HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1900-10-26, Page 6ate
E Hu
�N EXPOSITOR
OCTOBER 26, 190+5
SECURITY,
Genuine
Carter's
Little Liver Pills
Must Bear Signature of
See Fee-Sir/die wrapper Below.
Very email aselgas easy
FOR HEADACHE,*
CARTER
ITTLEFla DIZZINESS:
FOR BILIOUSNE13.
IVER FOR.TORPID LIVER'.
PI LLS ,F0H,CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.,
IfOR TIM COMPLEXION
trtis., CilTaleIL1 Purely ;MIN
to take tits a gar..
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
VETERINARY
JOIIN GRIEVE, V, S,, honor graduate of Ontari
Veterinary College. A 'diseases of Domesti
animals treated. Gaits promptly attended to an
chargemoderate. Veterinary Dentstry a specialty
Office and residence on Goderich street, one doo
leas of Dr. Soott'a office, Seaforth. 111241
LEGAL
JAMES L KILLORAN,
Barrister, Solicitor, CorIveyancer and Notary
Public. Money to toad. Office over Plokard's Stor
Maio Street, Seaforth. 1628
R. S. HAYS,
Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyanar and Notary Public
Solicitor for tho Dominion Bank. 011130—in rear o
DOminion Bank; Seaforth; Money to loan. 1235
T BEST, Barrister, Solicitor, Conveyancer
ej • Notary Public. Offices up stain, over C. W.
Papstai bookstore, Main Stroat, Soriforth, Ontario.
1627
Tit heeitY BEATTIE,, Barrister, Solicitor, &e.
IA Money to loaa. Oto—:,"ady's Bleak, Sea.
forth.
167911
ARROW & ()ARROW, f3arrister8, Solicitors, &o.
a_x Cor. Muni ton St. and Square, Godericti, Ont.
.f. T. CAjutow, Q. C.
1076 ellARI,Eti ()ARROW, L. L. B.
Scorr & MeEENZIE, Barristers, Solicitors, etc.,
Clinton and Boa field. Clinton °Moe, Elliott
block, Isaao street. Bayfleld (Moe, open every
Thursday, Main street, first door west of post office.
Money to loan, Jane a Scott &E. H. McKenzie.
1598
HOLMESTED, eooaestior to the late Arm of
MoCaughey• & floitamsted, Barrister, Solicitor
Conveyancer, and Notaiy. Solicitor for the Can
adian Bank of 00=10(00. Money to lend. Farm
tor sale. Office In Boott's Block, Main Street
teaforth,
DENTISTRY.
G. F. BELDEN D. D. S.
DENTIST.
Rooms cver the licnaracn Baak, Main Street
1691-tf
Seaforta,
FW. TWEDDLE, Brussels, Dentist, (formerly of
Seaforth,) Graduate of It. C. D. 8,, Toronto.
Post graduate course in cross n and bridge work at
Haskai's School, Chloago. Office over A. R.
Smith's store, BtUESSIll. 166941
Dg.r. SELLERY, Dentist, graduate of the
Royal College of Dental Surgeons, Toronto, also
honor graduate of Department of Dentistry, Toronto
University. -Office lo tho Potty block, Mansell..
Will visit ZurIela every MondaY, commencing Mon-
day, Juno let. 1687
JJm it. R. ROSS, 'Dentist (successor to F. W.
Taeddle), graduate of Royal College of Dental
Surgeons of Ontario; first class honor graduate of
Toneete University • orown and bridge work, also
gold work in all itS forms. All the most modern
methods for pal -ideas filling and painless extraction of
teeth. AR operatione carefully perforiatd. 3 Rico
Tweddle's old stand, ry• or Dill's grocery, Seaforth.
1640
MEDICAL,
Dr. John McGinnis,
Hon. Graduate Lc' -1n Western Univeralty, member
at Ocitaric College of Phyeicians and Surgeons.
Office and Pa sIdenee—Forratirly ocoupied by Mr. Wm.
Plokard, Vietorla Staait, next to tho Catholic (Month
cails attenae.1 promptly, 14613x12
AW. HOTIIAM, M. D., C. AI., Honor Graduate
and Fellow of Triolty Medical College, Ora-
cluatt r Trimta tati, t nifty, Member of College of
Phasii and Sur,: oval of Ontario, Constance, On-
tario. it a form« rn o•ampied la lir. Cooper. 1650
ALX. BEITIIIYINIC, 11. D., Follow of tar Royal
College 'et Phyal glans arid arirgeorit, Kingsben.
filiseCtesor to Itr. Mioalii. °flier lately occupied
• Dr. LI &add, Mo. 8ar „et Seaforth. Residence
..
