HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Herald, 1903-04-17, Page 2► ASSESSMENT SYSTEM
C anadtan
A eceptable
P1 eeeeettry
Active
D einocratie
1 decal
Admirable
ry one Such
Q btu;' noble
R easone,ble
ell esirabi e
Essential
R sg.tstered
O areCul management
ealtlty growth
t riginal features
Superior merit
;equitable rates
N otable record
F lnaneially sound
Reserve unquestionable
a mpressive ritual
xeeptlonai inducements
q ational reputation
efinite benefits
Second to none.
'Full Information cheerfully given.
Organizers granted- Apply to either
W. F. Montague, Grand Recorder.
Hamilton ; or W. F. Campbell, Grand
Organizer, Ila,mllton.•
tier Denny Jew Is.
Tile value of the jewels at the dis-
posal of the German F•mpress is
about 31250.000. Of these, how-
ever only $500,000 worth are her
' private property. Tine others belong
to the crown and are simply lent to
the Empress. The present Empress
does not care to Near jewels except
on state occasions nor does -the Em-
peror care to see them on her in
daily life hence weeks often pass
without her seeing them.
•
Not warn by
t
ub Erg
but Cleaned
g by Washing.
Illi 11011 1
New Century
Washing
Machine
cleans by forcing hot
suds forward and
back through the
fibre of the clothes.
Ball bearings and two strong spiral
springs make it easy work. Your
hardware dealers will ecrow it to
you or write for booklet,
THE DOWSWELL MFG. CO., LTD.,
HAMILTON, ONT.
Bad for the Skin.
Sarby's Maga'.ine.
An Episcopal clergyman of Cin-
cinnati. was being shaved by a bar- '
ber who was addLL'ted to occasional
sprees. The razor manipulator cut F
the ;arson's face quite consider- 1
'You see, Jackson, that comes from
talking too much drink," said the
Iran of God.
„Yes, gab," replied Jackson, "it
makes de skin very tendah, sail.
do fotr a tack."
DR. A. IV. CHASE'S „ ..
CATARRH CURE
is sent direct to the diseased
parts 3p the Improved �•lotve.,
Heals She ulcers, clears the air
passages, stops droppings in the
throat and permanently cotes
Catarrh and Hay FeverWBlower
free. All dealers, or Dr. A. W. Chase
Medicine Co. Toronto and Buffalo
A. Married Man's Musings.
Courtship is poetry; marriage,
i first year, blank verse ; after that,
I prose.
1 After a white every married man
comers to be a. firm believer in mind
reading.
Along »;'Dont tlas time the new
• i leavens we turned over recently begin
, to fly back.
1 ' Wbere :.there's a will there's a way
;to break it—u,niess it's a woman's
kvill.
It was Raid of a certain great man
Oat he metal be ;silent hi seven lan-
e
i kttaggs. It is rarely that a woman
performs onc-roventh of this feat,—
i Pittabui,g Despatch.
{ P. C. RICHA RDS & CO.:
I Dear Sirs,—Por some years 1 have
(caused
only partial use of my arm,
ca'us+ed Jzv a sudden strain. I ave
cased every remedy without effect,
until r 'got a sample bottle of
• ( INARD'S LINIMENT. The benefit I
received from it catagen me to con -
Sanaa its nee, and now I am happy
1lto *AY Pe -
Stored my armcompletely R. W.HaRRON.
etarl>tamiss, Ont.
• Sandals the Latest load.
Sandal., d eignet.l for ladies' even-
ing erea,r, sa,; ti the Queen, have al-
ready appeared In the shop windows,
and will rloubtio.ss ern long be sten
In he (h'awinrg room. A west -end
boot= leer recently exhibited a pair
of sandals he had made for a CUs -
tomer, which would have graced the
feet of a Roman empress. The boot
iexpert believes that the sandal has
nome to stay, and that the shoe,
,arrhich has held sway for over twelve
eenturieta, is at (net threatened with
lA rival.
Wood's Phosp'Iaocliltte,
The Great English Remedy,
is an old, well estate,
lished and reliable
preparation, Has been
proscribed and used
over, do years, All drag.
n
stain the Canada selli an
ofd
recommend as being
.'Before used .After, the only medicine of
its kind that mires and
gives universal satisfaction. It promptly and
rmanently cures all forms of .Nervous Weida.
