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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1902-1-2, Page 2T.OND f3'S 131ItT3 31AT41, Heol"ane ea ge*h ages Iteportbed.oR Spar 7'be Landon (l~ngleed) gonn$Y Connell, loo jos= issued a liege vol..- WOO, ol-tzfrf3, of the "London Statistics, 18094900." 1 r deals 'with. . every nubile aspect of the lite 01 nearly six millions of 'people and thorough -1y to digest ft would require days. Atleorciing to the moat revert ten, bus, wilieh was tdA91 , on lurch 149. 1806.. the total population of • the Administrative County et London vee 4,488,018, of whom 2,009,548 Were males and 2,888N70.1emoles This does not include the•outer ring, that part of the metropolis skirting the cetmty and ,we are probab,y not. far wrong 'in 'estimating the popula- tion of Greater Landon at eve and three-quarter trillions. 'l`llero is apparent a steady decline in the number of marriages and in the birth rate. New citizens who in - Crease the size of London's popula- tion come here, to e. considerable ex- tent, full grown, journeying from every part .of tho'United Kingdom and the Continent. The mean mar- riage rate from 1851. to 11898 child- ren, por 1,000 living p ren, of course, included. The d1a- gr•am under this head shows the average as a line, above which the number of happy couples in 1881 rose High, still ascending in 18513, dropping fitfully in 18513 and 1861, and resuming again Its former vopul- arity by hops and bounds till, in 1865, it reached the maximum ; 1869 and 1.870 saw it, at the lowest ebb, from which it faintly struggled for some six years. But, the expected t•e- vival was only timid. All subse- quent years figure at various depths below the average line, so that the 'diagram looks like a mountain -chain with lir reflection in a clear lake stretching along its base—here tower- ing to the skies ; there sinking to the depths. In figures, the marriage rate of London in typical years Is as follows 0858.........„ _22.13 per 1,000 persons 1865.. ...... ,...32.3 ., 1886, 22.1 .. .. 1887 ...... .16.0 " 1888.. .....16.9 1894... ...... ....17.0 " 1895-, ........17.2 " 1.896.. ... ... ...18.5 " " '1808... ...18.7 " The stories of girl -and -boy mare leages are not borne out by statis- tics. From 1851 to 1870 only about DEMO TEAT DO ROAD 137ET1MATISM AAP GOUT SEP- 71'1rIt11$ I,IVN LONG. People Who ITave Smallpox Are Longer -Lived Than Those Who Have Escaped. }lave yott had stnall-pox ? If you have, you i?ave recovered from .the terrible diseasewithout your eye- sight or Roaring being seriously al - Meted, as ie very octan the ease, you May congratulate yourself that smallpox attacked you, for you will probably, barring oneidents, 11V0 con- siderably longer and enjoy better health than if you had mover had the dienes0, says 1'earson'e Weekly, 1t 103 a remarkable fact—one of 1Tature's peculiar compensations— that people who have suffered from smallpox generally live longer than people who have not. 1111y this should be the ease, there is only an unproved theory • to explain ; and the theory is that the microbes which go to make smell -pox, being very powerful and pugnacious, swal- low up the microbes of many other diseases which they find in the Sys- teme of persons they attack. Bence, by contracting smallpox severely, You fromdyour system other ood chance of odiisl diseases timeorother, Oltseize seid tyou at likely enough, prove fatal. At the same time, it must be ad- mitted thea smallpox is not sc11cd111- ed as a preventive medicine ; and the number of persons it either kilts, maims, or inflicts with mental in- capacities is probably greater thou colic, and simple fevers, these mar - the number of persons whose lives villous little tablets have given re - it prolongs. liel in thousands of eases and saved At the seam time it is a fact that many precious baby lams. Do not the disease, though one of the most give -t child so-called "soothing" terrible enawrl to medical science. medicines; such only stupify and. pro- ' ROYALTIES AND SMALLPDX. Smallpox played sad havoc among European Royalties throughout the seyeeteenth end eighteenth centuries, Two of Charles L's children were carried on by the seotn•ge, and !three of Janres 11.'s