. --Comer 6f VIctorla ao,..trd. to honse latsly coaupted
I, E., Danoliy. 1127
' -
DR; FJ. UR ROWS,
ease reeleeneeheetetea and SurgeOn, Toronto Gen-
eral-ILA/4W. Honor graduate Trinity University,
soem'.ar of the College of Phyeteians and sureeoria
et °oast°. canner for the County of Huron.
-mei; mot 110341mi-a Gialerlah Street, East of tho
elan eloit oitur. 'a Tel Thane 46.
1386
DRS. SCOTT & MacKAY,
Pfl YSICIAN3 AND SURGEONS,
le,lch street, onp3.11t..) Methodist church,Senforth
G. ataiTT, grado Oa Victoria and Ann Arbor, and
r Ontario College of Phyuicians and
8nria Csironee 13r County of Huron.
ca at &PK AY, !pow gr aluato Trinity University,
goai Biota!: ib 'rriniby Medical College. Member
College of Physt !taus and Surgeon, Ontario.
1433
cKiiiop Ilitectory for 1900.
JA SI Es Ma' a I t ART, e, tic aforth P. 0.
ALEX. GAR+ na ER, Lendbury P. 0.
JOHN G GRIM E, Cooncillor, Winthrop P. 0
JAMLa 01.,al ti DIAN, ouneillor, Becehwood 0
ARCHIBALD Counellior, Seaforth P.0
.1011N C MORILlattN, Clerk, WinthroP I'. 0
DAVID M. Ituaa, Trenaurer, Winthrop P. 0.
WILLIAM EVI•INS, A.,aesecr, Beeehwood P. 0.
CHARLES 01)Dlia, Colleetor, aeaforta p. 0.
RICHARD looLLA 11.0, Safiltiary Inapecter, Lead •
lion. P. 0
Eureka
Veterin-
ary.
CA CLS'1110 .BALS
A. R. liable and euealy Remedy for Cur
splints, avineeSweeny, Etc.
a an be ileat in ,ers Aso of Veterniary Pro. ti
-
where Stimulating Linitoente or 11,ieter9 are pa -
to -We d. See parophlet i 11.4.11 accompanies co er;
bitta . It has- no sup -riot. Every 1 ottle said is
polaranteed to giv matt ifeietion. Prive 76e a bottle.
t. jl driiggista. In aluatilu ill the troetnura
et ienep Jae ie avec See Pamphlet.
Prepared by
THE El'Itla
-••1 ni Ont.
NARY M EDP CINE 00-,
101 52
OLD MAN DA
ING
There was 'a " be
I V
SON'S "P10
BEE."
77
" at Old Man Daw-
son's, on aloequito C -eee, in Alberta, North-
west Territory; Cant da. Dawson was an
old-timer of the old•timers, buffalo- miter,.
Indian -fighter And fu %trader ; now io was
growing ola and had taken up -a horrieetead
of ene huedred and sixty acme 01 wild
Northweetern land.
It may sound' sm oth and delig tful to
speak of " taking up " a piece and ' break-
ing " so meny acres ; but, as a sob r fact,.
this little a -meter o breaking the virgin
soil—pictureeque ph ase 1—is not a festive
pic•nio,
Now, a' bee" is n attempt to turn his
breaking bosiness int a festive pic•mo. 1It
works thu f You _beve "a place —one
hundied add sixty ac ea of Canadian earth,
mud, trees i weeds, reeks and enosquiteee.
Vastly proud were y u when you" entere
for" your Farm. I pell Farm with a cap '
taiF, beciatiee that i how you used to ta ink.
about it. I" There re many fine 'cot one
wood_trees on my arm ; '.' -" there is a
spring on iny Farm' ; and you figiire out
on paper that a wal round your Farm ,is
two miles bang, and hat you are the °Wrier
of six mill on six h ndred and ninetersix
thousand and six hu dred (6,696,600) sqUare
feet, of this earth: Then you can turn Your
attention tp reckoni n g the value of • pos-
pective crojps ;' so any -acres, BO many _
bushels, at so much bushel. It is a faseiti-
ating and harmless amusement, and May
-make yea swell visa ly with joyful pride ;
but it will not break our land, . I
There are, thep, hree courses open to
you : The first is, y u may " rustle" for
yourself, and by the weat of your brow and
with -the help of a te m and plough (bought
on tbe time system) ou may break an in-
significant looking - patois of land; the
second, you may pay a man three dollars an
acre todo the work for you—this is the
• way of the " remitta ce man" and othersof
his kind ; the -thi d and most popular
coarse is to have a " ploughing bee."
You invite your e eighbors to come to.
your farm on a certa n day, and - to bring
with them their plow and teams ofhorseo.
