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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1905-3-30, Page 3I_°' Fashion • •fir .(.Talk :_ : X • MILLINERY IS SMALL. Very simple gowns of handlieichief Unca, very 11110 and sheer, are 0111- broidered freely on both skirt. and waist, Such gowns arc especially recuninemiled for eliteily women. The m;weat lace 21100 is the net one embroiderer with colored ehenflla, White net worked with floral designs from the waistband downwea•d or as a border to the 11010081 is among the showings of emit robes, The poke bonnet will be populist' for 011131ren, and steno young 0yonles with a bent toward the picturesque may adopt! !1. A miming of most at- tractive models are I:elug shown, A girdle, truly gorgeoes to behold, is made of Russian green huedu dot- ted thickly with the smallest of gilt beads and finished at elder side of the back and front moues 34itr a row of Brass buttons half an incl( in dies. meter. Millinery is distinctly small; infact hats have been gelttng smaller fol' some limo past anis the picture hats which the milliners have loved so long have eu1irel„v given place to tho neater styles of ]tendgear. hive out of ten of the summer gowns already seen aro made with gn11npes or ChenliSetteS, tied the shops are showing tempting little handmade mull and titin linen ad - fetes, laced anti embroidered. The vogue of full sleeve tops rias raised the »salicin^ of the cape, among Use innovations for spring and summer are capes einbrOideled in very open pasterns and made up over colored si]10 linings. Some heavy linen shirt -waist suits are made with low 'round necks and short pu11'ed slo0vos to wear over a gehapt) and sleeves of thin linen, em- broidered or lace trimmed. This Is a pretty fashion also for pongee and foulard silks. The long unbroken lino is the thing for this season. Skirts will be trimmed only at or neer the bottoms, The short skirl; will always be in vogue for exercise of morning wen(', but for dressy occasions, such as af- ternoon calling or the theatre, will quite toucli the ground; all .around, The lingerie hat has been brought to a state Of perfection. The hand- somest of these aro extremely 5lnlple and depend on their detainees and the beauty of their materials for their charm. They are trimmed hardly at all, a largo bow of ribbon or ribbon rosettes serving for sole ornamentation, Dante Fashi0)1 pronounces against the silk petticoat for the silk sl(i't. Only embroidered amelia is tolerated for -such uses. Irlven lace is playing second for the purpose. With the vogue for eyelet needlework, however, many of the embroidered flounces are as finny as lace ones. A pretty, heart -shaped p100115111010 is fashioned Out of yellow silk and daintily embroidered with some tiny 'yellow flowers which have white centres. In the centre of the cushion is a circular inset of silk lace with a star border. An oval tray with wood 51111, brass handles and glass centre, under which embroidered linen is to be in- serted, is $3.00. Theso trays are used for 'smokers, afternoon tea and for other purposes. Tho now model linen shirt waists aro oracle with broad tucks running from shoulder to waist, sometimes with smaller tucks between. A Very good model in a shop known for the perfection of Its waists has three tucks a full inch wide running the length of 'the waist, with groups of tiny tucks between, the latter stitch- ed for a fel incises only. The back of the waist shows a group of small tucks running down the middle. Among tho neckwear aro narrow ties that wind twice about thie neck and fasten at the front in four-in- hands or as pert bows. These scarfs which are about two inches wide, aro worn with the etflT.tl1tle embroidered turnover collars or with stocks and soft turnovers. A dainty little silk -revered book decorated with snowdrops on a pini( geonndworts has an index at the side and a tidy pink pencil dangling from a bit of pi(110 ribbon. 1t is for one's visiting' list, Among' the things "little but mighty" that counts for much in the realm. of dress buttons occupy a first place. 