HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1902-2-13, Page 3Es
The Fred,
AGENTS WANTED'
To Sell Frost Wire Fence,
The strongest fence sold, made eatiretjt
from High Carbon Spring- Steel wire. Noi
tie wires or kinks to weaken the vvire. Tha
cross %vireo are held in place by the patented,
FROST LOcri. It never weakens Pr
slip. Exclusive territory givento good men.
wire Fence Lock.. Tsio FROST WIRE FENCE CO., tiestreo
Write for Catalog. • WOLLAND,1313
Ortr.
4dt,Atterdes0thr.teda10-b03100e1301r sco 42,lw .,tsetrloiloSedee tezt.idvappes,
TORE nu NO SNOW
WOXIX,D RE A BAB LOOE-GIIT
FOIt, EVTIRYBOPY,
What Effeet the Absence of SnOW
Mk.lad Have on the Bissi-
Mole of the World,
lVet feet, chilblains, leaky rocas,
etopped treble—Steep are a few of
the troubles soused by a lieavY leh
01 snow, Rod many people in WS
reentry MUM. be 'Oisiy too, glad to
be assured that snow weuld moor be
BeaLl again, sive London ,Answers,
Yet, the fulfillment of such a wish
woula be a great disaster,
1Sow would initmone teat the . a
Pence of snow would probably treb
—certainly double—the price of UM
ber. It eau be easily proved, hes
ever, that such would be the coo
The greater part M oar corm°
timber comee from the forests
Seandinevia, itusslo, and ()amid
all of which countries euffer from
very ocean winter. . Por some tiv
inontlis their surface is burled dee
under a inantle. ot snow, and th
thermometer in the. heart of th
greatest pine forests) not uncononon
ly falls to 80 degree below"' zero—
that is, 62 degrees of froot.
Snew boppeas to, los one of th
beet non-nencluctors of heat or col
in the World; and When the fall is
foot 'deep a thcamometer showing 6
ilogrees ,of .trost on „itst surface will,
lf, buried bimeath •thm snow, is
twenty to thirty degrees, Th
snow, in facto acts as an onormou
• blanket, otirsil keeps tlie 'intense col
Mom, the roots. of 'the trees, iseelOo
tionserving the natural wernith ef th
soil. Now, a fun -grown fir or No
way pine can stand almost any d
gime" of ' cold- and live, but a youn
tree cannot, do so. It might sprat'
during the summer, but a snowles
winter would
INFALLIBLY RILL IT.
If, therefore, snow ceased, the enor-
mous] timber oupplies of Northero
Euroile, Asia, and America would
disappear.
- Elven below the northern limits of
intense cold the thither eupply would
indirectly suffer. The enormous
logs of red -wood supplied by Oregon
and North California ate brought
down from the mountains on the
sprisig freshets of the mountain
streams. But without snow in th
mountains there would be no snow
• water slo supply these freshets. and
consequently the logs would have to
be brought out at an enormous ex
pense, along specially -constructed
s roadways. s"
Rivers all over the world would be
meet seriously offected by the ab-
sence of snow. Such great streams
es the Rhine, lthone, Danube, and
many others, are largely fed by the
graduat moltiug of the mountain
snows, It no now fell terrible floods
during rainy -winters would result;
while M summer the rivers would be
snore brooks, trickling through dried -
op wastes of sand and pebbles, Al-
most all of Luna's biggest streams
are snow -fed, Were theta to run dry
in suotraer the elibo•rate 'system of
canals '".built by, , Our GOVer11111ellt
• VOIll0 be uselese; a,nd families like
that of. two yeais ago would be -of
tonstant occurrenee; Until,,. finally,
the 800 millions we slow gSvern In
the Far East would bo dinainiShed to
a population of not over
FORTY TO IbJFTY MILLIONS.
Egypt lives on -suety. Without the
snow -water from the heights of dis-
tant Abyssinia there would be nO
Nile rC
flood . ho Nile would doubt-
less divipste away, mid disappear in
like Other of tho streams
• of tiro Aahara. The rich mud, which
makes Egypt the finest farthing still
on earth, ,Would, still be in its nar
-Live mountains, and Egypt itself
would boa bare and burning desert.