Then their part of th programme is to set
to work and break y ur land for you.
In the meantime g odladies of the neigh-
bourhood, ministerin angels, are busily at
e
work in your " shaek," 'preparing the tables
for dinner ; some, to., pass up and down
the field with drinka. or the men who are.
changing your green, bush -grown, wild land -
into. rich, ,blaele, he lthy-smelling earth—
drinks of cold tea, * ter, and (whisper this)
.beer in wooden pails nd stuff in bottles.
-Perhaps the stuff in t e wooden pails and in
the bottles may explain why some of -ahe
furrows look like reeds shaken in the wiled ;
in may also explain why some of the - men,
when they come in to.supper, trip over Lithe
doorstep or upset the r teacups ; but it ie .a
jovial, good-natured crowd, which does not,'
traesgrees the ru1e jof western - etiquette
when women are pres nt. . , 1 ,
Perhapsaome of the men may look un•
usually eoleron ; others -again may talk
somewhat loudly ahout the number of
rounds they made, how Jim ;Snaffles team
of bays "led the bee,' and how Long John
got stuck in that Wulf of willows on the
north•eastPorner ; and thus the talk goes
on about the thoiteend-and-oneethin 'of
interest to the settler in a new countr ,
The tenderfoot sits still and. listen
' • anii
while he rnay pretend' to despise much' of i
—as oorning from men of
Beefy face and gr bby 'and
.! Lor". ! what, do they understand ?
—bu 'yet cannot helj admiring the force,
the r adinees—yes, d.nd - the knowledge—
which are imasterihedind are breaking ,eed
taming tilts wild Nor,eh-west. ' •
All day the" bee , had been in. progress
at Old Man Dawson's. He was very popu-
lar ; many friends had rallied to hie call,
and a long; broad patch - of freshly turned'
earth gladdened bird eees when evening
came. It had beer a mese successful
" bee " ; the weatheri had been perfect, a
cool breeze keeping -down the mosquitoes
and enabling men andl horses to work at
their best. • •
Full justicebad been denote the stuff in
the wooden pails and in the bottles, and a
feeling - of...mellove contentment possessed
everybody. Good work had been done that
day ; now that the evening had opine. there
was to be a dance at ' Old Man'. Dawson's
. 7
home. .
The girls of Mosquito Creek were there
in full force ; end, like all North-western
damsel°, they wore plea:sant to leek upon,
healthy, lively, good-natured and . hardy,
with an endless capacity for hard Work and
an eeually endless capacita for play. In
staying power they are far superior to the
winner of a six days' bicycle race. He
might faint, froin exhaustion if. he stood up
-to all the dancee at, a Nortlaweetettn dune° ;
but what doee a western 'girl do ? She will
drive 20 miles or morel() the house, dance
with tremendeus actiVity and vim , from
half past eight in the evening until eix
o'clock next morning -; I keep herself perfect-
ly cool end smiling through all the dast and
turmoil of the root, .while stroieg men, are
gasping for breath add , looking streakily
hot ; and then she will, drive 29..mi1ea borne
—tired. -'t. Not she ! Mind you, fiho has not
‘• eat out " ono dance.
While the girls were arriving thee) men
who had been ploughin., were behind in. the
e . _
stable getting into thei best clothes, which
they had brought, with them in the morn-
ing. Other young mine wore driving ilp—
young men from the fort, looking rether
dressy in their thin shales, collars and gaudy
ties ----and fully conecioi s of the fact,. There,
satisfied looking indiv dual; with a high
i
too, was the school te oher, a lanky, self -
i
collar and oonspionouti curt. He was a
" dood " (man of fitehion) ; not a doubt of
it, for he wore a in Chinese -biled shirt" on
11 occasions ; and there was an awful
Stop iti with
M U LSI N
.A little coughi
—the tickling, 11
ouo-h once, is 1:4
he least harm,
fl itch, and for
ough is scratchi
But the cough
n and comes ba
Of anitch that h
comes back, .T
thing that makes
Intlamation:
alive ; like a seed i
ground; it will gi
it, even in childre
Take SCO
S ION of Cod Li
the germ will die.
If you have not tried
sample, its agreeable List
ti1407"1` & BeilliNR., Ch
aoc. and arm° ; lt
_SC0 TTS
f Cod Liver
ng i,s nothing
at makes .yc u
me dust ; not
You scratch
Yet This
ng an. itch.
that :hangs
A sign "
Ings on and
ere is- som(2-.
hat itch,
t. germ ; it s
fl moist warm
ow if you h t
n. ,
'5 '.EMUI
ver Oik an
,
t, send for free
will surprise yoir
enlists, Toronto.
druggists.