olTsptdng, including Mary, queen of England and spouse of 1Vi111tun XIX. Louis X1V,'s son (the Dauphin), his grandson' (else Dauphin), and his wife and great- grandson, Louis XV„ all died of smallpox. Likewise Joseph 1„ Em- peror of, Germany, in 1711.'; Peter 11 , Emperor of Russia, In 1780 ; }leery, Prince of Prussia, in 1767 ' and Maximilian Joseph, Elector o1 Llavaria„ in 1777. Two of our So- vereigns had very narrow • escapes from death froth the disease—namely, William 111. and Queen Anne. CRYiN'G, BABIES. The Cry of an Infant is Nature's Signal of Distress. Babies never cry unless there is some very good reason for ie. The cry of a baby is nature's warning signal Unit there is somethlag wrong. Every mother ought to got to work. immediately to' hnd out what that s0nlethiug wrong may be. If the fretfulness and irritation are not caused by exterior sources, it is con elusive evidence that the crying baby is ill. 'Pito only sure and judicious thing to do is to administer Baby's Owe '}'ablaut withoUl the slightest delay. )'or indigeoLion, sleeplessness, the irritation accompanying the cutting of teeth, diarrhoea, caustipatlen,. does you a great deal of good if you are capable of throwing it 05 with- out suffering after-effects of a more duce unilateral sloop. Baby s O+vn Tablets are guarnntecd to contain eio opiate or other Harmful drugs; they serious -character than i:emg Pilte•I•peeniol8 sound, healthy sleep be - with the queer littic merles it almost cause they go directly to the root of invariably leaves bthlnd• to lis- Laby troubles. ' Dissolved In water tingaish 1TS PAST -TIME VICTIMS. Numbers of elderly persoes, in more or less feeble health, arc ]sept alive by coughs, such, for 1110411110, as much good as Baby's Own Ilea as brcnrhitis. Chronic coughs' are lets, I would not be without them," peculiarly common 'to Ole people, Baby's Owe. Tablets are for saleat and hundreds who complain of the all drug stores, or will be sent di - distress caused 1 them by such asset- rect on receipt of price (25 cents a tions are really tadebted Lo thine box) by addressing the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont. these tablets can be given to the emiugest infant. Mrs. Walter Brown, letilby, Quo., says: --"I hove never used any medicine for baby that did three males of every hundred enter- coughs for their length of life. '1110 ing wedlock did so under 21 years ,reason of this is that mast elderly of age. The proportion is growing, persons suffer with weak hearts and however, and in 1897 it showed that feeble circulation of the blood, end rather over four persons under the weak hearts become weaker and nominal years of discretion were to weaker merely as a result of their be found in every 100 married men. weakness. A constant cough cor- rects this, keeps the heart hoisting more strongly than itotherwise would, and the strong heart-beat keeps the blood circulating • more quickly ; and the vital organs are thus kept in a state of activity which could only be meinto.ined by artillcial means, and for a limited time, but for the troublesome cough. Moreover, the constant reminders given by 1110 cough deter the suffer- ers irony running risks of entcning colds. In other words, they have ..... •.. ... ...... ... 84,08684,08684,086to study their health or suffer more Of these nrari•Iages 781) per cent. acutely trope their coughs, and. took place at the Established Church choosing tete former, tbey' benefit ac- cordingly.1 V4a1 . The proportion ot I,ondon girls who enter the marriage state under 21 is about four times as great, which is nearly about the proportion prevail- ing through England. The latest return of marria.ge London is for 1898, and is as fol - Spinsters married— —80,098 'Widowers re-rearriod... 8,862 Widows re -married— 2,1)45 15.0 per mut. at Registrars offices, and 4.4 per cent. st Nonconformist places of worship. As compared. with the two previous years there is a decrease in the proportion of Eistab- fished Church marriages, mid an in - Gaut and rheumatism are exceed- ingly painful :Ilse:tees, and, of course in some cuLes, prove fatal, but they confer ramiy ft blessing on mankind; and rheumatism partionlarIy ie well NORFOLK SITIPT WAIST. 