Glaciers are made entirely of snow
converted into rough ice by the etior-
mous , pressure behind it. What
would Switzerland bo without its
snow-capped peaks and giant glaciers
• winding-thete way dots into the -Vele
sleys? Incidentally it might, lie inept
Coned • that' if there 10aj =Oar been
any snow the AlosSond Other nitwits
" tains ,would lactiSe beistislong sago le-,
veiled by the fredomition of the fros• t -
and rain. SnoVe'Os the protector of
mountains. ' •
111' tho Arctic, howeverathe ehangee
caused by the absence of snovrwould
bo most marked. Greenland, instead
of avast, sismoth, 'mound of iso,
would bo a rhe o mass of fantastical-
ly Most -splintered crags. There
would, of comite, be no icebergs, for
thee° would be no glaciers to feed
thetn. •Only floe -ice caused by the
freezing 'of salt water would be vist-
ble. • Winter would be colder, sum-
mer, hotter. In all probability hu-
man life would be impossible beyond
40 clogreee north and south of tho
A 110TliER'S WARNING,
PEAES OF A TROUBLE TEA
AFFLICTS MANY 'YOUNG
GIItLS.
Tepolocheco Dim/nate, Nettrt Pale
pitotion, Fields) Appetite 'and
Pallor the Early SYnePt0mS ol
Decay,
`Ann the Sim, Orangeville, Otst,
Nord study at school, coupled.with
the lack of attentiOo Which sn'OrY
young girl merging into womanhood
ehould have, is yesponeiblo not orgy
for the many pale ia.ces und ntlietteato
ed tonne liset With uh lamentable
fromiency, but Is responsible also for
the loss of Many 'valuable youog
livee. .First there lei aa occasional
headache, and a eallowness of soon-
PleX1011, front which etages, if these
eaaly symptoms are neglected, the
eonditien gradually grows worse and
worse until decline or Consumption
sots in and'death °Jaime another vico
tim of parental neglect. Upon noth-
ere eepecially deyolves a greet re-
sponeibbity as their daughters aps
Proaeh womanhood. The following
trutibul story told a reporter of the
Sun by Mrs. , 0. Hermon, el' Third
Avenue, Orangevillo, carries a }mon
1,0 our mothers, Iiirs, Dorman said:
'About fifteen months ago MY daugh-
a ter,. Eate, while totteoding the public
0 'school sttfclied hard. We noticed that
she began to complain of headaches.
This• wee followed Wan, listlessness,
asel an utter indiffereoce to the things
that Usually intcreSt young girle, We
consulted a doctor, and 'Me took bot-
tle after bottle of Medicine, but With
ho benefit.• Often sho woold rise io
the morning after an almost • sleep-
less night, her limbs all a quiver and
box' heacIreeling. She would -be at-
tacleed with spells of dizzinese, and on
the least, exertion her heart would
Palpitate violently, and we were
really afraid she would not recover.
At this stage my husband suggested
that we should try Dr, Williams'
Pink Pills, and lie brought home KW-,
'eral boxes. Eato had only token the
pilln a few weeks when there was a
great change for tho better. She
grew, etronger, began to eat better
and to havo better color, and from
ihis stage it Was not long until she
Was again enjoying the best of
heolth and able to resume her studies
at school. X might also tell you
0 that those pills cured my dal:mister
Emma of an attack of rhetunatisre,
so that y011 see we have moth reason
,to protee them, and I earnestly
re -
THE SIMPLE BOER.
' BCow. Ne Is Imposed Um:6V By
Unscrupulous Pedlars,
•The Lennon correspondent of the
Manchester Guardian tone the fol -
toiling story to illustrate tho pro-
. foundairnplieity.of the "ve1d:0130er."
The 4imple veldt Boer, ie all in
fay& of buying the mostsiugenious
znechanisnis of an advaneed civilize -
Aiwa' which happen to panic his w ay.
/ This h4h1t, as the philosopher will
ailraito is natural to simplicity. Jo-
fiannesbilrg baginen know this very
owell, and they do well for them-
selves out of useless trinkets, highly
decorated Bibles, and such like. One
s bagman happeoed to take round false
teeth to the lonely farmt. A Boer
at ono farm bought a sot ot Meth
for himself, But the bagrnan had
tot firdshed then. "How many chil-
dren have you-'/" ho asked. "Eleven,'
"Well, why oot take sets for them
all ? They will grow up to need
them, and I May not be able to
ceisio agaiett Aeeetdingly eleven
SIAS Were "unloaded" (in nip infor-
mrisit'a pinaso) on the simple Boer,
Wad Were paid ter th novel:aka earn-
., frig infirmity of tile eleven children
and the oil -choice that there Would
be sio
Less then 000 Ivitile people' reticle
commena them to all mothers whose
daughters may bo suffering as mine
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills cure an
diseases that have their origin either
ist a, poor or watery condition of the
blood or shattered nerves. It is be-
cause they make rich red blood and
strengthen the nerves with every dose
that they cure such, troubles as an-
aemia, consumption in its, early
stages, nervous heatlache; St. Vitus'
dance, rheurnatiSln. partial parolysis,
kidney tfouble, indigestion, etc. Or-
dintory medicine merely acts. upon the
symptoms On the trouble, and when
such medicines aro diseontioued the
trouble returns'often in an aggravat-
ed form. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills on
.the contrary go direct- to the root of
Olio trouble and cure to stay cured.