SUNNY WOM N.
Who has not known the woman whose
disposition is described by that one word
"sunny?" There's always a lau rh lurk-
ing on her lips. Her cheeks ere ever
ready to dimple in smiles. He • house-
hold influence is as brightening and
stimulating as the sunshine. othing
can be crueler than to have this unshine
blotted out by disease. But this is a
common cruelty. The young ife who
was the sunshine of the home iecomes
its, shadow. Every young wife should
len6ow the value of Dr. Pierce's avorite
Prescription in the protection a id pres-
ervation of the health. It p omotes
regularity, dries the drains'whic 1 enfee-
ble body and mind, and cures in anima-
tion, ulceration and female w akness.
It nourishes the nervous syst m and
gives to the body the balance anl buoy-
ancy of perfect health. It is a strictly
temperance medicine.
tte can itsiy that your medicine cu ed meat
writes Mrs. Maud Pearce, of Stoutsv Ile, Pair,
field Co., Ohio. 11I had suffered abo it twelve
years from female weakness and I had almost
given up, thinking there was no cur for me.
Then I heard about Dr. Pierce's med eine and
thought I would try it, and can say t at iseven
bottles of your `Favorite Prescription made me
well. I am now able to do my own h usework.
I took about twelve bottles in all of D Pierce's
medicines. Took some of the ‘Golde Medical
Discovery," Pavorite Prescription' and some of
the 'Pleasant Pellets.'
Dr. Pierce's Pellets cure cons ipation.
legend to the effect that he owned a tooth
brush, and that he varnished hi yellow
•shoee. Down with such base tru kling to
the conveneionalities of the effete e et.
There were also other young men there—
dusky half-breed, black•haired an bright
eyed, stepping with easy cat li grace
with their moccaained feet,
Then there were the wall -flowers. These
are always men at a western dano , for a
woman mint be over one hundred y 3ars old,
deaf:blind and ceimpletely paralytics before
she will sit out a dance in the Northwest.
So the wall -flowers are heavy-booteo yeerths,
slow of speech, sitting like graven i ages o
the benches round -the room.
Of men at a western dance there s neve
any lack—men of all kinds, she es an
sizes ; a motley and cosmopolitan crowd
young Englishmen with histories youn
Englishmen without histories or ifs, stolid,
bovine ; Scotehmen, both Lowland re. and
Highlandere ; Irishmen with ready jest
French Canadians, black-eyed, gesti ulatieg,
good dancers these ; young men fr m east-
ern Canada ; Parry Sounders ; a d fish.
eaters from Newfoundland ; and 11 bent
upon enjoying therneelves and h ving
" good time."
Next, the ladies ! 'The chief thing to be
noticed is that there are not enough of
-them s 'there never is. Married or .single,
the ladies are there to dance. You will see
the house -mother with half a dozen grown-
up sons and daughters, tripping it as light-
.ly and as tirelessly as a echoolgirl. Babies
are ,krapped in shawls and laid on the bed,
or given to their fathers to aold while the
mothers dance.
" Partners for a quadrile 1" shouts the
self-appointed master of the ceremonies a
big half-breed, with shining face a d eyes
sparkling with excitement.
Then follows a rush to recure artners.
It is considered the " proper thing for the
young man who has brought a lad to a
dance to dance first with het ; after that he
is free to choose other partners; bu a lady
is bound, by the rules of- ;western et quette,
to refuse no man who twits her to dance
with him. This is is law which mus not be •
broken..
There is room on the floor to dan 30 two
sets of a quadrille, and eight coup ee are
standing in order as the , fiddler- etri es up.
" Honour your partners !" " Cor ors the
same I" " First couple heed to the right ;
four hands round 1" .And eo the dariee
goes on, the caller shouting his dir etions,
and now and then piloting and j uttieg
straight a dancer who: is going stray.
When he says " Swing your partne !" do
ii—not it delicate touching of finger ips at
arm's length, but take the lady's wai 1, in a
streng embrace, and whiil her Jesig rously
round, off her foot if yeu can, and s e
not , object, This is no -languid alking
through a quadrille, but a dance ; stamp
your feet ; kick up the dust. " Grand
.right and left !"
Watch' that. halabreededancing wi h the
light -fooled Irish girl.; -that is dai cing •
music ie in their feet, Look out fo thie
heavy feeted Parry Sounder who is prom.
onading " behind you with the mother of
fourteen young Canadians. Look out for
him ;-ho will kick your heels 'off if y n do
not get oub of hie way with your part- er, a
dark -eyed maiden whoa() dash �f ndiau
blood aceounts'for the supple gracefulness
of aer figure,
" Promenade all ; you know w ere !"
shouts the caller. This i a delicate hint
that that dance is over, " and you lead the
lady to a seat, gasp out " Thank you,' and
make a dash for the open door to try t cool
off. While you are doing this another dance
will be in progress, and through the lends
of dust, you will see your late partner being
whirled roundeby a member of the orth-
west, moulated police. .