82, to 40 Bust. efease in the proportton of Noncom- known to doctors as a preventive of Ceylon Tee Is the finest Tea the world produceSt and Is, sold only In lead packets. Mack, Mixed and Green. 'open tea drinkers try "Salado" Green fell, WRONG GEOGRAPHY. Mistakes That Are Made Now and Then by Writers. The Berlin correspondent of the London Times Informs MS newspaper that "the Captato-Caero Una of the African Transeontinental Telegraph Company has boon constructed 04 far „may read all right to any one who 1311031/5 nothing about the geography of Africa, but If he should try to il- luminate the statement by ;Ming a good map he would begin to suspect that something was wrong. 'rho route of the Cape-to,Cairo telegraph line pasees through -Central Africa, while 'rogoland. Is a German poems - Mon 011 the west coast, Bismarck - burg being' a settlement in the inter- ior of the colony, Such blunders are quite excusable as long as Africa is comparatively ittle known, but some people COD- tinue to perpetrate them W1101.1 they should know bettor. Treaties between various nations relating to hounderles will probably never again contain so many blun- ders OS has been the case within the ntst twenty years, while lac world las hew clearing 13p nearly all the geographical mystaries. At least. a dozen. ludicrous blunders were perpe- trilled by European Governments ta heir African treaties. The -Letitia'. and Portugueee, for example, fixed upon the. west side of the Manica plateau" as their eonunon frontier in Idashona Land, finding later that here is no such plateau, and that ome other definition for the boiled- ary line must be made, oe they ',Amid be as badly mixed up as the Alaskan boundary muddle. Then the British and Germans fixed upon the lio del Rey "from its source to the sea," as the boundary between their possessions fronting on the Bight of lilafra. They were slightly up a tree when they discovered that the tio del Rey is not a river at all, but s merely an inlet of the see. and not much of a, ono at that. A --"Have you realized anything from that mining investment you were MO about 7" 13—"Yes. I've realized the truth of the saying, 'A fool and his money are soon parted,' " formist unions and of those at Re- many other diseases, It, is a notor- Norfolk styles, In both leftists end --f -- lious fact that gouty subjects gen- jackets, make a notable feature of erally live to a ripe ego, and albeit the latest modes, and have the merit they gaffer very severely at times, of being generally becoming. The - 11 ' , j excellent general smart weist illustrated combines all the essentials, cad cam be made with or without the pointed yoke, as pre- ferred. The material of which the original is made Ls reseda green flan- nel, with embroidered dots of black; but flannel of all /sorts, corduroy, velveteen and all Nvaisting materials are appropriate. The foundation lining is 11 tted snugly and smoothly, anti extends to the Waist line °ply. The waist pro - which aloue has prevented him from strained. per is laid in iVi<I0 boie plaits that --......ferlie explorer found that in 562 A. contract -he; LIM tlISMISCS Whiell have run through the house. Such ooffore are stiLehed at their underfolds ead D. the attend), or one of the tribes again at each edge, TS do, not run half the risk, ci! catch - made a foray on another tribe and .', ' Tho yoke is stitebed firmly to posi- es a ransom for the booty and cop- 's11.1igitelenie,s7103: 7 nilu'ucpsase180.1,4teluivorr:: tIon -ander the cenere front „,i L1011 of the people who reach ages leip." 03,11 0V0', 1" °Rio* box tives taken he demanded and received .. a famous horse names Dellis. but both froet and back extraordinary fleetness of Dahie '0708 tor years, latve suffered from gout or plaits extend to 1.110 shoulders when the boast of his now owner and it tc., yew, .fut, they ,,,,„ yoke is omitted. The eleeves are in made to race him against a leezare, doubtedly olve follnY 01 the Yeurs Modified bishop sLyle, with culls that , was not long before a match was they base lived over the allotted include pointed portAontl WI1 I 1111 match mare belonging to emother tribe and spim. the stock collar. ECORSE RAcn IN 562 A, D. An Ancient Sporting Event That Caused a Long