7n fact, so important have they become that they are nate in scala exquisite designs o(rd of so cost])' materials that they have been known to servo as ornaments where jewelry nils before always held Sway. With 1101 return of the three-quarter sleeve a denenl has sprung up for bracelets, end Parisian jewelers have for sons' time least been busy with new. iicsigns. Narrow bangles of single colored stows, set so as to show 11m setting at, all, are extreme - 1,v popular, Those aft 4'onorall,y made of one, kind of gem, tlhough, it is, permissible to wear an emerald, a ,uh3, s. diamond, or any other col- ored Bangle et. the s'une. HMV, 502110 jeweawe fasten six or eight • 511511 bailees together with a diamond ('resp, RECORD SCHOOL A'1"1'T1NDANCTI, Remarkelile records in a:f.tendance were disclosed at the iriz0 distribu- tion in the Smith Lincolnshire ole- lnetlni'y schoyl5, says the. London l tkeess, At 'Do•rhlgtoli two girls each received a 'gold welch for a1- tencltli.; School for seven r.onseetItive years without beteg (dise1t, once, A how e1. Spalding Ccn(rnl Sehaols hail attended school six ;scarp, two cloys 'attended five yellI, nn eight boys hr att.attendedattendedroue scarp without nut. h breeds In the Girls" Central Helmet 1)n the same town one minder Wangled sots-.. en wears, another six ,yearS and others 111,e end toils' year;( without n, lmljla 010er'ca BLOOD WILL TELL, Rich, Pure Blood Will Drive Out the Most Obstinate Ouse of Rheumatism. Crowing pains, aching joints, stiff- med. muscles, tender, sw011011 MIMS— that's rheumatism—a blopd disease that CilnSP5 ceaseless agtllly and eril'- pies thousands, It is acid In the blood that causes rheumatism. 1. Lini- ments may ease the pain temporar- ily—hut they never cure, To cure vheuniati$nt. you Joust remove the Poid in the impure Wood. Dr, Wil - Danis' I'iuk Pills pos'ft1v51y cure rhe111110 ism, 8101110 or chronic, 'l'luly act directly onthe blood, driving the acid out. They made 11(•15, warm, pure blood and send it throb- bing through 1110 heart, end lungs and limbs. This new blood banishes every riche end pain—brings, good health and fell activity. Int'. T. 1f. Smith, Caledonia, Ont„ 511,1/0:—"hor a numher of veal's T was badly trou- bled with rheumatism, and was so crippled 'up I could 5earCely du any work, 1 tried quite a number of mcdicin':10, but they did not help nu', Then I sate ler. Willianis' Pink fills advertised for this trouble, and. I got a slumber of 1)0x0.8, 1101(2141 the third box was used, 1 found myself lnlproving. I continued to use the pills throughout the winter and they have completely cured 111e. I got so that I could work cm the coldest day without a cont and not feel a twinge of the trouble. I have told quite a few of 012,5 neighbors about the pills, and they are a popular medicine Here." It is because' Dr. 5ildlares' Pint( Pills make new, P11re, warm blood that they have such great power to cure disease. They positively eu'1•c rheumatism, sciatica, neuralgia, St. Vitus dance, partial paralysis,, lcidiioy and liver troubles, anaemia, and the aliments which women alone suffer from. The purchaser must be care- ful to seo that the full name, "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peo- ple" is printed on the wrapper around each: box. Solis by all medi- cine dealers or sent 11,5 mail at 000, a box, or six boxes for $2.50, by writing the Dr. Williams Medicine Co.. Brockville, Ont. LAKES GETTING DEEPER. Shipowners are Pleased as it Means More Profit. Shipowners are puzzled over the cause -of the phenomenal rise in the levels of the great lances in the last ton years, and are at n, loss to ex- plain it. Every foot of added draught for their ships means the addition of thousands of dollars in their freight earning capacity, and as a natural result they aro pleased. Theso figures show rise in lako levels during the last ten years, the number of feet being the height above mean sea level: - 1805. 1004. Lance Superior 608 1-6 603 1-1 Lakes Huron and Michigan ....,. ...,580 1-6 581 2-8 Lake Erie 071. 