. Dance follows dance ; now it is a vaitz,
in which some of the tireless girls, 1 eking
paitnersf dance with each other ; now it ie
a }ig,,and that Is where some of the half-
breeds shine. Have you ever seen the
" Red rim jig," danced by half-breeds ?
" The next dance will be a aong !" so
says the facetious master of the revels. It
is an old old jut, 'yet it never fails to raise a
leugh, even the graven i nags on the
benches joining in with a hoa guffaw.
)1
a. Song from Mies Cavallo
Miss Cavallo baehfully trie
the room, but, is easily daugh
back in triumph.
" Reelly I cannot sing. , I
not. Please excuse me. I h
cold."
" Nonsense ! nonsense ! Song from
Cavallo !"
" Put your cold in your po
Thua adjured Miss Cavell
companiment begins to trill
about a certain young man
With a little black mill tache ;
And every time he 1 oked at m
My heart went like a flash.
It appeals from the poem tat the faith -
leas swain deserted her for 1a " sour old
maid with lotto of cash"—to r yme with the
" little black moustache."
Thunders -of applause break forth ae she
concludes with the warning " to all you
girls, &c., not to fall in love ith a stylish
" dood with a little black mu tache."
Oh, yes, the North-weet is audden death
to " deeds." nen Mr. J hnny Meech,
who has been Bleeping or the fleet@ of the
atuff in the wooden pails and i the bottles,
is asked toefavor the company with a sprig.
Evidently he expected this, fo he at ince
begine to warble a plaintive itty of f n•ty
stanzas, mainly about nothing. He has for-
__
Lorun out of
and br light
would r ether
ve a very bad
keb !"
, withou
orth a b
Miss
ac -
Ailed
gotten the tu
many of the
hinder him, f
half the word
Everything,
Mr. Meech p
next to hint it
eays Mr. Mee
not till then,
Honest folk
any of them p
applauding w
all.
Then Miss
consents to at
the long Fad
who met, fn
young woman
forward demo
into her hut a
marriage.
Great apple se follows this song, after
which there ere more dances, quadrilles
and Circasia circles. About half -past
twelve we ha e supper. The ladies of the
house go roun the room with teapote of
strong tea an plates of cake—oake of many
kinds, sweet, ticky stuff. One of the wall-
flowers on the bench close beeide me de-
vours no lees hen fourteen different speeies
of cake, wash d Own with :three or four
ming of tea.
After Hupp° we have the "rabbit dance."
This is a nort ern dance, and it is eminent-
ly suited to a old climate, as any one who
has taken pa t it will confess. But
imagine it on warm night in the latter
part of June,i, n small log shaok, with the
dust rising in hoking oloude.
The dancer form up on the floor, in two
parallel ranks foaling each other, the men
standing in o e the women in the other.
Then the pair ;tithe head of the line join
hands, and wi h a peculiar, skipping step,
dance dosvin t e centre first, then separate,
the man donci g alone at the back of one
line, the wom n doing the same at the batik
of the other 11 .6, till they arrive at the bot-
tom, vehere th y meet, join hands again and
dancteto the t p and once more separate.
Then the fu begin, for the girl starts off
alone and the an has to catch her. This
may sound ea y, but just try it. A little
room Which eems to be full of attire,
beinshee and p o le's feet ; a blinding dust;
two lines of m eng men and women—you
must not brea through the lines— and a
laughing girl, your "rabbit," supple and
full of vim, skipping gracefully away from
you as you pl nge about, run into the wall,
inteccepting foot ; these are
tures of the famous 0' rabbit
at 1' rabbit "has been caught
rtner take their places at the
reeks, and the second pair
eirejourney ; this is -repeated
rabbits" have been caught.
In anew, with this difference
rabbit" has to catch, the
generally does it in quick
re shout encouragement to the
with criticisms, "That ain't
! You muetn't run J , Skip,
abbit ! Keep time to the
uadrilles ; the lamps are put
o of sunlight shine ehroegh
nes. The big " caller -off '
g rather hoarse, and has re -
e of a tole, straw colored
ley hair. This cello* young
ght himself into notice by
litof abstraction and dron-
ost lugubrious tone of voice,
e song. After thus, having
the evening's hilarity he re-
ancholy efforts to keep alight
until he was summoned to
he dancers.
ming brightly now; thoughte
ilked and other " ohores"
e the people to begin' to get
me. The men go outside
e patient horses that have
ith mosquitoes or standing
ling smoke of the "smudges"
weary hours.
eople go away in bumping,
s, some on horseback, and
pies in buggies and buck.
wasnot there, in fact she
at dances in the Worth -
I
ee-if it ever had one—and
wOrds • but that eloes not
r it really does not matter if
be left out, or all of them.