See that the full name, "Dr. IVS1-
PiokOsills-fith Pale People," ie
found ein the wrapper of every box.'
If your dealer does not have them
seed direct .and they win be mailed,
post paid, at 50 cents a box or six
bOXOS for $2.50, 'by addressing the
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock-
vlilo, Ont,
• FUTURE DISOOTERIES.
SOME ' GREAT CHANGES ARE
VERY NEAR,.
Searchlight of InMrence Thrown
Porwaod, Not Backward.—
, , ',World Changes., ,.
r , .. . .
*.e. H. G. Wells, She seibMist and
thDariVin, and ddire to tiirect. a
lveliSt„ who' ootalkarticins WO mas-
ter,
'coaildeet 'gazeO'p So , future'stili
aeobs distant, ,deli ered a leeture at
the Royal Institut on, ,London,. le-
cently, on "Itiseiiv , of the Fu-
ture." This. did,. not,mean sto,aerial
flight or anyifight. development of
science, but discovery of the future
ae e whole.
Along certain linos with certain
linsitatione, he argued, a working
lcuowledge of the things of the Ms
tore Wait; practicable and possibles
Ai' during the past Century the tuna*.
ing searchlight of inference had been
Passed into the remoter past, so by
seeking, for operating causes histead
of for fossils the searchlight of in-
ference ithglit bo thrown into the
future. The man of seionce would be-
lieve at Met that events in A. D. 4,-
000 Were ea fixed, settled and un-
changeable as 'those of A. D. 1600,
with the exception of the affairs M
nian and his children. It is as sim-
ple and mire to work Out the Shang-
ing orbit of the earth In future 'until
the tidal dents limns ooe unchanging
lace, at SasirteVoird the sun, as it
is sto work back to the blazing,
molten past,
itanight be argued that than, indie
vidiSallyand collectively, was ay,
incalculable factor.
A 111311V 101,EMENT.
opposing the nature of the inquiry
and stamping it as -vain and hope-
less, but Mr. Wells eeenied to favor
the idea, that . 113011, though conipli-
eating, did not alter the eseential
maize 01 fildslotien. Ne ditt not be-
lieve in tile importance of the lead-
ing rams, and ho tiohfessed 1333 it be-
lief that if by sOrrie juggling with
space and tittle Caesar, Napoleon,
Williarn the Coilquaker and other
great Individualities had boob chengs
ed at bh•th it would not have pro-
duced any serious dislocations of the
(worse of destiny. Great Men were
no mote thaii\ boagee and isymbola
and instruments taken at haphazerd
by the incessant, consistent forces
behind them. alley Were the pen
nibs which fate ilsed In her WrGdillr,
and the Moro ono Ives indited to
in Britain's Weet African Colothem trust therle knees behind individeals
113e more oPe 00314 believe in the
PeeeibilitY 01 e reetOried inductive
view of the litture that woold eerve
is- 131 pelitice, remodel, social goal*
vaoces and in a thousand Wilye, A
elaborate directloe Of WOO:gloat
eeenomic and /mobil study tmearti
tho filter° end courageous refereeee
to the future in moral and religicole'
Oiscussien would be enormously
etimulatiog toad prat:able to the lo-
tellectual
That inan is 1194 lirod le a great
oud dieturbiug fact in solentille dies
covery in the futuro and the mice -
thin, What is to come niter mon 7
15 the most portistently *oscillating,
insoluble oueetien in the world, Bet
for the near futtire Mime few general
statemeots have
GROWN MORD CERTAIN,
Two year& ago it woe an irrespoo•
sible ouggestion, but now At Wen the
0000o00e03p1eee of Cabinet, Ministers,
that our deliao POIMIntions wero io
the opening phase of a. process of
cUfloo'eutiatin,
Secondly, it was inevitable that
the incise of the white population of
the world wool(' be forced in some
way up the scale of °Moloney within
two or three decades. Thirdly, rear
sons had been collected showing that
in the comparative near future hu-
manity would be definitely aod con-
sciously organizing itself into a
great world state and porge itself
of much that is mean and bestial
and dreary in 'Nile world.
