months old
any got hold of a bottle of carbolic
cid while playing on the floor and
is stomach eves so badly burned it
was fearer! he would not 11•t•o for he
could not cni; ordinary foods. The
mother says In telling of the case :
"It was all to -o doctors could do
to save hint as it burnt his throat
and stomach so bad that for two
months after he took the poisot
nothing would lay on his stomach,
Penally I tools. hien into the country
nahcl tried new milk and that was no
better for him. ITis GraIldlua final-
ly suggested Grape -Nu -is and I am
thankful I adopted the food for he
commenced to get better right away
and would not eat anything else. 'No
e0rtlnlenced to get fleshy and Iris
cheeks like red roses and now ho is
entirely tvoll
"I took him to Matamo'as on a
sit and ovely place we went to
ny to eat he called for Grope -Nuts
act I would have to explain how he
ma to call for it as it was itis
ain food:.
"Tho nam0s of t1i0 physicians who
trended the baby are Ile, Eddy of
is town and Dr. Goo. Gare of New -
art, 0., and anyano can Write to
e or to than and learn what
rape -Nuts feed will do for children
and grown -u s toe."' Nams given
by 1?estum t,O.t tattle Creek, diel.
Look la each ,lfkg, for the famous
little books :JTh:o toad to Weil-
Villtie"4
BABY'S MOLD 011 LIFE.
hl
e The little ones ere frail—their hold
upon life is slight. The slightest
sem./(o-n of trouble should be eget oy
y- tx r0)1 Ib!e corrective medicine. Baby's
v own mem u have proved Ly their
recon: of success to be an ideal medi-
cinefor the ills of infants and ?'olmg
1 children. The Tablets cure all Stom-
0011 and towel troubles, allay the ir-
ritation of teething, break up colds,
prevent croup and destroy worms. ,
The mother has ,a guarantee that
,this medicine contains no opiate or
harmful drug Intra T 1; Gtea •
BESSEMER'S INVENTION.
Saved the Inland Revenue Depart-
ment from Loss.
It is almost the universal impres-
sion that the late Sir Trenry Besse-
mer w'as longhted in recognition of
the steel process which bears his d
mune, but such was not the ease t
says Caster's Magazine., The lune -
or tens bestowed in 1878, when ho 1
was 00 years old, as a tardy reward t
for a service rendered the British
Government about the time of his
attaining his majority. Tho history
of this, as told by James Dredge, is
that tho time, when in his early B
years, Bessemer came into contact
with some of the officials of Somer-
set House, the seat of the Inland
Revenue Department, it was actor- n
Sous that frauds on the Government b
were perpetrated to an alarming ex- n
tent by the repeated use, of stamps h
affixed to deeds. It tens estimated
that an annual loss of .0100,000 10(18
sustained from this cause, and to (le-
vier, a means for entirely putting a
stop to this occupied Bessemer's at-
tention, It is almost superfluous to
say that he arrived at a solution by
the simplest means, that of p0rfo'-
ttting the Government stamps with
dates. Now that this evident meth-
od has found a hundred uses
throughout the civilized world to
Safeguard stamps or checks, and to
divide postage stamps, being among
1.11e most common, it 1)1 a little diffi-
cult to realize the Inlpot•tahee of
this invention. 7'o Bessemer it
Meant, : in anticipation, vast things --
emoted fume, a. retaining fee of
£000 a year as a Government ofli- vi
vial, and a great advance on the st
rand to fortune. In reality, how- to
ever, it meant nothing, for though ca
the invention was at once adopted, fit
Os official promises were soon for-
gotten. .
tb
1'
•m
G
STIIANCIii, ISN"l' IT?
A •iafy whose name Was Miss Book
Vas taught ata school how to c0o11,,
Tim fallow slioWed,
I think 11010 is dead
i5i3ce ffi11ea Itoo11 leetrned to o4off YiY
the bode,
'�f01'itana, Que., says:— "I have used
Baby's own Tablets with great sec -
cess. They never full, in my experi-
ence, to cure the little, ills of 11111-
'rlren," You can get these Tablets
from any medicine dealer, or they
will be sept by mail at 25 cents a
j box by writing '11)0 Dr. Williams
iIJedleine Co., Brockville, Ont.
statue of wrath in the temple was
his remembrance of the Lord of
S1laduws. Indeed it resembles more
then anything else the product of a I
well-developed nightmare.
ALL SORTS 011' GODS.
In the Shinto religion there tiro
multitudes of divinities, More than
3,1100 111•e thought to dwell in flifler-
ent parts of the empire enshrined in
3,131)0 temples.