1-2 573 1-4 Lake Ontario .245 248 In each case the comparison is taken at the high-water mark for the year. AN AID TO MOTHERS. Derangement of the stomach or bowels is responsible for most of the ailments that afflict infants and young children. For keeping the stomach and bowels in order nothing can G,qual Baby's Own Tablets, that is why children in the homes where these 'Tablets are used are bright, good-natured and stealthy. Mrs. Joseph Wallace, Shanley, Ont., says: "I have used Baby's Own Tablets for 111,y baby since Iron earliest in- fancy, and have found them to he medicine that meets all the needs of little ones. They Have kept my lit- tle one as bright and healthy as can be. There Tablets are sold ander a guarantee to contain no opiate or poisonous "soothing" stuff. Sold by all medicine dealers or by mai] at 25 cents a box by writing tlio Dr. W11 - hams' Meclieine Co„ Brockville, Ont. WOOD ALCOHOL IN RUSSIA. Thirty-seven Deaths Attributed to Its Use Last Year. The subject 'of wood alcohol pois- oning has .again cropped up, this time in Russia. When :Russian troops were being mobilized last summer at Do'pat the event was made the oc- casion for drinking, and nen and W0111011 partook freely of a bevel'ege 00111n050d, according to the Journal of theAmericanMedical Association, of alcohol, water, peppermint leaves, salvia, lavender, etc. Like Jamaica ginger, this beverage is much a11'ect- ed by the 3 ivonlans 115 all internal remedy. Shnilaelly; it Is used as a stimulating chink 111 default of the ordinary alcohol beverages. Unfortunately for the Russian merry-n141Cer5, Lie stuff 1ra5 made 151111 wood alcohol instead ,of grain alcohol, the consequence- being fiat sixteen mon ani. one womanflied as a result of the debauch. 11 is sug- gested tial y1,11e alcohol risen was probably of the deodorized kind. More recently a report has (onto from Russia that twenty persons have died at iticf front chinking methylated brandy. Jt is only withiin the-last.,year that wood elc11001 poisoning ]las oocarred in Rnssla, Pp to the year 1:004 the Woad , alcohol used in Russia was so repugnant to the senses of smell aril taste that Oven the '42101'0111 peas - anis, elm will china( the vilest and strongest Comas of spirits, could not use it es a 11cv0rage. in the early pert of 1.001 the ileo- dorieled tvocd alcohols )vele introduc- ed into 1111211ia, to consequence of which there have been already 'thir- ty-seven (tenths repelled, As here, 0)1)0(1 alcohol, owing to its comparative ceslf »colas t ) have been large/S, sllh„t.i'tetcd in Tim - Sin, pin, fol' grails alcohol in;ptlie maillline- 112re of r'elno(lial - agents, flavoring exlrcleta, perfumes, 11ointents, w1te11 110.1013 Otey. GOOD YEAR FOR HUNTERS AND ]?RICES OF TUR MAY DROP A LITTLE. Bussia May Be Too Poor to Buy So 1lriany Skins This Year, The trappers of the north, the fur collecting depots and the ordinary country storekeepers are accustomed at this season t0 send out theft' belles of skills to the wholesale deal- ers in the great centres. A little later 11)0 breaking up of the show roads will hinder travel, and the in- creasing hent will injure and throw 10511 pelts as have not been properly dried Ipon the hands of the men who are least able to stand the loss. A great deal of the fur is shipped as 11 has been ever since the time of Charles 'II„ directly by water from Hudson 1103'. 1111(11 the animal sales Have been 1101(1, 15111010 is after the ar- rival of the steamer from Croat Bri- tain, the prices of furs for the Coln - inn season are never established. That is the great rounding up time, when the extent of the winter's harvest of fur the world over is ex- actly. Ca10llate1. A fair estimate of it 1111y be made, however, from the size of the bales and the quality of their C011tellts as they arrive just at this season. Trappers who work south of the height of land which divides old Can- ada from the Hudson Day territory are generally heard from early this 01011111 for the first that since they went for their lines in the autumn. The reports so far received are EI' 1I D G J) DT,Y EN00UTtAGING. There ]las been a great deal of 811005, but also a good many fine bright flays and clear nights. In cloudy times most wild creatures stay order cover as much as possible, and the hunters' baits are likely to be 8110Wed andel'. 