The lecturer asked, Why obould
things cease at man 3 No creatures
lived under changing conditions
without ondergoilig changes. Numan
SocietY, he said, was neverostetie
and would presently Cease .in Ito at-
tempt to lie static. Mr. Wells de-
clared •
'Ole ate at the beginning of the
greatest cliange 'quit 4u1niul1tY
ever uodergone. There will bo no
shock as there is no ehock at a
cloudy daybreak. We are creatures
of twilight, but out of our minde
and tile iiimege of our minds will
epring, Detects that will reach forward
fearlessly. A day will come—one day
In the unending succession of days—
when the beings now latent in our
thoughts, bidden in our loins, shall
stand on this earth aS ono stands on
a footstool, and they shall laugh and
reach out their hands among the
stets."
In the crowded assembly that lis-
tened interested and enthusiastic
were Dr. Dewar, Sir lVilliaan Crooks.
Prof. Armstrong, Lord Rayleigh end
Sir Frederick Bramwell. The leeture
has ali•early aroused widespread in-
terest and will probably be much
discussed.
VERY PLEASANT.
"1 toll the stilly with gusto now,
but at the time it happened I was
badly frightened," remarked a well-
known autbor.
"1 bad penetrated into tho depths
of a Cornish tinonine. After making
certain observations X begon to as-
cend by means of .a bucket,'with it
miner for compaziy. Rappelling to
look up, -I noticed witb a feellug of
horror that the rope was much
worn.
"I said to my companion as wo
Swung in the an, ov often do
you change the rope 3'"
" 'Once every three months, sir,'
he replied. 'And it wouldn't do to
leave it a single day later, either.'
3' 'And how lotig has this one been
1flu,o?'
" 'just time months,' was the
comforting reply. 'We change it LO-
12101TOW2 "
•
'Mg CARE OF LITTLE ONES.
Sonne Sound Advice as to the
Best Illeiht.d Of Treating In-
fant .Indigestion.
NO thing is more connnon to child
hood than indigestion. Nothing is
more dangerous to proper growth,
raore weakening to tho constitution,
or more likely to pave the way to
dangerous disease. Among the ,symps
tOrlan 1)37 which indigestion in 'infants
and Yousig,. cltilciren naay ho yeadiloi
reeognized 'are loss of &pilaff°, nett -
Sea, eructatioes, coated tongue,Sliad
breatis, laiceepish, • and Matoelsod
Sleep. Indigestion may be toasily
cured, and Mrs. Is, K. Begbie/ Lintl-
tsay, Ont., .poluts out he* tins 11.1331y•
best be dolse. Sloe sayt• OSN'then iny
baby' -WAS thrhe montes 0.1ttrehe had
indigestion -very badly,' She would
-vomit her food just as soon as sho
took it, no matter what I gave bor.
After feeding she seemed to suffer ter-
ribly and. 100211(1 001010101 with pain.
She seemed always hungry, but ter
food did her 210 gbod and she kept
thin and delicate. She was very,
Sleepless aod suffered Isla) from con-
stipation. Wo tried several medi-
recononended fel-these trOublcS
but they dicl her no good. Finally I
saw 'Baby's Own Tablets advertised
and got it box. After giving them to
her sho began to improve in about
two days, and in it week's time I
coraidered lier well. Silo could sleep
well, the vomiting ceased, lier bowels
became regular and she began to
gain in weight. She is W a l'at,
licaltby baby, and 1 think the credit
is duo to Baby's, Own, Tablets and I
would not 11011, be without theta in
the. Uouse." .
' :Barites Own O'ablets 'is the only
Medicine sold under on absolute
guarantee tliet it °entities' neither
opiates nor ethos harmful drugs.
These tablets are a certaiu cure foO
all the minor. ailinesits of childhood,
5015)1 0.0 souk stomach, indigeetiOn,
constipation, simple fever, diarrboea,
They break op colds, prevent croup
and ellay the irritation accompany-
ing tho cutting 01 teeth, Price 25
cents a box at all druggiste, or sent
by mail post paid by addressing the
Da tholicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ont.
• ---14;
A COLD REJOINER.
'Dore ain't muell syMpathy in di&
wield, an' dot's a lack," said Mono-
derieg Mike. "X took dat policeman
into nut coulidenca I told hint dat
had all the trobbles extant; that I
wet ice' 0. collection of sorrelvsOt
"What did he de 3"
"11(1 looked nee Over en' den said it
Wos abeet time fel, -him to tette op a
colleetiOn,tt
Ceylon Tea is the finest
Tea tho world produces,
end is sold only In lead
packets.