Dress, Etrtissfonn.t, Spermatorrh.cea, i'mpoieney,
And alleffectsof abuse orexcesses; the excessive
1 arse of Tokraeo, Opium or Stimulants, Mental
tiaad .Erafn Worm, all of which load to Infirmity,
) Xnsanity. Consumption and an Early Grave.
!Price SI per package or six for $n. One will
tolerate, six twill sure. Mailed prompty on re•
eoipt of price. Send for free pamphlet. Address'
TLto Wood t onxpteiay,
'Windsor, Ont',•epanaadra,
WHEN WARD .
ACTED CHEROKEE 5yy
iHbre le a story of Artenrus Ward
wbicit ]idle never been in print. It
WAS to'ki to we nwe by • 011e of the vic-
tims, who years afterwards was sent
as 'ambitssadoc ,from the United
States to a prominent country in
Europe. Artelnns was lecturing in
a western city, and two prominent
,so'ciety young mon invited hlm to a
little ,supper al' or the dii :course was
over. it w,ae nearly :i o'clock In
the mors ing when Ibis h alffi turned
out into the ,silent rind deserted
streets to escort Artenrus to the het -
tel where he was IStaying. The hu -
nearest \vas feeling pretty brisk and
hes stopped suddenly on the pave-
ment :tad gravely Saiti :
"Bid you ever hear me give the
Cherokee Wit r -whoop ?"
His companions admitted they had
not had that pleasure.
"Well, •eetel Artemue, `'I think I
can waken the whole town, altheugh.
I ann net sure of area:tam the move
distant suburbs, and with that he
tent forth an ear -piercing yell the t
m'sin the sleeping city in Ids 'm-
ut:: nett, to ighltorhood tlt:nk the. Day
of Judgment Intel come. As the echoes
of the appalling war -whoop alien
away, .slirill policemen', whistles
were lien rd in \-snow: tlirt'etlone,
wl•c'renpo:i AriCelli '.t tu.nei, de,$)+tee
his two comrade, and ran like the
warrior ho had imitated. Before
the two young neat eol:ld gather
their wits a policeman appeared
out of 'tile du•rknees and arrested
that.
Drunk and diisorderly and disturb-
ing the peace,— .said the officer;
"make no r'eeleta'ncc or it will be
the worse for you.".
And thin he blew his whistle again
to summon help in ease the two
aehould to •n nl;ON him, which they
had not the slightest intention br
doihig, but they were thunderstruck
at the prospect of spending the night
in the cells and baying their respect-
able names in the papers next morn-
ing. Thy swore to the policeman
that they had net uttered the shriek
or murdered anybody as he seemed
to suspect, anti the hobby s' rcastie-
ally advised Lhe.m to try that Story
on the magistrate in the morning.
As they parleyed there,. a tall, dig-
nified gentleman in evening dress
strolled Along.
"What is the trouble, officer ?"
asked the newcomer in a most
urbane tone of voice.
"Drunk and disorderly," repeated
the policeman.
" Oh, I beg. your pardon," said the
stranger, "but I know these gentle-
men and can vouch for their so-
briety and respectability."
" And who the deuce are you 7"
asked the officer, not too well
pleased at the Interruption, yet
somewhat mollified by the politeness
of his interlocutor.
"I am Mr. Artenrus Ward," replied
the othe,+'. "I lectured hist niglht be-
fert' some two thousand of your best
citizens at the Opera Eouse, and
among my audience I understand was
your own chief pf police, so if you
wish me to accompany you to the
station I shall be most happy to do
so."
The policeman
an crcrn
ed his hand.
from the t h.>u• de
I r of the future
am-
baa~sadoh for he h.td seen the name
of irtemus Ward on the bonodings
in letters three feet long, and he
had a deep respect for any man
wjto c' .uld have hist name printed
in Kuoni gigantic form,
'Ott, if you know; the men, ear,
it will be all right, and I won't run
them in, but who in thunder let
out that blood -curdling screech?
Did you hear it, sir 7"
"I did'," admitted Artemue, suave-
ly, and, furthermore, not five min-
utes since a man ran down in the
direction from which I, came as
hard as he could go, 1 believe that
he was the disturber of the peace."
"Alt, well," said the official, with
a sigh of relief, "that'll be the man,
bad luck to him, and h'a'il run right
Into the arms of Mulligan, for
that'd ron Mulligan's beat, Good
morning to you, gentlemen, andmy
beset apologies to the three of
you."