War.. A. recent traveller in Eastern Ara- bia has revived a little of the ancient holds, except one member, being history of that part of the world, stricken clowie with infectious d's- treeing back for many centuries the easee, and the lucky exception has been EL SUffOrer from IINELISCATISM Olt GOUT, health, the very causes of the gout keeping their blood in good condi- tion and making it unendurable to ineny kinds of microbes. Cases have occurred of whole 'mime - cause of bitter feeling between 1.1/7 0 tribes that were at war for forty Added to the Strength of Great Britain's Navy, The Ring Alfred, which Wee launehed the other day, ie, says the New York Post, the vory latest typo of cruiser added to the eeritish navy. Sho is 500 feet, long, 71, foot wide, end when in lighting teem slie displace 14,100 tons, her draught be- ing 26 feet, Nor speed will be 28 knots, attained by means tee two sate of triple expanslen engines, develop- ing 80,000 here° power --said 'to be the most powerful machinery over put into a warship. Tho vessel ear - ries 2,500 tons of coal in her huek- ars, and will therefore be Ono to steam at a cruising speed of 14 knots /or 12,500 sea miles, equal to a voyage from Portsmouth to Mel- bourne, without, renewing her fuel supply. She Nvill carry thirty -Jive guile, varying In energy from the 28 - ton weapon, firing a 880 -pound shot, IV/ 111 (1, power capable of settling one ton weight nearly three and a. half miles into the nee. One of these gene is motmeed ou the forecastle, fir- ing ahead or on either side, and tho other is on the poop for astern or broadside attack. They aro '85.88 feet long, and of 9.2 calibre, and, using cordite, develop a muzzle ewe. gY 01 17,880 loot tons, It is 0X- 13ected thal. they will be able to maintain a continuous Ilre of four shots per minute. Their mountings 8,re of a new type, and are arranged to be worked by hane as well ti,4 by hydraolic power. The whole revolv- ing' weight oi the mounting, with Its gum is 120 tons, and this ma easily be worked by band. There aro eight six-inch guns on each broadside, ar- ranged in a series of two-storey case - mates. They are eeven-ton guns, fir- ing 1.00 -lb projectilea, and are tap- nble of nring eight rounds per min- ute. Two of the guns on each limed- sido fire ahead as well as four 12 - pounders and the 9.2-ineh weapon, and taus the King Alfred, when chas- ing an enemy, will be able to tiro ahead per minute four projectiles of 880 pounds, 82 projectiles of 100 100 pounds, and 8Q projectiles oi I 2.1.• pounds. Site wilt be ethic also 1,0 discharge an equal 'Weight of met- al astern. She Is subdivided into also noted for her fleetness. 'he wager was for 100 camels and the length of the courtie was about IASI As the day fixed for the race ap- proached the horses were kept With- rheumatiem or gout, they enjoy very horse which first plunged its 710S0 suff,rom end sod splendid chance yoke IS oinitied. OUR MILLIONS OF AleIMALS, Few people have any idea oi Ole immense animal population of Great Teke half a dozen persons over the ° '14 age of eeventy who suffer from. (lieu- eize eli yards of material 21 matlem or gout, rod hell a dozen inches wide, Si yards e7 inches wide othere who suffer frone neither, and or 2e yards 44 inches wide will he you will find that, except for their required when yoke is used, 81 yards 8/ rds 27 inches out water, tho plan tiding that the much better health than the nen. wide or yards 4.4 inches wide when into the water through ten milee of out liviug i he lett me affe cover, from the starting point, shoold be gout and rheumatism greatly en - declared the winner. The recurs were bance a sunerer's ebances of retain - to min riderless, and to make theta ing bis neettal facultics until the gallop their best maddening thirst end ; a large, pereeetage of cotton - was to t&ke the place of whip and arians who die with ell their wits Britain. Aceording to the leat re - ,spur. about them, and will excellent turns of tho lloard of 'I ratio, there The superior strength of Dallis told memories of the days of their youth, were in the United, leiugdinn matey over the yielding, sandy plain, end have suffered for many yeare from 2,000,000 horses, about 10,000,000 