3iaoko Mixed.and Grovel.
man tea drinkers try "Salado" Greets
BOUNTIES FOR BEASTS,
ANIMALS WITH PHICgS 0
THEIR HEADS.
Wolves are a great Pest
andsDanger.
The French Government's bill in
wolf killing 132 1888 w as over $25,
000, 1,816 )30.13's of ears having bee
brought in; and even in 1899 two
BI,2013 was paid, Tito bounty i
given not only ler full-grown wolve
but cubs also. Oddly enough, wolve
are practically extinct in the Alps lIn
Pyrenees, most of those killed bein
found in central provinces and in Al
sem-Lorraine. Last December a peel
of sixteen welves 100.8 8000 nem
Meltza
lusia, is supposed to be infested
.by oyer 'a moister of a minim
wolves. In 0X/0 ,V331131' recently 203
Russians were 1i110 b137 tliese cree-
tures, and the damage to -litre Stock
was set at 117,600,900, The wolf -
hunters, who, usually `use a Moe, pig
as a bait, get 02 a, head for their
bag from the Russian. Government,
and as the skins aro worth $2.130 a-
piece they find their sport very pro-
fitable.
Norway and Sweden pay a similar
price for dead wolves, which exist in
great numberin the mountains.
These countries also pay about $20
each for bears. In Scandinavia a
whole.villagomenerally combioos in a
bear hunt, and a kill of four or five
in a day is not uncommon.
India suffers more severely from
wild 0.01300.15 and reptiles than any
other part of the world, in spite of
the thickness of its population. The
natives are generally too supersti-
tious or cowardly to war against the
creatures width prey upon them.
Last year 25,160 human beings were
killed by snakes mid wild animals,
of whom reptiles accounted for 21,-
1101. Over 46,000 cattle were also
des thoyed.
The Indian Governmeht pays re-
ward for alnlost every kind of harm-
ful boast or snake. Last year a to-
tal of $132,750 was paid 01113 107 the
deaths of 19,776 wild aninials and
108,885 reptiles.
13083. dingoes—the Australian
wild dogs—killed sheep to the esti-
mated value of $400,000. But the
bounty of $9.50 a head has been the
oauSe of exterminating these pesti-
lent boast e for a long distance from
the coast, There axe plenty of them
still, however, on up -country ranches
and their destructiveness may be
judged by the fact that it single one
of these yellow -haired brutes will
Idll it dozeu sheep in a night.
13ut all other nounty giving fades
into insignificanee compared with the
enormous sums spent by New Zea-
land and New South Wales in their
efforts to cope with the over -increas-
ing plague of rabbits. Alter vainly
endeavoring -to fence out the grow-
ing hordes, the various • Australian
Governments were forced to offer a
bounty lor each rabbit killed, 4.
penny a tail was the usual amount
paid. This tooit effect in New South
Wales in 3883, and since then about
45,500,000 has been expended. by
this*overnment alone. The slough -
:4i' may bo imagined by the fact that
11 one year twenty-seven 'pillions,
were paid /or.O
The latest a,uimal upon which al
Government war has teen declared
plitusthiveday•atibaIttr1a,iat: 4bOax011171)1.plOTTZul 00.0,frt11:,
f00.B1031, so Malay towns aIS weer the
world are Offering n: Pbriny apiece for
rats' tails. Sydoey, , New South,
1Vales, is one, and. Copenhagen an-
other. . In ino latter city the kills of
the first three weeks were 6,094, 6-
616 and 6,780. The lumber has
since grown to over 10,000 di week,
and it is believed that by the mid ei
1202 rats will be getting scatee in
Deinnark.
ur-T0.0.0vro Barmen rows,
r.oh, woxi . of diaMetinttng the old
inuzale-loading giano, at. tile Moutll of
the ThanleS , and eloog the Sotitil
moult of England, aod replacing thern
by niedern 9.2 Inelt 6sineh outelte
firers, ono 4.7 -inch quieittirieg Mune
, having been completed, the atallori-
ties aro now carrying out, extensive
Works Tor the defence Of Fouibrok%
Cork, Gtbraltar and Groups
of 12speander and 7-1)01134de0 quick -
Ming guns have been Ineeed bs cote-
' outeding positions ,at the entrances
to the naval ports, each entranee be-
ing supplied ' with over thirty genel
neW armored shields and perapete,
end the latest mod most effeetive
r.enge-finders and eearehlighte. Spe-
cial dynamos for tbe searehlighte al -
se have peen provided, so as to pre-,
vent any aossibillty of delay or
11 brealtclown. At those forte which
am still waiting for their quhilalir-
ing armament a number ot huge n-
inth guns of recent pattern have
been placed ne a, precautionary raca-
,o, ysuruieu.sobnaontr4v,07 y
dear, I Want tO ask
before Yeti go off
o on thet long visit I" Wife --"A
✓ thousand, my love. What is it ?"