71 is in clear weather that animals gut out to forage for food and to play about in the snow. Then, the coli] has been steady since 11 set in early in November, with no prolonged thaw to loosen the ]lair. The snow has been kept in good order, the moisture being frozen out of 11, which keeps tho fur from fading, Many of these conditions were so unpropitious last, w'intee that the supply of furs taken from the woods was smaller than usual. That meant so many more animals left, to ma- ture, or to breed for this season. But most important of all is the fact that this is a fisher year. Why, no one knows, bilt so it is that for a year or two these valuable black auinnls areto be found 10 greater or smaller number. Then for perhaps six or eight years there will be nothing . seen of them at all. Old hunters malts many guesses as to ndlat becomes of them and why or where they hide, but no one has ever been able to furnish a really satis- factory reason for their TEMPORARY DISAPPEARANCE. Suddenly some winter the trappers' hearts are gla0clened by the sight of their peculiar trail or they get them in fox traps. Fishers have been plentiful this winter, though they were scarce as hens' teeth last year. It is always sure to be a good trapping year when fishers are about. In fact, they 50e11. to be a 1(i.nd of gauge whereby the fur season may bo tested. V it is good enough for fishers, then every other fur bearing animal may be expected to iso well. So it has been this last winter. Fur Lias boon plentiful. Trappers have been unusually successful in their captures. The quality is better than it was last year. Unfortunately there is always such a wide difference: between the price pares to the trapiiers and the actual value of for that it is impossible to forecast the price of fashionable furs for next season, :But foresi•ghte'd men foretell a duop in prices of the costliest varieties because of the troubles in Russia, which is the heaviest buyer of the most valuable furs THE SIMPLE LIFE. Ways That Are Pheasant And Paths That Are Peace. It is the simple life that gives length Of days, serenity of mind and body and tranquility of soul. Siutplo hopes and ambitions, bounded by the desire to do good to one's neighbors, simple pleasures, habits, food and drink. Men 'die long before their time be- cae5e they try to 0500021 too nitleli into thele experiences—they clln)b too high enci - fall too ]lard. A wino Woman writes of the good that a simple filet hes clone her: "I have been using (Grape -Nuts for about six months, .I began rather sparingly, until 1 acquired such a liking for it that for the last three months I have depended upon it al- most: entirely for my diel, eating nothing else whatever, but Grape - Nuts for breakfast and supper, and I (relieve .1 could eat it for (linnetswifh fruit (11)21 1)n satin(lod withocrt other food, and feel much (letter and have more strength to do my housework, "11'1)011 I began the use of (irape- 1uLs 1 was thin anti tweak, my mus- cles were so soft that I was 3101 able 10 do any work. I weighed only 1.08 pounds, 'Nothing that I ate did 1110 any good. I was going sown hill rapidly, was ner5ou5 and miserable, With no ambition for any- thing" My condition improved rap- idly after I began to eat Crape -Nuts food. 7t made nuc feel like a new Nonan; my muscles got solid, my figure 1r001nle(1 out, my weight M-. creased to 726 p0111(18 in a . few weeks, ' 111,y nerves grew steady and my mind bettcn' and clearer. 