he wtts well ahead of lds rival, the rheum:item, mid been particularly cattle, more than 32,000,000 shocP, Inure, which, though very fleet, had flee from other disc:113es, and something like 4,00(1,000 pigs. fess staying power, The horse would The loss of a leg or an arm is also As regards tho first item, this woe OEM QUESTIONED. to handle a good article, eepeeielly when it is Tea. LIIDELLA proved its worth dine and time again, You recommend it; it'll b [EtDANnrQ 01, u 7'54 The Dawson Commission- Co., Limited, 1 205,480 people carry gum? in GrOat Of 1,614 gas works in the 'United Kingdom, 1,268 -are in England, 258 in Scotland, and 108,in Ireland. According to the death -Th., - the least healthy eounties'aa Druggist Tried Lang.hire is the "Most mieee4' British ty, Middlesex sea. Yorkshire third. Ail the Catarrh Remedies Known. SAYS JAPANESE CATARRH CURE IS THE ONLY PERMANENT Mr. lobo Wylie, the weleknown Senior Merl.; await. Geo. Marehe.11. the feeding queen s what 1 om talAtte Dhow. I have tried over) rot:m(1y hieh 1 thought would do me cope Mao impure y roller. A ter hea hag rover of our onatemoro, who had us d Janane4ti Catarrh Vuro 1.9531t so Ingtly of 10. 1 d Ir. nt the vary .iirst )3 gave Ine much ) diet wen tho arm mng in my Throat ceased, anti now. atom using 111 ell four boxes of Japanese tho most di,ngreealho d 0, tour Bettering for years. I la ve slime recommended it to mo of our emtomers, 00.11 know 01 worn). of them whom it has mired: Japnnern OBterrh ere permanently anima ontorrl) and catarrhal deafness. All (tremble. two. Actdreks the G. br, M. Och, Limited. Of Britain's total population of 40 millions, just one-quarter are men betWeen the ogee of 20 and 64. 248 compartments, and carries a, _-_-- crew of 000 officers and mon. M. B. CONNICI1 RELATES EXPEItIENCE Timm BRIGECT'S DISEASE AND PILLS. Suffered With. That Dread Nalo.dy for Pifteen Years.—Treated. by rive Different Doct Literally Rescued from Death by Dodd's Ifielhey B, Connick, the well-known black- smith of this place, known all over the Islaad as the man whom Dodd's leldney Pills saved from death as by a miracle, has often been inter- viewed regarding his case and is ever ready to supply the facts. "I had been a victim to kidney trouble for fifteen yeare before I took Dodd's Kidney Pills," sold lib% Connick in a. recent conversation. "Did you know it WaS Disease, Mr. Canticle 3". "Not at first I didn't, but when I found it out I was startled, I can tell you. In those days, you know, Bright's Disease was incurable. I went to five different doctors. They could do no good. leinaily my wife and I went to one who told us right out there was no use taking my money. I could not be cured. I felt that it was all over." "How did you come to take Dodd's "Well, one day a customer e.nd were talking of the death of a neigh- bor, and my customer said he was quite sure if be had taken Dodd's Kidney Pills he Nvottld have been cured. Tbat set me thinking. POT' the last Mx years I had been forced bire a man to do my work. Well, I began to take Dodd'e Nidney Pills and before 7 had finished the third box I was at work again. 7. can shoe horse ea well to -day as ever I could in my life." "Do you mean to say that three boxes of Dotars leidaey Pills cured you of Bright's 1/10/3/1S0 of fifteen years' standing 7" "Yes, sir, that'e exactly what I mean, I was so etiff and sore could not stoop to pick ap anything —couldn't put MI my shoes. If my wife was here she would toll more about Dodd's Kidney Pills than 7 Mr Com -stele le now efty-eight oth Powder t have Moved in next door must be Afro: Wiggsy--"Thot family wno either very rich or very poor. Wig- gsy—"Why so?" Mrs- Wiggsy— , "Their furniture was all done 13 1) in 'sheets and blankets, and I don't know whether it seas done to hide its shabbiness or to protect its beau- Ithard's Lthlreect Cures Bums, etc, 1 Out of every 1,000 of the popula- tion of the United Kingdom 62 are domestic seryants, 44 belong to the commercial classes, while the profes- sional people, including civil see - Nantes, number 88. Good for Bad Teeth ?tot Bad for Good Teeth 3,,a0dOnt 1.1014,351 Large eieied anti PnWeicr 778 An aorta or by mall lor the price. Sample tor postage 244 WASTED MterORTS. "So