• "Don't try to put tho house in order
s before you leave." "It isn't hard
33 work." "Perhaps not, but think of
d the expense ef telegraphing to you
ff.. every time _I_want sontething."
..THE TURPENTINE
In Some Parts o/ the World
1 WOULDN'T WORK
GRANARY OF THE EXPIRE.
Winnipeg Business Man Has Vi-
sions of Bright Future.
"I firmly -believe that, before very
long there will be enough wheat
grown in Oana.da to supply the de-
mands of the whole Empire. That
is a consummation which we should
always keep in mind, IVe had a
marvellously good crop this year,
but a very mutes larger area will be
under cultivation next season, and if
tbeeeliraatio conditions are equal to
what we enjOyed last yew*, there will
be an encirmots crop in 1002." •
'Phis is the itaterneet of Mr, W. V,
Gordon of Winnipeg, formerly of
Montreal, • man well acquainted
with the western country.
"There it ono featu're about the do-
ooloposent of the west that should be
noted," he continued, toad that is tho
manner in which Aniericens are be-
ginning to SWarre acrese the line,
mid snap ins the best farnsing propo-
eitions. 'This movement hes been a.
most noticeable one during the poet
year or two."
THE PITIFUL EXPERIMENTS
OF A YOUNG, XA.N TO CURE
HIMSELF 01' RHEUMAT-
ISM.
Liniments, Oils, and Everything
Palled to Relieve PEis Sufferings,
—Ite Used Dodd's Eidn.ey Pine,
And They Cured Niro.
Bolssevain, Man., Jan. 27.--(Spe-
cial)--Isive years ago, Mr. C. 8. Hol-
den, of this place, then quite a young
man and a farmer's son, became al-
most it cripple with Rheumatism.
Nis own account ol bis experience is
very interesting. Ile says :
"For about a year and a hall I
had a dull pain hi my right shoul-
der. It grow much worse in (mid
weather, and in winter was 00 bad
that I could, scarcely •Ose my arm at
all. When I wont to bed X 'would
have to take my left band and hold
my right shoulder to turn over. The
pain was nearly unbearable. Words
eannot express M. I often said if I
had to endure such pain all my life
would rather have no arm.
"I was almost a cripple and could
not help coraplaaning very bitterly.
iFsverybody had something to tell me
, to do. One said, 'Rub 011 Spirits of
iTurpontinet I did so, but only
:grew Worse. Besides this X tried
every other liniment and oil I could
'bear of or get, but all to no pur-
pose. Nothing seemed to give me
' the slightest relief. I was growing
very. downhearted 0.0 it looked as if
I was never going to find anything
to cure my dreadful pain.
"Now it happened that Tr° had
801110 of Dodd's Eiciney Pills in the
house—we always keep them—and
having tried everything else, my
father suggested that 1 take some.
•I commenced, and when I had taken
three doses I felt some better, and I
kept on till in a few days the pain
was all gone.
"This is five years ago, and I have
not had the slightest pain or ache
since."
' The vine will not grow at it great-
er height than 2,800 feet above the
sea, 1301' the oak above 3,850 feet.
The fir, however, flourishes up to
nearly 7,000 feet.
Monkey Brand 'Soap will clean a.
liouse from Wier to roof, but W0214.
Wash. clothes.
Fifty-foor goIlons out -of every 100
of London's water supply b0r11CS:
from"the Thames, ` 23 gollona`
train the Leas
' 11%in• and,7r; r o
ld.
Laxative Dronoe-Quin Ina Tablets cure a (Fold
ha one day. Nd,11r5. Nb Pay. Price Mounts.
I,ondon'e passenger Mottle numbers
1,267,500,000 a, year. 3-1 Londoners
'*sod river boats as much as Paris -
fans, the steamboat traffic would be
1,800,000 a year.
EMPIRE STATE EXPRESS—FAM-
OUS JrAS'T TRAIN.
This magnificent train, Out of Um
fastest trains in the world, runs
daily except Sunday from New York
to Buffalo, a distance of 440 miles
in the fast time of eight hours and
Cif teen Minutes.