"Tim mistake was quite pardon-
able," said Artenrus, with his most
distinguished bow, Mid hie .led his
bewildered friends amen—Robert
Barr in Saturday Evening Poet. ,
'r if No One Ever Marries Me."
(By a Bachelor. With Apologies.)
If no one ever marries me...*
And they don't seem' very keen,
For I can't pretend I'm handsome,
And my purse is rather lean—
If no one ever marries me,
I'll get along all right —
I shall play at golf the whole day
through,
And at bridge the livelong night.
I shall have a little sailing yacht,
And a motor all my own ,
And I shan't be plagued with child-
drten's Jilts
For things that th'ey've out-
gh'olw'„n.
And when Fin sick of everything,
And dull as .dull can be,
i shall think how glad I've made
some girl
Who didn't marry me.
—Punrch.
Good Sense and God's Grace.
I have peered into quiet "parlors,"
Where the carpet is clean and 'not
old, and the furniture polished and
bright Into rooms where the chairs
aro neat and the floor carpetlese; 1
Into kitchens where the family lice
and the meals are cooked and eaten,
and the boys and girls are as blithe
as the sparrows in the thatch over-
head, and I see that it is not so
much wealth and learning, nor cloth-
ing, nor servants, nor toil, nor idle-;
nese, nor town, nor country, nor
i(tation, as tone and temper, thaait
render homes happy or wretched» And
I see, too, that in town 'or country
good sense and 'God's greet) make life
What no teaohere, or accomplish-
ments, or means or society, can make
it -the opening stave of an ever-
lasting Nairn ; the fair beginning of
an endless existence; the godly, mode
est, well-proportioned vestibule to a
temple of God's building that shall
never decay, wax old, or vanish'
a I
way.-- , bI . yob n Halle
Never get ,between a dog and has
hboonnbeyor between ra man and his
Like the running brook, the
red blood that flows through
the veins has to corne from
somewhere.
The springs of red, blood are
found in the soft core of the
bones called the marrow and
some say red blood also conies
from the spleen. Healthy bone
marrow and healthy spleen
are full of fat,
Scott's Emulsion makes new
blood by feeding the' bone
marrow and the spleen with
the richest of all fats, the pure
cod liver Oil.
For pale school girls and
invalids and for all whose
blood is thin and pale, Scott's
Emulsion is a pleasant and rich
blood food. It not only feeds
the blood -making organs but
gives them strength to do
their proper work.
Send for free sample.
' SCOTT Sr BOWIcg, Chemists,
Toronto, Ontario.
soc. and $a.00 ; all druggists.
Letters are Reversed.
In North Wales the Welsh word
for "now" is "rwan." In South Wales
it is "rwan" spelt ,backwards --vim ,
"nawr."
A Woman of Forty-five
is young and loveable nowadays,
but she is at the threshold of the
time of rheumatism, lumbago and
neuralgia.
MB SHOULD iri.NOW
that there is one sure and true and
speedy curo for them, giving relief
almost the instant the first spoonful
is taken, and driving oft the last of
the disease in one to three days.
'The
Great
South
American
$^t, hetu-
neatic
heIS: " Cure
does It.
Miss M. C. Kennedy, Toronto,
writes:
Before taking South American
Rheumatic Cure, 1 •es ratable to put
my feet on the 11. r and could not
obtain relief front the doctor who ,,
attended m after tan„v
tteude e. ., °;h' tlylo '.
t I t c a et .tely.'
THE QRIIAT SO' 11 AMVIIIRICAN
IKIDNeV CURS
,a invaluable to wam'n especially.
Rel:oves pain in urinary erg•;, - ".n
MA hours, and effect.. a •are, a per-
manent cure, very qui k y. l9.
The Lesson Conies Too Late.
Pearson's Weekly.
Helene—Mamma. says we shouldn't
eat too much.
Archibald—But it doesn't feel like
too much until afterward.
Beware of Ointments for Catarrh
that Contains Mercury
as mercury win surely destroy the sense of
smell and completely derange the whole sys-
tem when entering it through the mucous
surfaces. Such articles should never be used
except on preacrlptlons fromreputablephysi-
clans, as the damage they will do Is ten fold
to the good you can possibly derive from
them. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured
by I 7, Cheney & Co. Toledo, 0. contains
no mercury, and is tarsen internally, acting
directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces
of the system. In buying Hall's Catarrh
Cure be sure you get the genuine. It is taken
internally and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F.