your engagement is broken off 2" said the girl in grey. "Yes," replied the girl in brown, frowning at the recollection. "Whet WeS the Metter 7" "110 basely deceived me. You (tee, it Nvas this Nvay. 1 asked him ono day to promise me that, he would never again smoke cigarettes. lie promised. Then I asked him to re- frain from the use of tobacco in any 101131. No promised to do that. Later, told him I had a, horror of anyone who touched liquor, and be agreed never to touch it. Alter that I suggested that I thought clubs had a bad influence on young men and I Should expect him to give them up, mid he said he would, I also took up the subject of gamblIng apd Made him promise that he would oinp playing cards and betting on undoubtedly have won the race if it had'ilot been for a trick perpetrated .bete the tribe 1.0 whom the mare be- longed. They had concealed a man iu a hollow on the track over which the animals were racing to.check Du, hie arid thron: him off bin eourse. The ' trick eucceeded, and the mare VMS 11rSt et 1110 *Watering trough, The dishonese slaatagem by Width D 1158 was Waited came to the Icnow lodge 01 hie owner. After vein efforts Lo adeust the difliceitY the 'Wo operation, odds two or three, some - tribes resorted to war rind the feud times more, years to his latter doye. present day, Tho Ivor Jested for THE CA1173 Or STLVEIR. forty years, and the unpleasantness tion to generation, Iloilo long per_ polinhifig becornos ensIer if the whit - Perhaps thee is an awkward phrase alone. The nereber of hors's useu to apply to the loss of a leg, but let for carriage purposes in towne, re - it stand. It certainly seems that garding which we have particu- whon /1308 is deprived of a leg or lars, must bo 0110111100a, The value an arM, the vitality and vigor of the of this property is estimated at lost member rerratins with film io lta about 81.250,000,000, crease the vitality of the rereninder. Jt haS been declared by an Min- TEARS AS MEDICINE. ent authority that when a, man has a leg Mit, nte he being aefliciently Hinnart tears are not recognized as good health not to collapse from the a specific against disease in ally other country but Persia, and there, only those tears whicl• have boon shed at a inaera1 ore sopposcd 10 ha.ve curative quehtine. roue - tears is an important feature of the funeral ceremony. To each of the mourners prosent the master of the ceremonies presentS plate 01 cotton etiol or sponge., with which to wipe to a bath of hot soap sude, and then away tho tears, Tim contents of the use the paste, robbing it off .With w001 03/ sponge, with which to wipe piece of ellaraois. Whon Lila 'Alter 19 in111002M1 int0 a bottle, and 111e12 11111eh 100010313d rubbing' with there are presorved as a poweriul and little dry NOW?* after the ap bath certain restoretive when all other mett ho medicines have proved useletoi. Into boon helloed down. (3001 gc,n01,0„ In the rare of silver the work of lode sometimes elapse in which there ing mad° int° thin PaSte with are no active hostilities. 'Water tO Which 0, little nrnmonia, heti been added. leirst put, the silvqr Walnuts come eriginollY front Per - sic, almonds from Central Akin. 'Sweden, 1%rauee, amnesty. rind Fin- ed havv eciesns• mire in live I &IAN WINSLOW% 50011111,9 Sir or hes hem aced So • plairen, of inneeser for thrt 591111ron, :Idle 1.53/08)004 Frande, though supposed to be the most highly cultivated country, has mi211111noinlliooln waaci;r0LIn_fao.rest and 174 Beware of Ointnients for Catarrh arwierarioni from reputable ph rsietons; as 100 Chwe manufactured by 7.3, Ohonef 51 00..1 cr, .tinage they will do is ten f ld 3, tha amid MI ran possibly derive from them. lie, l'a Co.tarfit ...well, you 'didn't ask him much 1 leeo..0., contains no ineromy, nnd e talone in. I 330PPOS0 he deceived you in the mat- ternelly. acting diriotly upon the bloodied ter 2" t Hair, Cabtrrh Cure be Aura yon got the rt. that. l3ut just when I was congra- fres: 7 tellatiag myself that I at least had Sold by Dregethaeprica 22.2 per bottle. reformed 0/10 young man I found I that he didn't need any reforming. Mare Family Ville aro the best. terrible. shocle, and I broke off the - SINGING 0.