°waver, Must come to an end,
uses, and some one sitting
ks, ''Is that all ?" ''Yes,"
he" that's all." Then, and
oes the applause break forth.
! :kindly folk 1 I wonder if
rceived the'delieious irony of
en, they heard that that was
Cavalle, forgetting hercold,
g enother ballad. This telli
ffeeting tale of a sailor -mane
cocoanut grove, a dusky.
' the fair maid of Bohee," it
1, who invited the wanderer
d Made him a proposal of
or fall over an
some of the fe
dance."
After the fi
she and her p
bottom of the
start out on t
until all the "
Then tbey beg
that now the
man, and she
time.
The oulooke
dancers, mixed
Rabbit Dance
skip like a
muaic 1"
Then more
out, and streali
the window p
has been getti
signed in fay
youth with wi
man had bro
coming out of
ing forth, in a
an alleged coin
contributed to
lapsed into me
a wheezy pipe
"call off" for
The sun is s
of cows to be
to be done eau
ready to go h
and hitch up t
been fighting
in the evil•sme
during the len
Some of the
creaking wago
-some happy co
boards.
Mre. Grundy
Seldom appear
est. .
Miss Cavallo,
who brought h
her home by a
the Beau Brum
the owner of a
frame houee up
Old Man Da
has had "a goo
There is pl
Northwest, but
to be seen at
Chamber's Jour
baeely deserting the youth
✓ to the dance, is driven to
oohing young farmer,: oue of
nells of the neighborhood,
hole section, fenced, with a
n it,.
son's bee has ended ; every
time."
nty of hard work in the
thel hardest work of all is
a Northwestern dance.—
al,
•
Tot Ca ses Night -Alarm.
" One night y brother's baby was taken
with Croup," w itee Mrs. J. C. Snider, of
Crittenden, K " it seemed it would
strangle before e could get a doctor, so We
gave it Dr. Kin's New Discovery, which
gave quick relie and permanently cured it.
We always keep it in tho house to protect
our children fr m Croup and Whooping
Cough. It curc1 me of a chronic bronchial
trouble that no dthcr remedy would relieve."
Infallible for C ughe, Colds, Throat and
Lung Troubles. 50o and $1.00. Trial bot-
tles free at Fear's Drug Store.
A Teacher's Value to the Public..
" What the teacher is counts for mueli
riore-than what he knows. A love of °lin-
ren, unlimited tact and infinite patience
re necessary fl1 tural endowments," writes
Caroline B. Le Row, in the September
[Ladies' Horne Jiurnal. "01 course, the '
ability to teach i nplies the possessionof an
education, thoug ' no amount of education
alone can make good teacher. While all
,eacheria must know more than they teaoh,
he power to lin sart to others is the iinport-
ea matter, and he one in which tact or in-
enuity is absol tely the prime requisite.
loreover, she sh uld be personally a social,
ntellectual and ioral force in the commun-
ity. The physician and the clergyman have
immense opportu Mee for this uplifting of
oor
uality
f Blood
Frequent Caus of Consumption, Heart
Failure and 0 her Constitutional Dis-
eases—Dr. C ase's Nerve Food as oi
Blood Builder.
The heart, t e lung's, the etornach,
the liver, the ki rreys, and bowels can-
t ot perform th ir functions and repair
Wasted thistle w en supplied with blciod
•that i dencien in nutrItive qualities,
and sooner or 1 ter the weakest organ
muccumbs to th attacks of disease,
The indication of thin, watery blood
nre paleness of the lips, gums, and eye -
1 dm, ehortnese f breath, weakness of
heart action, arid languid, despondent
f ,elings. These symptoms are usually
companied by neryousnese, sleepless -
5, and tenera4 wea,knessi of the body.
It is positivel useless -to doctor the
symptoms, and I. eurlous to use opiates
o stimulants, cure can be brought
about gradually and certainly by the
uae•of Dr. Chas, 's Nerve- Food, which
cOntaine In cond nsed pila form all the
elements required for eitrengthening
and revitalizing he blood. As a blood
J. lider and neve restorative, Dr.
elisise's Nerve Ft�od is of inestimable
v lue. ri) pill term, 60 cents a box,
.,aTIlodro•nalteor.s, Edraanieon, Bates &
humanity, yet their advantages are small
when ebrripared with those of the teacher,
whioh are practically unlimited. Encour-
agernene and satisfaction in this 'field of
tabor n ver can be dependent upon results,
for it is eldom that the teacher is permitted
Lo know what the years - of maturity owe .to
faithful care of the youthful days.i The
teacher' time is always one of seed -sowing,
never of harvest."