71St' Mends toll mo they haven't 8ecu 1ne look NO Wil for years. "T consider Grape -Nuts the best 100(1 on 1110 mall(OL, and shall never go incl( to moats and White bread " •'v Posture Co.,again, Nemo given 1),y Battle Creek, Mich. There's a reason. Look in each pkg, for the little boos(, "'1'e itoad to We11v311e." THE CAUSE OF WOMAN'S TROUBLES IS DISEASED KIDNEYS AND TTS CURE IS. DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. % Unless the soap you Y Wonderful Cure of Mrs, J'amos Kinsella, Who Slept in a Chair For Two Summers—What She Says of It, St, Mulachic, Que., March, 27: (Special)—A cure of great interest to women has attracted the atten- tion of those interested in medical matters in this neighborhood. Ids. ,las. Kinsella, wife of a well-known citizen, had suffered from a compli- cation of troubles for about two y0111:4. She hada pain in the right, hip, In the back and 'was obliged to pass water every 11(11)011 minutes in a burning itching scot of wily. She could not sleep at night and had to sit up in a chair for two 511111111(55. Dodds Kidney Pills cured her, Airs HiesellS, speaking of her cure says, 'After the hest box of 1)odd's 1(111(ney Pills I felt much better, Then 1 got more and they .lid me a world of good. I have never slept in the chair since I used Dodd's Kidney Piths" Woman's health depends on her kidneys. Nine -tenths of the so-called 101121110 complaints are Can2ell by uric acid i(1 the blood. Cure your Kid- neys with Dodd's n y Ki1ne Pills and you can have no uric acid in the blood. 4- WHEN SHE CAN'T TALK. No Wonder Women Hate to Go to the Dentist's. "Do you know why it is that a woman dreads so to have a tooth filled?" asked the dentist of the young num in the chair. The young elan was of the opinion that it was because women are 11u - man, and coosequently deek100lly op- posed to having their jaws nand gums subjected to 1t treatment like auto the working of a eompresved air drill in a stone quarry, "No," said the elan of the drills ams forceps. "Wooten can stand pail much better than men. It is a fact, even in tho eatreet.ing of 150011 1)t omc teeth, the fortitude of the little, slender women is remarkable when one comes to consider the hideous groans that emanate from a big loan undergoing the same operation. It isn't the fear of pain that keeps many a woman away from the chair when she really ought to be having her tooth attended to. "You see this rubber? Well, that rubber goes Into the mouth of every Person who comes in here to have a filling put in. Iron can see that it covers the 111011111 entirely; doesn't leave the patient half a chance to talk. Well, there ,you have it; that's trio reason women don't like to go to the dentist. Yes. sir, it's a fact. I have lost some of my best custom- ers because of the necessity of ap- plying that rabbet'. "A woman conies in here to get a tooth filled. If she is inexperienced in this line she will bo surprised when the rubber is produced. As'soon as it is placed in her mouth she tries to talk, and finds that her speech is only an unintelligible jumble. She begins to get mad from then on. When T ass(, her if I am hurting her she can only glare at mo and shake her heacl. When I pass a remark about the beautiful wea- ther we have been having she glares still more. and by the time I am through with her she is ready 10 kill me if looks would .lo the deed. Some- times, when I take the shield off, the pent up speech of the fair ones breaks forth into an irrepressible flood, and the portent of the re115,11(s is, to say the least, not complimentary to me, "Some clay some genius will in- vent an apparatus which will allow teeth to be filled without depriving the patients of their speech for the time being. Then there will be no- thing to this business but brown stone fronts and automobiles." FIRST ELECTRIC RAILWAY. Car Ran at Edinburgh—Early Motor Vehicles. 7t has boon/11111051 utterly forgot- ten that the 0100trie railway was, in the first instance, a British invention and that so Mr becs(, as 1887 a car was electrically propelled on tho Ed- inburgh and Glasgow Railway. But tho invention carne before its time. and like many others was put aside and forgotten because of temporary imperfections. So, too, with tit/ motor car. So long ago no 1760 Captain Planta, a Swiss 01)12): officer, succeeded, after long experiment, in producing a steals carriage which ran along the road. A second automobile, built in the following year, was exhibited before Louis XV.,. 