The time occupied from Buffalo to
New York is nine hours, and as St
lands its passengers right in the city
the otdvaritego over ottser lines must
be admitted. The New York Central
hat a dozen fine express trains be-
tween Buffalo miti. New York daily.
itis the best.
1,4.00 naillion gallons Ol milk is the
annual product Of British dttiries.
Of this 4.00 in.illions aro used in
Initter malting,
ilsOrd's 'Almon! Me Rost Hair rissiorer
Iliggs--"I wonder what makes Iny
eyes so weak 3" Diggs—"X don't
know, unless it's because they ore in
a weak Place,"
One ounCe of:Sunlight Soaris worth morethan REDUCES
Two ounces of impure soap, EXPENSE
asu for tlie OetegOn Bah 11 year grocer mind °supply, writs to
rasuR BROTIDIXS, LIXITEll, Toronto, maims /Animates and address,
and trial sample of Sunlight Seep will he sent pn Eno 61 oat
OEY...oal TEA. Load Packet°. All oratoret
;i;dAltld re,0.001.1111` Ork/Ret 'le A ^4'
Uranges9 Lemon% Fresh Fish t Ail Kinds
3BlE1n71.3£ =Rancor' ete11111.
TUE DAWSON CO161311SSIEON CO., Limited, TORONTO.
soomona, of Butter, Egg% Poultry, Emmy, Beane, Annie!), Potatoes, Solicited,
259 in every 1,000 of the world's
population own Xing Edward WT.
as soNe,"cign. .
—+ •
CALIFORNIA - OREGON EXCUR-
SIONS.
Every doy in the year. The Chicago,
Union Pacific & Northwestern Line
IMES through first-class isulhoan and
tourist sleeping cars to points in Cal-
ifornia Ond Oregon daily. Personally
conducted excursions from Chicago
to San Francisco, Los Angeles and
Portland, leaving Chicago on Tues-
days and Thursdays. Lowest rates.
Shortest One on the road. Finest
scenery. Inquire of your nearest
ticket agent, or write 33. H. Bennett,
2 King street east, Toronto, Ont.
The material used in the Great
Wall of China would build 160 sect,
structures as the Pyramid- of Cheops.
Minard's Liniment for Rheumatism
In England there is one clergyman
to every 610 people, in tbe TJnited
States one to 680. Spain holds the
record with one to every 400 inhab-
itants.
To CURE A COLD IN OnE DAT.
Take ',Fixative Brom° Quinine Tablets. All
draughts refund the money if it fails to cure.
01. w. Grove's signature la en Sank box. 215.
+
High class pig -iron contains 931r.
pounds of iron to the 100111., the
rest being carbon, silicon, phosphor-
us, sulphur, and mauganese.
Minard's Liniment Is the Rost
The island 01 Jamaica, has three
districts. The northernmost is 'Corn-
wall. Next. comes Middlesex, and
then Surrey,
For Over Sixty Years
Mut, WINSLOW% SOoraisa Svoltr hns beta used by
millions of motherfor their ohildren while teinhing.
aeothen the child, softens the gums, ahayapale, puree
wind colic, regulate. the stomach nod how*, alto ss the
beet:woody far Diarrhea. Twenty-11re cents a bottle.
Sold by druggists throughout es world. Its Furs and
.4, for "335,5. Wmarow 45000s050 Bram.:
Of English people 450 in each mil-
lion are convicted of crime in a year,
In Ireland, however, the average
fails to 216. In Italy it is 1,010.
A'
zerds4tg,:g.i 0..4131e1b4e1Th-k` to," '
GootionieltzLetstg';vioter, 3 received
great -benefit froin"the use- of MIN-
AND'ILTNT1)8Fr in a severe at-
tar -Ltd ,Lacstriiipei 'sand X have *fre-
quently Proved it to bo verY effective
in cases of Inflammation.
Yours,
W. A. IlUTCHINSON.
esessaesescesoe.seesseassasooiosanisaateme
Johnny returns frons school with
his exercise book all blotted. "Rear,
dear, yeu naughty boy I" exclaimed
his mamma, "You've mac spoilt
your now book." Johnny (equal to
the 'occasion)—"lt isn't my Molt,
; I have a black boy sitting next
to mo in class, and he cut his Unger
and it bled on my- copy -book."
4
Deafness Cannot ae Cared
by looni applications, as they cannot reach the
diseased portion 01 (130 oar, Thero is only one
way 133 01335 dnainestt, and that is by ammo.