Among these the Jepau'se seem to
lean Lament gods of misfortune. '!Trus
they worship Bimboganli, the God of
Powerey. It is said 110 in black and
always accompanies ten god of good
luck, who is while. Rather a pret-
ty Iden, poverty being called by
them, the shadow of good .luck, as
the shadow is the absence of light,
and poverty certainly is 0s opposite
to opulence as darkness from light.
Smallpox, which often devastates
whole sections of the country, also
Res its god, whose votive offerings
consist of a combination of cooked
rice and_ red beans, placed on small
straw mats, which are either suspend-
ed from trees or set to float slowly
down some neighboring strenm,
Tho devotee of the God of Winds
and Hnrd Colds ]las a harder oxperi-
eneo in propitiating his deity, since
tho victims of his anger are forced
to make the pilgrimage to his tem-
ple without any sort of clothing,
save a cloth about the loins, what-
ever may bo tIo weather. The tem-
ple reached, the suppliant lays his
offerings at the feet of tic gods, end
then stands by while the ministering
priests, clad in loose garments as in-
valids, drink d000etimns of certain
herbs told roll on the floor 'before tho
imago as a penance for the pilgr'im's
sins,
These offerings, if from mon, con-
sist of goltir., o1' small strips of pap-
er att.a.ehed to a piece of rope and
supposed to he peculiarly pleasing to
the god. In the ease or women the
gifts are small metal mirrors. Ono
would suppose that the last ata.te of
the pilgrim would be worse than the
first from 051asul'e, but as they run
all the way to the temple, oven when
their baro bodies have to press
through deep snow, they usually are
five at the shrine In a state of pro-
4uem perspiration, end immediately
warm gal'nlents are provided by the
priests, So the peasants, being na-
turally sttlydy, rarely suffer in 5011-
Segner10e,
MOTHER, OF DEMONS,
born a demon, who devoured 11
by safe profit,,'
mo - 4
01111 Children, bat, being salved
tho teachings of Buddha, she, becu
olivine and was set apart as a go
deslt to protect young children.
She is represented as a fair -far
woman, holding in her right stand
lotus blossom, while at ]ler braes
in 1110 folds of Inc robe, is au 0
clad baby. Iler temples ern fille
with brunboo poles, from wbich a
stretched ropes suspending tiny k
mottos of exquisite workmanshi
brought as offerings by the brat
"Pure soap!" You've heard
the words. In Sunlight
Soap you have the fact,
LIGIIT
AEA. p..rdaticEs
l?tSPICrRB.
Oak for EMO Octagon 1358,
erre,.rr+mv,..'>mwAnno...,- n�+ sera tk Insirnria
two of his bones into drulustlulis, and
the balance of his fortune to his
friend Mr. Simpson, on condition that
on every 17th of Juno he should r
Pair to the foot of Bunker' 11111, an
as the sun Pose, "heat on the clew
the spirit -stirring strain of ank
Doodles' „
A Mr, Stow lett. a sum of 11101
10 on eminent IC. 0. "wherewitht
purchase a picture of a viper stingin
his benefactor," ns a perpetual war
ing against the sin of ingratitude.
It was a rich brewer who begueatl
ed £30,000 to his daughter on co
dition that on the birth of her firs
child she should forfeit £3,000 to
specified hospital, £1,000 on th
birth of the second child, rind so 0
by arithmetical progression until 1.11
1:30,000 eras exhausted,
]Mr. Sydney Dickenson left &00,00
to his widow, who appears to hav
given him a bad time during his life
on condition that she should slice
two hours a day at his graveside "i
Col pany with her sister, whom
know she loathes
Worse than she doe
myself."
"Soule men," said Made Eben
"regards honesty as re principle, an
some a3 a luxury to ho indulged i
e1• only after cloy has cleaned up a good
0-
d,
co
cy
0
u-
1-
n -
t
e
e
0
e
n
d- Beware of Ointments for !°iaiitrrh
eel that Contain @1'l1l'OUry.
a as mercury will sorely destroy the serge.
et . hell and completely Om nage Lha
t, whole systeuu when entering it through
11- the mucous surfaces. bitch articles
d should never bo ossd except on pre-
perlptlons front reputable physiei enS, as
ro the (35nla10 they 1111 do Is ten fold
1- to the good you can possibly derive
nfrom them. Boll's Catarrh Cure, man-
ufactured by 1'. .1. Choney & Co„ To-
n
100111ees of the empire to Wil i
5cod groves o1 Kishibojia for the
beloved little ones.
iedo, 0„ contains no mercury, and Is
h0 taken Internally, aethlg directly upon
13.. the blood andmucous surfaces of the
system. 7s) buying Hell's Catarrh Cure
be sure you got the genuine. It Is tak-
en internally and made in Toledo,
Ohio, by F. J. (honey & Co. Testi-
monials free.