1l. de Choiseul, and many other distinguished personages at Versailles. That this Is no mere legend is proved by tho fact that to day, 131 year's after its birth, this self -same ma(hine is to he soca at the Paris Coilselvatoiee of Arts and Crafts. An obelisk was recently erected at Dundee to the memory of James Bowman Lindsay, who died in that city 011 ,luno 20114 :1.862, oh one of the pa.tel5 of which aro inscribed those WOi'i1s; "A pioneer in electrical science; foretold the application of eleetricity as an i11tm1inan1, a, motive power to replace steam, anti substitute for coal in heating, ITo ilevisecd an °lees tl' telegraph, 11) 582 sti •ested Iveld- iet1) a 1 g I gg 1 e tr' ro 11iCin C )1- t Jcit o1) a o inghyec, Y, p g tirnuous electric 11ght, 1885; propos- ed a 5ubtearine telogl'aph, 18'13; and ac00.mp115110d 'wireless telegraphy through water, 1858." use has this brand you are not getting the best hsO for abs octagon BAY. ens LY UNnTIIDG7;, PARITY 11511)11]) 1. Dist1'let, Improvers farms, splendid bargains, also Ano summer reo,l'l pro- perty, brick house. John Carter, Mundt - ridge, Ont. 1' A11JlMS YOH. SAL M.—Loud 11111f -sec - i' tion, fl} miles north of Wargrave, 2110 acres and cultivated, comfortable frame house, new granary and fair stabling, good water, best of wheat soil, a ,41,lo did neighborhood, 51)11,42. x5, 501100121 and post enure eonvenient, $0,000, terms reasonable, Several sec- tions and quite a imv In loon of A 1 lvheat wt from 7..50 to $1:D per ante, 1111'1110 district u1uol1 and suutl)- wcst of Virdcu. why Ku 150.1 to tin Teri•ftorn:s nn,l p $`(, $n, $1q nod $1.11, when you 11111 buy right here at our prices.—Mclr0\A1.1( S11)1'8115 0(.1., Virden, Mau. CHENILLE CUFITAIiJS and all kinds of house Hangings, also LICE CURTAINS DYELI G MEr" Wtlto to ire shout yours. BRITISH AMERICAN SUMO 00„ Box 155, Montracl ITELEGRAP V Canada's Best School, Graduates from this school are draw- ing from 500 to $100 per mouth. Po- sitions furnished to aur graduates. Prospectus ma11ed free. CANADIAN SCHOOL OF TELEGRAPHY Cor.Queuu and I'onge Sir., Tor,nta Can. iiiiffliElEMDMIMIIITIMIUMFESEL11 Dir etl S is Free FCR CASH TRADE. BENEFITS THE VIERCHAWTS BENEFITS THE CUSTOMER A Merchant in your neighborhood is showing his appreciation of cash trade by sluing absolutely free, those DINNER SETS. It you do not know Oda Marthaut, write e3 and we will not only toll you who he is but forward you o handxomesouvenir PatP>; The British Canadian Crockery Co., Ltd. TORONTO, CANADA. REEEMEMIEMMINIMMWMP Smith—"Jones, I'm going - to marry and settle down." Jones -- "Humph! You'd better remain sin- gle and settle up." , Ask for Minard's and take no other Wild cats are on the increase in Scotland. One measuring four feet long was captured in a trap at Poolowe a few weeks ago. Lever's 1-Z (Wiso Bead) Disinfect- ant Soap Powder is better than other powders, as itis both soap and disinfectant, —_ . An engine -driver lamed 'water - worth died at Proton, England, re- cently, after having travelled over 2,000,000 miles without an accident. Piles cured in 3 to 6 nights.— One application gives relief. Dr. Ag- new's Ointment fs a boon for Itching. Piles, or Blind, Bleeding Piles. It re- lieves quickly and permanently. In skin eruptions it stands without a rival. Thousands of testimonials if you want evidence. 35 cents. -23 No fewer than 15.1 people were killed in the streets of London through accidents during the past twelve months, and 10,202 people were injtu'ecl. Chen pest of An lfedicincs.