J. Cheney & Co. Testimonials free. Sold Y
Ball's Family Alla arreithe bester bottle,
French 'Dried Beef.
Put into a •saneepan with enough
cold water to cover it, one gtaarter-
pound of finely ,shaved dried beef.
Litt come to a boll, then drain off
and add one level tablespoonful of
butter and two shakes of paprika.
Eton) ready, on e. hot platter a half
dozed nicely brollod mushrooms. Put
on, each of those a shake of paprika,
and a few drops of lemon juice. Sprin-
kle over these the beef and gravy.
ijC9MiWevlB„�7 !t• , i
Don't
lit®i 1cey with
a Cough.
Just a little tickling cough
may not suggest any trouble
but itis often the fore -runner
of very serious lung disease.
Gray's Syrup of Red Spruce Gum
soothes and heals the irri-
tated membrane and the
cough passes away. Gray's
Syrup of Red Spruce Gum
is a carefully compounded
preparation and is a specific
remedy for all throatandlung.
affections. 25 cents a bottle.
One bottle will demon-
strate its virtue.
firay's Syrup
of
Red r
WO'1'CU THE ORClIA1•WWS.,
OflleiaLlnstructions for Spraying fon
the San Jose Scale.
Trees must oe thoroughly pruned,
andt ail rough, bars and .iacbiui' re-
ptrlved,
' jewel a ,suiflcietn't supply of mater-
ial; on beau, anti it proper pump for
applying it..
leo not spray the trees while wet.
Tlborougbnes,s in preparation ant
treating Etre Imperative.
Soap meet be wsetl .while hot, 234
pounds to the gallon, and altpifuU
aelry thoroughly after the erosl,e.
are; over and behore the hands open.
nal oil will esuulsify with ira pound
of ;coop to the gallon of oil, anU will
take the place of soap.
Cruse petroleum undiluted, ;should
bo applied with a very fine t ernvorel
nozzle, and every part 'of the tree
covered with the least posslble quan-
tity of oil.
Oracle petroleum, diluted, mut be
applied with a reliable combination
pump, and a medium sized nozzle, in
the proportions indicated by the
size of the air chambers which
wort( 'be air tight, and the plungers
parked ,so hard that the pump werles
stiffly.
Crude petroleum will emulsify with
2.3i pounds of soap to the gallon of
oil. Use :i in 0 in winter, and 1
in 10 on foliage. The nozzle .should
not be too fine.
Kerosene will emaildyify with
pound of .soap to t e gallon of oil,
and is recommended only for sum-
mer work, 1 en 5 to 1 in 8, Ivey 1 in
0 for apple, pear and plum, and 1 in
7 for peach trees. Apply with a
ratter coarse nozzle iu bright, dry,
airy weather.
In preparing emulsion, the eoap and
water mast be boiling when added
to the oil, and the agitation ecn-
tinuecl slowly while the cold water
Is being added. Soft water is always
best for emulsions.
Lime, sulphur and salt ; one pound'
lime, one-half pound sulphur, one-
third pound • of salt, if salt is used,
to the gallon of wash. The sulphur
should be pulverized; slake the lime,
which must be fresh, in hot water,
add the balance of the material, boil
two to three hours, dilute with hot
water, and apply hot with a rather
coarse nozzle.
Any good force pump Is suitable ex-
cept c
ep for rte hanical mixtures. While
In use the pumps should be cleaned
each night to prevent corroding and
clogging of the attachments.
For successful spraying a first-
class equipment is necessary. The
valves should act promptly, and hold
all they get. The hose should be
heavy enough to give ssuffieient pres-
sure without danger of bursting, and
long enough to allow the operator
privilege in reaching every part of
the tree.
'.Che extension pipe should be In sec-
tions, 15, 80 and 60 inches, joined
with couplings., This will give seven
convenient lengths, imitable for any
work, and when all are in use makes
a pipe nine feet long. Every exten-
sion pipe ehouici be provided with a
stop -cock. The elozzle may have
direct oblique or lateral discharge,
according to thee work in hand. An
oblique di t ll:trge may b•' secured by
attatrhin g a Il ordinary e
g t oI 1 nary noz.l _ to a
!short 'piece of pipe which has been
bent to an angle of 45 degrees, and
a lateral discharge by attaching an
elbow and a nipple to a straight
pipes(
1
The advantage
or direct dis-
charge in treating
all sides ofali
mb
andve ei onion o t+
y p f the tree will
beett
b er under
stood when tried.
l r .