--N 71:j13 MARCH. No positively Nvas tot addicted to . any one of the bad habits I made ' him promise to abandon. It wart a , Max, .03 permittitg and even ca- m longer anything in it to make it eouraging soldiers to sing when on engagement right away, There was interesting 1" the. march, a privilege which, has --- has also been arranged that any nol- boon strictly•denied until recoil -ay. It Bon acres 113 1111.M land, but only 5 provided with such instrument at the who cro" play on any of the 24 million out of England's no mil_741°.1. million oni al sootlamrs 19i, aro emaller musical instruments shall bo cultivated. expense of the State. I was cured of Acute Bronchitis J. M, OAMPTIELE, Bay of Islands, ' I was cured of Fe.eial Neuralgic by MINARD'S LINIMENT. WM. DANIELS. SpringhilL N. S. ' WaS cured of Chronic Rheumatism by MINARD'S LINIMENT. Albert Co., 117. 331. years old and the plater() of health and strength, PLEASANT FOR I,ANDLADY, A took at 0, cheap boarding house played a gamo a, grumbling boarder, a newspaper Minn:mist, by eei ving 1 11000 of sole leather ineteed of beefsteak, "'nine° changed your butcher, Nes, or theca mi»utee at the irether. "Same butchee es usual," replied ronizing smile. "Why? "Oh, nothing much,' said 1,114 ini- morlet, trying to in en impres- sion on'the steak with is knife and fork, "only this pioco t mutt ir: the tenderest breakfo.st I hove had in this house 'fibr some wee(s," SOZODONT Tooth Porodor 250 Mew elm Muth Red voarlta err the Orld. in ono doy. No Lure, No Pay. Price 25 cents. TM highest inhabited spot 117 1111 r- ope is the observatory on blount Et- na, 0,076 feet above See level. Mistress (initinight)—"X don't in- tend to dome down stairs to lee you in this time of night again." Now Girl (reassuringly) --"You won't havo to, mum. One of my friends took an impression 0.0 your lock, and he's making a nice key for me," THE MOST NUTRITIOUS. GRATEFUL -00 M FORTING. During the past year there wore 11- 116 wrecks on British coasts, a de- crease of 160 on the year before. Mind's Liniment Hallam Hanralgla October', with an. average of 2.67 inches, is the wettest month In the year in England; November comes se- cond, and August third. Take 1.41xativo Ammo Quinloo Tablets XL drutratt.to refund the money if it falli ro cure. E. W. Grove's signature is on oaoli box, 21o. Tbe Sou1,11 African desert fox lives almost entirely. upon ostrich eggs, which it breaks bY thee' against a stone. 111. C 11848 Preserves tho teeth. Sweetens the breath. Scrongtheno Ma sures EVERY TOWN CAN HAVE A HAND SOO illustraii moon thod free, Write no fur any duns lo 7111aste at, W011051 RIM WHALEY ROYCE F.6 CO., Limited, ItECOVERY Cr REASON. /Cieg Otto qf Bavaria, 'teem lost ine reason twenty:eve years ago, has just recovered the Ilse of hie tongue, and has been askiag for his mother and others Nebo have -been dead for some years, Nis Mind ia /IOW clear as to ovente that haPPeted before his aillietioa, but it is a blank so ler OS 00 18013 quarter of a. century is Rei, ziz 4-eze/0/040", dteisai Toronto, One, and Winnipeg, Min end all kindo of horisoHorislum also LACE CURTAINS vELIAW11."' Write toes about yOura. BRIMS AMERICAN 01'5180 00,0os ISO, blentraeh Is a Salm et Gilead preparation. It ouraa 0eld Sores, Chapped,,,, Rands,. Murals or Skin Diseases. It (5 not EION HEALER. Large Boxes 250. DrUpf- gists, or Tha noodles Co., Toronto. won AT HOME, w. want tho eon. piece of mon women and child eon to work for us, whole orepere tenesknatIngiroern socks and othor tar. tlelos at their own homes. We *booty yarn sea matselal, and pay for al, work assent tn. For cordial, partiettlart odd rood, Tho Pcopleis Matting Syncilaates, (Limited), Toronto, Oat. 17.)14=24r. tai2 Dominion Line Steamswips 1101101561 to Thomool, Boston to' 1+140. pool. Portland to Liverpool. Pie Quoins. Lar'grantl. Ymbacatnalope. Superior ocomenindgair 1.ro anedolers. apeolal aeon/Ion Ida born 5110n. to LW nocond Saloon add VA n/Olanava;:non:::1;:t. loweof Immo end all partioulars, apply to ear wok AlvTolat 718` to Idmarootkodlle • The Important: ni‘ Co sideration .r to the inns or wolorot with ii &peon, `a• Canada's Minim, Co any eecoadaty cOnsideratiOn 19 the and WESTERN CANADt Toronto strot. le; ,Itt TO ifrI44Ini.4-1.4.144.144-14 1414" ef