Sold by Druggists. Price, 75e per
bottle.
Take hall's Family Pills for constl-
eatlea,
Ono comes often upon small shrines
With slight bamboo roofs by the.side
of the highways, In these are wrath-
er-beaten 11005,s of a god at 0110
time quite popular in Jopon—tole
Clod of Roads, Koshin. But the ne-
glected condition of the shrines in-
dicates that he has tensed to be
highly regarded, for gradually 1.1
ancient worship in changing, an
tune sees the dying out of the of
customs before the advancing street
of western civilization.
I'HE, THREE MYSTIC APES,
to
d
d did after we got back from our hoo-
p cymoofl was to !tide my wife's mus-
ic.'
"Well, now that you are married
do you find life a grand, sweet
song?" "0h, not The first thing I
Perhaps the most leteresting of the
multifarious gods ere the Three Mys-
tic Apes. One of these is represent-
ed with its hands over its eyes, an-
other with his hands at its ears, and
the third holding its little 'pate over
its closed lips, signifying that they
see no bad tiling, hear no bad tiling,
and speak no bad thing.
Japanese mothers take their little
children to tho temple of the Mystic
Apes and there teach them to avoid
listening to gossip or prying into
things that do not concern them,
and to refrain irons speaking evil of
!!heir neighbors.
While the spring buds nen beginn-
ing to bloom on the squatty little
tires in Japanese dooryards the pru-
dent house:vile completes her house
cleaning by a curious ceremony
110011 as the casting out of devils,
Uni-yari. In this she is assisted by a
professional, who wanders about tho
streets after dark rattling his staff.
Upon the stall is carved the image of
a god, catling his weird cry, "Oni
tvn s010," wbleb means "Devils out.'
Per n. small foe he performs the
ceremony of reciting a few Buddhist
prayers and throwing dried Pens
about the house in four directions.
'1'lte devils, hating dried peas, aro
supposed to flee. leaving the house
free from their threatening presence.
Afterward the pens are swept up
carotene: and preservers until the first
chap or spring thunder, when they
aro cooked and Oaten, end the cere-
mony 18 completed by the hanging
over the doors and windows of s111a11
charms made of holly leaves or tho
return of the unw0150n10 visitors.
9
ECCENTBIO WILL MAKERS.
Testator Wanted His Skin Convert-
ed Into Drumheads.
;A; goddess who is per•tioularly re-
vered by women is TClnlihhoeln, Moth.
ar of Inetnons, 'Phe .legend hs that,
on aeoount of scene Sit committed in
ti previous existelled this Woman VMS
There have been many will makers
more eccentric than 111', h1acCaig, the
Oben hanker, whose last testament
will shortly comm under the consider-
ation of the Edinburgh Cont of SOS -
81011, says 1110 Westminster Gazette.
Mr. IhtacCu.ig, it may be remembered,
left instructions in his will that gi-
gantic statues of himself, his bro-
thers and sisters, a round dozen in
all; should be placed on the summit
of a great tower he 11adi 001111110110011
to build 011 Battery 11111, near Oban --
each statue to cost not loss than ,1,-
000.
A much more whimsicaltestator
was a 15u', Sanborn, who left £1,000
to Prof. Agnssiz to havo his skin
converted into ttvo drumheads and
erensememenerseteessiesseetenseestentameeteete
It is Eas
To Cure You Now That
We Have Learned IoW.
Helie? in 30 hilinUtes.
For years the author of Pr, Agnate's
Mart /ewe Ins believed that the 1,05111)
Of. the heart 2s almost entirely Inspon.
sll)ie for the health of the 300 008 8111)
stomach -and now !t can be proven, .Dr.
Agncw's Mart Cure wilt relieve heart
Memos In 30 mteetes and cure It, It
(Perls the 0e1ve0 through the heart by
giving tlto heart the lamasery power 10
Dump richt blood to the nerve 00ntt•0s,
when stolnnoh disorders 021(1 nervom1115s4
disappear its hit Ides/0. One dose Will
cen81)01. 118
D , AltnoW'11.1t'or 1)1318, eo dertie ee Cents'.