•
HOPE HAD DEPARTED.
•
The S ory of a Woman's Rescue
rom Great Suffering.
For years Her Life Was One of Mi ery—
Her Feet and Limbs Would !Swell
Frightfully, and She Became Unable to
Do Her Household Work, I
From th Enterprise, Bridgewater, N. 8.
It is a pauling to think of the number of
women tbroughout the country whet day
after da± live a life almost of martyrdom ;
sufferiug but too frequently in silent,eiImost
hopeless despair. To such sufferer the
story of re. Joshua Wile, will come ae a
beacon o hope. Mrs. Wile lives about two
miles fron the town of Bridgewater, X. 8.,
and is re peoted and esteemed by all who
know he . While in one of the local drug
stores, n t long ago, Mrs. Wile noticed a
number- f boxes of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
in the sh w case, and remarked by this pro-
prietor '11 ever there was a friend to
women, its is these pills." She was 'asked
why she poke sol strongly about the pills,
and in reply told Of the misery from which
they had rescued her. The druggist sug-
gested t at that she should make known her
cure for the benefit of the thousanI s of
similar a fferers. Mrs. Wile repliedIthat
while ad erse to publicity, yet she Would
gladly te 1 of her cure if it would benefit
anyone Ise, and she gave the follOwing
statement with permission for its publica-
tion :—
" My ife for some years warone of streak -
nese, pain and misery, until I obtained re-
lief throtigh the use of Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills. From some cause, I know not what
exactly, I bee:amain) afflicted with uterine
trouble that I wail obliged, to undergo two
operations. A part only of the troubl was
removed, and a terrible weakness and mis-
erable, nervous condition eneued, whic the
physician told me I would never get clear
of. I tried other doctors, but all wit the
same result—no betterment of my cond tion.
The pain e finally attacked my back and kid-
neys. My lege and feet became frigh fully
swollen, and I cannot desorible the tiired,
sinking, deathly feeling that at times eame
over my whole body. I became unable to
do my household Work, and lost all hope of
recovery. Before this stage in my illness I
had been advised to try Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills, but like thousands of other women,
thought there could be no good in. tieing
them when the medical men were unable to
.,
cure me. At last in despairation, I Made
up my mind to tr them, but really withoet
any faith in the r mit. To my great sur-
prise I obtained acme benefit from the first
box. I then boug t six boxes more, which
I took accordin to directions, and am
happy to say was raised up by them fr m a
weak, sick, despondent, uselese condition,
to my present state of health and happiness.
Every year now in the spring and fall I take
a box or two, and find them an excellent
thing at the change of the season. Opier
benefits I might mention, k but, suffice it to
say, I would strongly recommend Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills to all ailing women."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills surpass all other
medicines men cure for the troubles that
afflict woman kind. They quickly ooreet
•
suppressiens and all forms of weakness.
They enrich the blood, strengthen .the
nerves and restore the glow of healthj to
pallid cheeks. Sold by all dealers in medi-
cine, or sent postpaid at 50 cents a box, or
six boxes i or $2.50, by addressing the Dr.
i
William' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ontt
•
A Mighty Man.
You want d,Inace up, Mandy, whon you see we
(main' round ;
I'm a persoti of importance, It his suddenly been
tomfd
That the question of this government, an' whether it
shed last,
Must floallY be answeiei by the way my vote is
oast
The orators have said it ; they have said It loud an'
ion ;
They said it so einphatio that, of ;course, they can't
be e rong, .
So act rospe :Glut Mand4'—nob familiar•like and free,
The country is in peril, an' it all depends on um.
l'in the soil
The %eters
Ing
Eo, Mandy,
the
An' start
doo
An' when I'
oho
By rattlin'
My livin' ,hor
kinhi
The countr
citizen—the man who tills the soil,
ave grown troubled, an' they're holler -
or oil.
on't you bother me With 01k about
hores,
e outoffhand a-doin' errands out o'
•
medltatin , don't you give my mind a
no or kottl 8 or a•wIndln' of tbo olock
should in ke you Jae' as proud as you
,
Is in peril, an' It all depends on me.
Washington Star.
•
Nerve Pain Cure.