Menai remedies. Deafness le mimed by an
inflamed condition of the Memos lining of tho
oustechiee Tube. When this tube is in-
flamed you have a rumbling sound or ironer
feet hearing, and when it le =trols. closed
deafness Is the result, anti Unless the inflame
maiiiM Oen be taken 083and taus tube restored
to its normal omiditilen, hearing will be de.
strayed forever; nine cases out of ten ere
osneeilbS. totarrli, 'which le but ea in,
tamed condition of the mucous setae's,.
Wo win give One ilanilred Dollesofor any
38130 01 Deafness (caused by catarrh} thet can
t be mired by Ron ()anima Cute. Send
or oiroulars, free.
37,1.0010111311313 Ss CO., Toledo, 0.
Sold by Druggista 31e.
Inas Family Pille aro the best.
"You speak," said the fond moth-
er, "o,boot people having strength of
mind, but when it comes to strength
of don't nand, My son Willient sur-
paoses attybody I ever knew,"
THE MOST NUTFUTIGLIS,
EPPS'S
GRATEPUL-GOMPORTiNG.
COCOA
.....k1REAKFAST'-..SU PPE
01113 cal KIPLING.
Rudyard Mipl11ig eve that he Wan
once presented to a young lady who
atmost, immediately began to whim-
per, and whose eyes were so full oi
tears that he felt compelled to ask
if she were ill or if anything were
the matter. Looking at him between
her sobs the disappointed maiden
broke out : "Oh, I thought you
were so tall and so handsome."
Minard's Liniment Cures LaGrippe
313 London 900,000 persona are
living more than two in a room, and
26,000 Mx or more in a room.
W P 0 1114 •
TNE MIDST POPULAR DENTIFRICE.
C2.4611.1riVr3EBN.T.„ur-si
CV A:N.3MM X -NX
9!2' C:31) CIPX° 2allt
30' Ce NlYforManra
Pregame the teeth. Sweetens the breath.
Strong Mons tho BUM
Gerits'Suite Weaned
BRITISH • AMERICAN DYEING cone;
Montseal, Toronto, Mows, Es Quelled,
Is a Balm at 6110101 PraParatiolm
oures Cold Sores, Chapped Handsi,
Wsunds or Skin 0111eaces. It Is not
ansatilhetlo, but a healer—THE Kan -
MON REALM Large Oozes 230. Drug -
EMS, or The elleadins Co., Torststo.
rass
Instruments, Drumm Uniforms, Els,
EVERY TOWN CAN NAVE A BAND
Lowest prices ever emoted. Fine Catalogue
600111 ustrations, mailed free. Write us for any
thing in musk or inimical lastruniontm.
WHALEY RUDE & 00" Limited,
Toro/141,one.. and Winnipeg, Man
Dominion Lino Steamsuips
Montreal to Liverpool Boston to Liver.
pool. Fortlaud to Ltrentool Tia Quern..
town,
Large nee reit sten...bac Superior coeonnuedeldpa
tor all 01,00 08 ea./maroon,. Baloons and Blditerootrit
tro smith:hips. Special attention has been given to the
locond Saloon and ThirrLOIssa a000rnorodatton, FOS
intoner nonage end Partintlara, apply to any KIWI
le the Corepany, or ,
. „
Richard., 1,1I11. & . D. TorraneadCed
sta. St., Beaten Montreal and Portion&
Baker's hap°
gives Bich,
fe"iornt
01,
otiA04
4 dAl FARM
SP F.LTZ—
What So It I
Catalo1011*g
SEEDS
000,00e Customers.
Prondent record of. any noodarnan on oneth,
and yet we are reaching ont for more. Wo
doolro, by July 131, 301000 *070patrons and
hence this unprecedented offer.
P.O WORTH FOR 1-156
10.111nallnpon receipt of Do In ste*w,pi.
gm:resent eztorotWftvi?, worth nnathars -34
- 50 907201• 6030ad083'O stamps.
"01=5ZA.r-.
00
P105.0
30,34 31,3,
041, with
lac for 0.1nive,
Catalog
Mono, re.
&nommen.
SYSTEMATIC AVING
),IVE SAVING
SUCCESSFUL RING
..
. Advantegeoue facilities foe Me ao*
cumulation of spore eland ol 11.00 arid
it unmade, With the regular addition ot
a profla producing interest ere Afford.
.. ea by the :swifts., DePartnalutt et
: : THE CANADADERMANENT
:I:
6 6 .
.. anti WESTERN CANADA
MORTGAGE CORPORATION
Toronto Fit1ilet411011014`k0
m
V++++++++•1+1+.01÷H4+44++!'