A Cautious leather.
Toronto News.
Young Dinklel,aum — Fodder how
much is twu and two ?
Old Dinklcbaum—Vat you want to
do, bay or sell ?
Mina rd's Liniment Relieves Neural-
gia.
To keep Off Old Ago.
Sometimes as the years go on the
muscles of the body, which should be
straight and strong, become lax and
convex, giving one the middle-aged
figure which Is such a tell-tale. To
prevent or overcome this, you must
be sure that you walk, stand and
sit erect. Walking is the best of all
exercises for these muscles. Relax
the muscles of the face, keep it scru-
pulously clean, and feed it With
plenty of cold cream. Remember that
after the body is fully grown it only
needs enough to keep it in good
working order, that the plainer and
the more simple the food the less
di estiv
the a organs are taxed, and.
that it 10 very Important that hese
organs should be In good order, or
even the necessary food will do harm.
Remember that you should eat light-
ly of meat; that green vegetables and
fresh fruits contain salts and acids,
and are especially efficient in dis-
solving the lime -salts, and that all
rich food and drinks tax the diges-
tion heavily, and furnish nothing
good in return. Drink freely of
water.
Nine Times Out of Ten Painkiller will
be found to fill your need as a household
remedy. Used as a liniment for etiffnees and
taken Internally for all bowel complaints.
Avoid substitutes. There is but one "Pain-
killer—Perry bavis'.
• Tired of the Bishop.
"Mother, I am tired ;• ean't :the
Bishop) go 10 ' heaven now?' said a
little girl, during one of Dr. Win-
nington Ingram'',s Sermons, The
authority for this beautiful legend
is th,e Bishop of London hiuvaelf. If
Bisliopls are allowed •such anecdotal
license, remark's the London News,
the mere layman can hardly resist
the temptation to report—or even.
to invent—,stories of the kind. For
Mr/tame, there is the story of the
little boy who desired in leis soul
to be devoured by, a; hon. when •asked
why, he retorted, "Becauge, dear
reether, the lion would think he had
nate en his inside, while really, I should
• "I'll LAUNDRESS'
LAME T'T'.
Bles any heart 1 Why was I ever born?
Toiling and moiling from morning till night,
and never a rest 1 If maty was made to
mourn, what was a laundress made for—
certainly not to sing. M' hands are nearly
charred off working in filthy suds, washing
other people's clothes, and other people's
floors. No wonder soaptnakers give prizes
with their soaps. Those who use some
of the soaps deserve prizes. I would
rather do without the prizes and have a
whole skin. And as to tiro mistress' part of
the bargain --imagine rubbing ten dollars'
worth into the value of five dollars, and then
getting iV fifty -cent prize for doing it? It
makes one laugh—that is, if ypu haven't to
pay for it. Hut I cannot laugh at my sore
hands. Well, well, I suppose what cannot
be cured must be endured,
t°Kollo, lti'ary! what's the matter, you
seem out of sorts?"
Out of sorts, Margaret, I should think I
am. Life is a burden."
" Oh, nonsense., Mary, you bave a fit of the
blues—it will soon pass off."
"Tho blues might pass off, Margaret, if
that were all ; but my poor sore hands and
aching back remain."
" Why, sakes alive, Marry, what has put
your hands in that state? �G hat hard thick
knuckles you've got, and how ragged your
nails are, too 1"
"Hard knuekl.,s and ragged nails ! Bah !
What is that to me, I wish you heard the
grumbling I have to stand. about hard flan-
nels and ragged clothes after I have washed
them. iIard knuckles and ragged nails are
not my only troubles."
" Yes, but why should the flannels or your
knuckles be hard, or your nails or skin be
cut up in that way?"
"Vi'hy, surely you know, Margaret, you do
washing as well as I."
"'Yes, but I hear no grumbling, and see
my hands, they aro as soft and fresh as
any lady's."
" VIT hy, so they are, Margaret; now, how
is that?"
" I tell you what, Mary, yon want to have
a doctor's advice."
" Oh, the doctor may cure my ]rands, but
he won't mend the clothes or soften the
flannels."
" Oh, yes, he will."
"A doctor mead clothes and soften flan-
nels 1 You always would Lave your little
joke, Margaret."