A Sour Stomach et1:d a Sour
Temper travel hand-in-hand and aro the
p.ccursors of mental and physical wreck.
Nine hundred and Ninety-ninetimosin a thou -
land food ferment (indigestion) is the cause.
Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablets keep the
stomach sweet—aid digestion --keep the nerve
centres Tell balanced—they're nature's pan.
area—pleasant and harmless, 35 cents. -88
Miss Sharpe—"Believe in vegetari-
anism? Why, I love good beefy,
Cllolly—"I wish I were beef, you
Imolai" Miss Sharpe—"Never mind.
Calves grow you know."
Mlnard's Liniment Cures Dandruff,
Xlead of the bureau—"I suppose you
1(now something of the duties of the
olllre?'' Applicant—..011, yes. They
are to come late, go home early, and
clo as little as possible while you are
here," Tread or llurean—"Quite sat-
isfactory; you must have held public
office before."
Eiave You a Skin Diseaao?—
Tetter, Salt lthoum, Scalcl tread, Ringworm,
Eczema, Itch, Ilarber's Itch, Ulcers, Blotches,
Chronic Erysipelas, Liver Spots, Prurigo,
Psoriasis, or other eruptions of tho skin—
what Dr. Agnow's Ointment has done for
others it can do for you—cure you. Ono ap-
plication 81ves relief• --35 cents, -87
"And so you left your last place
through having had words with your
mistress?" "Well, mum, not words,
mute—not adzactly what you might
call words,. urine, I only spoke to
her same as ono lady might to an-
other."
Port Mulgrave, June 5, 1897.
C. C. RICHARI'DS C CO,
Dear ,`1lrs,-11ITNA'RB'S LINIMENT
is my 101011dy for colds, etc, It is
the best liniment I have eve)'- usetl.
1111?S, JOSIAII ITAT2'l'.
MATCING I1." CI.I1'A.te,
"George!"
"What?"
"George!"
"Oh, what do you ward?'
"George, you don't love 0)0 any
more."
"0, of course t iso, Let lee alone,
I'm reading the paper,"
"George, if you clo love me 1133 you
'tatted, wily don't you tell me s0?'
"Deuce tako it ,all! r love yoti,
lova you, lovo you, 10vo you, love
you, tote you, love you, you, ,you,
you, yen, you, yon, you! Noe, for
hoavcn's solo shut tui and let 3x11
read."
Now cloth I:ho busy Japanese •
Improve each warlike, tnlntitie
13y loading 11)) his lilIle,g033
6d handing 'out what's•
di pi*
otei
.eo.a lad:
Potatoes, Poultry Eggs Butter Apples
i 1 t
Let us have your consignment of any of these articles and wo will
get you good prices.
THE D W50114 COM! »ISS O 9 00, Limited
Ooe, West Market and Colborne {Eta, 'ro1101VT0. -
•
IllESIME2MMIBUI=11313f
11(r d'i'e ,t'r1f •atidatR a.•S' 0 44'3) 311:.°x; ...10 1L.:f4 t '(10
KIN
$10 in ono pa'laa for the greatest number of words.
$111) in two five (foliar prizes for the next longest lista.
3110 In five two dollar prizes for the smaller lists.
We will pay these prizes for the best lists of
English words made out of the three words) :
f.6 MASSEY - HARRIS WHEELS. "
Letters to be used in answers only as many times as they appear in the
above words. Competition closes May Both. bond in your list to -day.
MOTE.
The Massey -Harris le fitted
with the ou0lden Crampoon
Morrow coaster brake—
tho two Improvements that
have made bleyelt08 o0
famously popular,
Write for our new "Silver Ribbon" Booklet,
ADDRESS, DEPARTMENT "A"
CANADA CYCLE & MOTOR CO., Limited, Toronto Junction.
'Will you love nue when I'm old?' -
she whispered, "Wo'll wait t111 you
are old," 11e said, practically. "It's
as much as I can attend to just now
to love you when you're young."
RfIncrd's liniment Cures Burns, etc.
Ted—"She cuts rattler an odcl fig-
u2•o." Nod—No wonder! 1Ier gown
cost nine dollars ninety-eight, her
hat two dollars forty-nine, and her
shoe:; one dollar seventy-four."
For Over Sixty Years
erns. W1N31,ow'S SOOTHING 58011r fine been need by
ndIlions or ,,,others for (heir ah1I,r0n walla bietit 0).