—Consider- ing the cur01.150 qualities of Dr, Thomas' licloct,'ic 011 It is the cheapest medicine now offered to the public. The dos0 required in any ailment in small and a bottle contains many doses. If it were valued at the benefit it confers it could not bo purchased for many times the price asked for it, but in- creased consumption has simplified and cheapened its manufacture. A cow's hicle produces 85 pounds of leather, and that of a horse about 1.8 pounds. Have you tried Holloway's Corn Cure? It has no equal for removing those troublesome excresenees es nun,., 11050 testilled alio have tried It. "Re that takes a wife takes care" stays Franklin; but Brown says that Franklin Is wrong—"that ho who takes care doesn't tale a wife," Re, p Millard's Liniment in the house Mrs, Horner—"Do have some more of the fee -padding, Miss Guestly," Miss Cuostly—"Well, just a little, as you ins1321; but Only a l (11111iful, mind." Mrs. home"—"Jane, fill Miss Onestly's plate up again! ' That's what any woman is after a hot cup of FRA RANT Sesscessataralaralealeleiseg TEA. It chases away that old tired feeling and fills her with new life. SO DELICIOUS 1500. ONLY ONE "r: EST TEA—BLUE RIBBON'S IT Mrs. liewlyweii—"I can't nay that I think much of my new sewing - machine. ft is disappointing," Mrs. Elder—"What is atrOng With 11.?" Mrs. Nett•lywed—"I don't know ex- actly, but when I tried to sew but- tons on with it, the machine broke every one of thele," FOR OVER, orx'rY YRAx15. Airs. Winslow's 1-laothing Syrup has peen used by mflllmis 0f urnthere for their cillld ren while teething. It sonth0s the child, softens the gums, allays pain, cures win dcolic, regulates the stomach and trowels, ru111 is the best remedy for .Dlarrliosa. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Sold by druggists throughout the world. Be sm'u and ask for 'Mrs. window's Soothing Syrup." 23-•04 When a 151)111a7n. criey it is a sign you can't guess whether it Is be- cause she is glad or sad. A. Magic fill.—Dyspepsia is a foo with Windt men are constantly gr0p- Ming but cannot exterminate. Subdued, and to all appearances vanquished in ono., it makes its appearance in an- other direction, In Many the divsative apparatus is as delicate as the mechan- ism e' a watch or sa breath i0! air mint In which even a breatu of er- s n make disordersa variatthe tom such pare sons temos of the stomach ensue from the most trivial causes and cause mach suffering. 50 these sndodParmelee's Vegetable Pills aro recommended as mild and sure. In school a boy is taught how lit- tle he knows; at home lie teaches his parents how little they know, Death or Lunacy seemed the only al- ternative for a well-known and highly respected lady of Wingllam, Ont., who had travelled over two continents in a vain search for a cure for nervous de- bility and dyspepsia. A friend recom- mended South American Nervine. One bottle helped, six bottles cured, and her awls written testimony closes with these. words: "It has saved my lite." -20 Sometimes a girl is in earnest w11en she lets a man kiss her against her will. Board's Liniment Lumberman's friend A young doctor said to a girl -- "Do you (mow, my dear, I have a ;heart alTecticn for you?" "Have you had it lung?" she coyly inquir- ed. "Oh, yes; I feel I will liver troubled life without you," he re- sponded. "Then you had Vetter' asthma," she softly murmured. The Denton, Dyspepsia.—In olden times. it Was a popular belief that demons moved invisibly through the ambient air,. seeking to enter into mein and trouble them. At the present day the demon, dyspepsia, seeking is inin hose who by careless or unwise living invite hint. And once be enters a man it is didloult to dislodge hint. He that 'Ands himself so possessed should know that a valiant friend to du battle for him with the unseen foe is Parmelee's Vege- table Pills, which are ever ready for the 'trial. "Here is a carpet,'1 saiil the dealer, "that simply can't be beaten," "Just what I want," exclaimed the tired -looking elan, who had recently undergone a little strenuous exper- ience in his back -yard. "Send a man up to my house at once and measure every room," use the sate, pleasant and effectual worm killer, Mother Graves' Worm Ex- terminator; nothing canals it. Procuro a bottle and taste it home. The Cashier—"I wish to marry your 'daughter, sir, if you have no objections." Tits Employer (who t,as just finished examining his books)—"Of course I have no objec- tions. I'm only too glad to have an opportunity to keep the money in tho family." --- To Starve is a Fallacy. —The dic- tum to stop eating because you have indigestion has long since been explod- ed. Or. VOn titan's Pineapple Tablets introduced a new era in the treatment of stomach troubles. It has proved that one may eat his All of anything and everything 1e relishes, and one tablet taken after the meal will aid the stomach in doing its worst. 