"Seriously, Mary, Iam not joking, and 1
will tell you a secret. Have you ever heard
of Sir Charles Cameron? Wtill, he is one of
the highest authorities in England. He war
President of the Royal College of Surgeons,
and has a whole string of letters at
the end of his name. Well, I read
a simple statement he made one day, and it
cured me of sore hands, hard knuckles,
aching back, softened the flannels, and pre.
vented the clothea going so soon to tatters."
"What a funny doctor, and what was it
you read ? "
"He said there was something he used him•
self, and he recommended it to women when
washing clothes; and I said to myself, I will
try that. I found out that Queen Victoria
herself used the same in her eaetles in Eng-
land, and that further convinced me.'/You
know, Mary, these people have a means of
knowing things that we poor people take
years to rid rut."
" Well, what did Sir Charles Canteren
say?"
"Well, it was analyzed s ec'p }simr Sunlight this: `I have care-
fullymens of the
Soap. The points in the em—
position of thin Soap that are most valuabh-
are its freedom from fres alkali, the large
percentage of fatty acids which it contain:_
and the purity >i th t t ' o materials eniP toY ed in
its preparation. I employ the Soap, anti
from my actual experience of it can strongle-
recommend it.'"
"I have rhtyeelf found from experience --
and it stands to reason—that soaps loaded T d
with alkali must ruin the hands and destroy '
the clothes.* I found there was no sense in :y How
v,
burning my hands during the day and rub.
bing glycerine on during the night. They sy soothing and subduing
t time t t better. Sunlight Soarthe pain that's the w�
8 pure
ISSTJE NO. 1(6, 1903.
Mrs. Winslow's boothiug Syrup should
always bo used for Children Teething, It
soothes the child, softens the gums, mires wind
eolie and is the best remedy for Diarrhaaa.
LEARN A PROFESSION
f,
;yl .•
11
IN FIFTEEN DAYS
•by mail so you can make from rive To mart
11OLLARS A DAT. For particulara write ,+
/t HAiUSEL, M. Rai% 2® North ee
re
Hamilton. Ont. r".,
ea
LADY AGENTS WANTED !
i ' ^ Yii,
' `.
TR ALL -WAYS READY
'et,
' 5K1RT SUPIPGORICER
:6 ,,, & *law:. AiJus1'a1 µl-,- i:,‘„,
e,
'Ji''r
Best Selling Skirt Supporter and Waist Adjuster ?
ever Introduced, Sells at sight. Good profit. IV
h
Send 25 cents for samoin and forme to ao•nnts 4;;i;!
' LISS ;+
On,
11000 MILE AXLE SHEASE
It Has leo Equal
Mannfaotured only by
THE CAMPBELL i "il"C, CO. t.i
of HAMILTO fd, 0eeerieRIO.
For sale by all leading dealers.•
The Flow of Milk
will be increased,
Wlygotoall the
trouble of keeping
cows and get only
• ,- ,' about half the milk
� : '••,• they should pro-
p ,"„'*"ht e%" jt duce.
` ` Dick's -lice` ".v. iIGI
."re: Purifier
strengthens the digestion and invi-
gorates the whole system so that
the nutriment is all drawn from the
food. It takes just the same trou-
ble to care for a cow when she
gives three quarts as when she
gives a pail. Dick's Blood Purifier
will pay back its cost with good
interest in a few weeks.
60 cents a package.
Leeming, Miles t Co., Agents,
riONTRr.AL.
�• ,�,1,,1 Ae!J,-+, ,,.+)..+Z.}a,J�; 13,V <, t1 ,1:LtJ`"R-n,",<•lg
Crl'r40<4P <,.•?C rtw ,¢w'anh-<yrt<C< P F.,
*<
7.411
.4 Pend
�� R' • L ,a,
i. y
l' 1
,'IllaoE
MARK,
aria .
never go mi o ge . i g
being made from oils and fats cannot
hurt the hand or the clothes. Imagine the x €1
foolishness of rubbing the adulteration of "s` d ' e# .l$ ala
common soaps into the skin and into the iti 0 ' iiw
clothes, and then having to wash out not a
merely the original dirt of the clothes, but'
tate soap adulteration as well—that is. fe
washing dart with dirt. Simple Simon could Curers -
;r ,. r®
scarcely do worse. alYr
"Oh, Margaret, I wish I had known of d `'''' i.i+
Zoo Price, 25.c: said 50C:
a
kaq�
k.4,:S441,fi:?'�t'.t",'E'd�3e'PYA}�&?tatii3dw,'l .ti+.UK-�'a" '
this before. My hands might have been
like yours today. I will try it in my next
washing."