1ta0o11meth0 child, roaaus 015.01113. al nysrnin ovalwind [Ale, re;,'tuales tltoetomxefi sort bow,dn, and ie rho
bestren,e.y for .I/iar,bo a, Tivein' ll a cruel a bottle
5011 b9 druggists thmngliout the world. no sure tool
ask for" Earp. Wl othowh$UOTnlna svelte" 12-01
"She's a lovely girl, and so simp-
le in her tastes. I told her that I
Hadn't much of an income yet, but
that I hoped I could provide for her
every want." "And what did she
say?" "She said that would be all
silo could ash."
Dropsy is one Positive Sign of
Kidney Disease.—Have you any of
these unmistakable Ogee? Puffiness undertb e
ayes? Swollen limbs? Smothering feeling?
Change of the character of the urine ? Ex,
haustion after least exertion ? If you have
there's dropsical tendency and you shouldn't
delay an hour in putting yourself under the
great South Amtxicaa Riduey Cure. -86
Clara—"011, Mani I wish Provi-
dence had made me a man!" 'Mother
—"Perhaps he has, dear;, only you
haven't found hint yet."
Mlnard's Liniment for sale everywhere
The 'theory that boys are descend-
ed from monkeys has received art ug-
ly setback. A Philadelphia gentle-
man possesses n monkey who washes
himself with 50ltri and water.
Lifebuoy lioa.p--disinfectant — is
strongly recommended by tate medi-
cal profession as a safeguard tullainst
tnfeotioes diseases,
WORLD'S FAIR, ST, LOUIS, 310.
From April 35th eo Dee 1st, in-
clusive,
nclusive, the Wabash Railroad will
sell round trip tickets to the Great
World's I"air, St. "Louis, at the low-
est one-way first-class tare, good for
fifteen days, faro and a third; good
for thirty days, good either via Wa-
bash direct line or via Chicago, with
atop over privileges. Carladian3 go-
ing to this, the greatest of all Ex-
positions, shockl remember the great
Wabash line is the shortest, quickest
and bast route, The only line that
owns and controls its own rails di-
rect to the World's Pair gates. For
time -tables end descriptive World's
!coir folder,'eddress any ticket agent,
or J. A. 1Tic11nrds013 District Pas-
senger Agent, North-east corner King
and 701150 Streets, T000nto,
No girl. is willtiIg to believe that
marriage is a. failure from hearsay.
Tf a, nlan'3 mother -hi -law acts tip
IL is usually !tis own fault.
neteammesseneetemeakenessemesee
Do you catch cold easily?
Does tho cold hang on ? Try
1iR's
Co rn, . k l1210,.. tiOrk
i ho 1.1)15
e . Tonto
It curds rho most stubborn kind
of 'congh3 and coidi, 1f it
doesn't care you, your money
will he refunded.
hzie'r: e, C Weems' & 00, r,01
110e, .ipl T.ehtuyr 11, Tt a. , 'r)reoto, Ceu,
a.sn.ommt mYntYbmmra r,tci,itein zaaae.
.A man who is fearless is never a
liar.
Mlnard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia
INTERPRETED WEDDING.
A curious wedding took place the
other day in a church In Glasgow.
The bride and bridegroom were Poles
and could not speak English, while
the clergyman did not understand
their language. The ceremony was,
however, successfully carried through
by the aid of an interpreter.
_ .. ..._........,.-�..
S4 An admirable Food oftho
Finest quality and flavour.
Nutritious and Ect,moln1cal.
48-21
-YOL)fi OVERCOATS
snd ruled sun; wm,d look bettor dyyad. If nn aprte
at 0(1 o In ymtr 8000, mite dire,) ElouIr,!nh Sen 118
BP.ITI8H Ann si:10401 DYEING CO.
MONTREAL,
WINTON
IIVINTONi KJNG
£cif' is Fie to .*
�g
Il "at
AUTOMOBILE
(UNDERWRITERS
The Winton Touring Car is appre-
ciated by the hest informed because
built on correct; mechanical princi-
ples, of highest grade materials. As
a prospective automobile purchaser
yon dare not, in full justice to your-
self, take chances on an 1311014or
car. By presenting a car of such
imperial merit as is the 11194
Winton, we become "automobile
underwriters"—insuring you against
risk or loss. I3ave you seen our
new catalog ?
The Winton Motor Cotrriag'e Co
Cleveland. O.. U.S. A.
Represented la the Gemlaten
of Canodaby
THEI AUTOMOBILE St SUPPLY CO
79 Riad St., C., Toronto, Ont.
Sulu Adonclas 15 Chief
Donaialoa sues
xs
tj 11r0, 2o•-04,,