00 in a box, 38 cants. -34 M1aud—"Look) That's the groat heiress; she was born, you know, with a silver spoon in her mouth." Mabel (after taking a look at the heiress)—"Are y'ou sure it wasn't a soup ladle?" Marion Bridge, C. dl., May '40, '02. 1 have handled KINARD'14 LINI- MENT during the past year, It is always the llrst Liniment asked for here, and unquestionably 1110 1,051 seller of all the di1(0l•Ont kinds- of liniment I handle. NIllL FERGUSON. CIRCUSFOLKS' PAY. The monthly earnings of 1)t lady circus -rider in England vary from. 5975 to 850(1, 051111e ,those of the highest class often 00(21 $750. A clown's earnings avenge (roes 8175 and 8200 to ,5„"375 and 0,.000. No per - tomer 011 the light -rope "works" fey 1es5 than from $250 to 8075 a month, iingagements of this sort, it 80eills, are allwaya made, -at111 -wages paid, by the month, Carpet acrobats car)) frou1.$500 to $350; even 500011011 rate performers on tho horizontal $ 011 31 to whin atel- iers - r rceri3'e $6 C r e as ba 1 art am s much $1.- 250; ' - i C15 of tho a earn 1t. aS .1.. 250; and inggle's on the tight -rope or or borselmek are the best laid Of all„onl'uiug often ,as emelt es 1$1, 500 a 'month, ®ar•,mraxa^fVfle MY s No other workingman's shirt is made so big or comfortable or' so strongly as the H.B.K, Big Shirt Not a skimped, factory -made, cheap shirt but a shirt made of honest material and -lots of it. As big and easy fitting as the ones your mother used to make with three yards and a half of goods. Every H.B.K. Big Shirt has three and a half to three and three quarter yards of material. Ample room under the arm- pits, broad and spacious on the shoulders, full and long bodied, big sleeves, an easy wearing shirt and a long wearing shirt. Every shirt his branded with this brand and guaranteed by the makers. 4 HUDSON BAY I(NITTING CO., Montreal Rawson, Winnipeg H.M,S. Wyo recently landed at Sheerness thirteon turtles, each weighing about five hundredweight. Several were forwarded to the King. Mioard's Lioimeni used by� Physicians Rich Aunt—"You only visit me when you want money.'' New Nephew—"Well, I couldn't conte more frequently, could I?" If a cough makes vnur alights sleep- less and weary, it will worry: you - a good deal, and with good cause. To dispel the worry and give yourself rest try mlickle's -Anti-Consumptive Syrup, It exerts a, soothing influence on the air passages and a lays the irritation that leads to inflammation. It will subdue the most stubborn cough or cold, and eventually eradicate it front the system, as a trial of it will prove to you. "You and y'onr husband have lived together twenty -live years, and never hada quarrel? What's the secret?" "No secret at all, I'm too good- natured to quarrel, and he's too in- dolent.” r� South American Kidney Cure is the only kidney treatment thathas proven equal to correct all the evils that are likely to befall these physical regulators, Hundreds of testimonials to prove the curative 1115ri1S of this liquidkidneyspecific in eases of Bright's (1100x50, diabetes, irritation ofthe blad- der. Milne atlnn, dropsk:al tendency. Don't deny. -22 "T sec Newlywed at the chile quite often since his baby came. I thought he was firmly cambered to a home life." "TIe was, but at the first squall Ile began to drag his anchor." Worry wont cure a cough. When you find a cough holding on -- when everything else has failed- try SitilOhlas Consul , ' (ion 'lhnt e,Lung 7"o C It is guaranteed to cute. If it doosn't, we'll refund your money. Iyr feast S, G. Wntt s & Co. 504 sSc.See, $I. I,otoY,NX.,.Toro nEo Can:- "(8811Z No,-12.—os