"Do Mary, and be sure it is Sunlight Soap,
and ask for the Octagon bar. It is an ideal
shape for the laundry. And just a word
before I go, Mary, if you find that your
grocer does not keep Sunlight Soap you have
only got to send his name and address to
Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto, and they
you a sample of S
will send Sunlight Soap
g
without cost."
Nortea absolutely f 1y a tact. and It means In
e
*Nene
—The
every -day lana e that the skin cannot be hurt even
if the hands ireimmersed
for hours in the suds of
Sunlight Soap, because this soap is rnado from oils
and fate pure enough to eat; and there is none of
that burning sensation that is caused by alkaline,
One Didn't Pay.
He—Will you teach me bow to make
love to you ?
She—I will if I can get up a class.
—Philadelphia Inquirer.
Settiers' Low Rates West,
Via Chicago and Northwestern Ry.,
every day iron, February 15th to
Aril 80th Colonist one wily Be'e
oud-class tickets at extremely low
rates from tutations in Ontario and
Quebec, to points In Colorado, Utah,
Montana, Nevada, Idaho, Oregon,
Washington and California; also to
Victoria, Vancouver, New Westmin-
etor, Nelson, Roseland, tete. Full
particulars, rates and folders can be •
obtained from B. H. Bennett, General
Agent, 2 East King street, Toronto,
Ont,
When a fellow can't raise a beards
he feels Cott that is coo of the ills
that flesh Is hair to,
- p
Keys in Cold Storage for Nosebleed.
In the lee chest oe a German-
town residence there are always ly-
ing four or five big keys. 'This Is
because the nose of the little son of
the lliouse bleeds every few days,
and nothing stops the hemorrhage
like the dropping of a. large, cold key
down the child's back. He suqirms
and cries out and then, in a moment,
he is well; his nose stops bleeding.
A Physician said recently that the
cold key remedy for 'hemorrhage of
the nose was as old, lie supposed, as
keys themselves aro. "It is a very
good remedy," he went on, "and its r r`.•',
Curative power is due to the shock
It gives." Philadelphia Record. �"
Minaard's Liniment for sale every- +%i'•
•
where.
se
GO D
T
New Yorlc and Boston Via New York
Central.
The numerous trains, the excellent
service. the uniformity of its trains,
its four tracks and the location of
its depots le Boston and New York,
make the New York Central the fav-
erite line to those points.
Any ticket agent will confirm the
above.
bo in heaven." Idle exalted notion
of aleeelvingathe king of ben,ste was Quite a mataber of men have man -
quite sufficiently alluring to&minter- aged to mount the ladder of fame
balance the trifling inconvenience of by hanging on to the coat-tails of
mlartyardoin by inwsticatioii; dthor,d. •
Mina'rd's Liniment Cures Burns,
eta
Getting at the Causes.
Philadelphia Record:
ilfaren. Muggits—Eew did you break
your huibanli of swearing ?
Mrs. Huggins --'I gave the 'alarm
d
cl,,,oek away and had the telephone
tokoo out,, 't 1 1 ,
Minerd's Liniment Career Dandruff,
Germany and Venezuela.
G'ermany's trade with Venezucia is
trifling in amount. The statistics for
five years show that but oue-fifth of
1 per cent. of Venezuela's exports
'were 10 Germany, and but one-tenth
of 1 tray cent. of her fniports came
from that eonntry, - 1
A •,sea'E-
libby's Natural Flavor
Food Products
These deiiciotts preparations allow of alt
sorts of impromptu spreads without the
Impromptu appearance, and permit the ,l
hostess to enjoy rather than slave. Our
booklet, "Row to Make Good Things to „
nate' ace to housekeepers." Libby's Al. sit
las of the World, containing 32 net' maps,
Published expressly for tis by the largest
map and atlas publishers in America, is
ready now. Indexed, and gives new 'naps
of China, South Africa, the Philippines,
Cuba, Porto Rico, and Is of as much prac-
tical use as any atlas published. Wemall
it to any address for 5 two -cent stamps
Libby, M6cNollt & Libby, Chicago
The World's Greatest Caterer's
?
',.'4t' YfaV4l±itt! it 407 •4i,',1, ,.;:44'