Polson' Nerviline cures flatulence, chills
and apaaifr e. Nerviline cures vomiting,
diarrhoea, hulera and dysentery. Nervil-
ine cures h etdache, seasickness and summer
complaint Nerviline cures neuralgia,tooth-
eche, lumle go and sciatica. Nerviline cures
sprains, bt ises, cuts tee. Poison's Nervil-
ine is the h at remedy in the world, eked
only 0008 0 and 25 cents to try it. Sam-
ple and lar to bottles at any drug store. Try
Poison's Nervilinc.
•
Sir deorge and the Valet.
When Sir George Turner, of Victoria,
Australia, went to London, England, for the
Victoria Jubilee celebration, two flankies
were told off to attend upon hire ist the
Hotel Cecil, Being a man of exceedingly
simple tastes and aocustomed to do ever -
thing for himself, he was greatly astounded
when one of the servants came into his
srioro.m” and Said, "I've come to dress you,
" Coine to drees me, have you ?" was Sir
George's reply. Get out. Do you think
I can't dram myself ?"
At last he got so sick of the sight of these
same servants that he summoned his orderly
and gave bin} instructions to make them
both drunk. " My orderly," Sir George
told a friend afterward," was an old soldier,
He knew how to obey orders."
•
To Cure a Cold in One Day.
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets,
All druggists refund the money if it fails to
cure. 25c. E, W. Grove's signature is on
each box.
•
George Brown's Son,
Veritably (writes a correepondent of M.
A. P.) I must be growing old, as it seems
only the other day that I was at school
with Mr. G. M. Brown, the Radical candi-
date for Central Edinburgh, opposed by Dr.
Conan Doyle, and vho, for all practical
purposes, is the famous publishing firm,
Thomas Nelson & Co. More years than I
care to think about have passed siuce G.
M. Brown and I were schoolmates ab Mer-
ohieton Castle, beat and footballiest (if I
may coin the word) of Scottish schools; but
I remember him well, for we were friendly
rivals for the Hope prize, founded by an old
Merchistonian for the best scholar of his
year in French, German and English liter-
ature. Brown won the prize. He was a
good looking boy in those school days, and I
have a pleasing recollection of a warm,
creamy complexion, ruseet colored hair,
earnest sympathetic eyes and a mobile
month,
It may please some M. A. P. readers to
compare thia portrait of the boy with the
Candidate cf today. Brown Was in no
Lr'l
Nikg
etlal
others
The output of " Setter Shoes " is so large that the makers are elale
coutrol their omen eareage in moet leathers.
" Canuck Calf," n ede from the best selected calfskias, in blecke
_and medium tau and seal brown.
" Kidduck " in block and seal brown, from selected Patna .goateltHs
Both -leathers are weer and water resiting, porous and therefore eliiitary.
There are also " i'est French Patent," French Enamel," " Ptierless
Russia" and "American Wax Calf."
Slater Shoe Polish only should be
e.(1 on these leathers, retains their
tedicity and keeps them soft.
-The sole leather is the best obtain -
on eve-ry sole is the makers'
une and price in a slate frame,
hen the finished shoe has Raised
• rigorous examination.
Catalogue.
R. WILLIS 146 SO
11
0
0.
it
SOLE LOCAL AGENTS FOR SEA ORTI1,1.
sense of a word a prig—
cricketer and tennis player
decidedly earnest boy. Per
et:jou/mess of coming wealth
bility oppressed him, perha
was naturally quiet and studi
was the cause he was reserve
sensible beyond his years.
time, he poeseesed much in
epirit and daring of though
ever the champion of a wee.
cause.
1
Stepped Into Live
"When it child I burned
fully," writee W. H. Eads,
Va., " whioh caused horrible
30 years, but Bueklen's
wholly cured me after everyt
ed." Infallible for Burn s,
Sores, Bruise. and Piles. So
Fear, Druggist, Seaforth, for
•
Literary Prescrib
For clearness read Macaula31
For logic read Burke and B
For action read Homer and
For conciseness read Bacon
For sublimity of conception
For common sense read Be
lin.
For, vivaoity read Stevens°
For imagination read Sh
Job.
For elegance read Virgil
Arnold.
For simplieity read Bur
Bunyan.
For smoothness read Addis
thorne. I
For interest in common thi
Austen. i
For humor I read Chaucer,
Mark Twain.1
For choice of individual
Keatei, Tennyson and Emerson
For the study -of human
Shakespeare and George Eliot.
For loving and patient o
nature read Thoreau and Wa
City Star.
e was a fine
but he was a
ape the con.
and responei-
s hie nature
us ; whatever
, reticent and
At the same
ependeuce ef
, and he was
or of a lost
Coals.
y foot frigbt
ofJ onesvfo
i ller,
le gsores rnica Salve
ing else fea-
r bld5:1, IC. uvts., wbuotnitisf LiseyaRthutop. wporrinacesi5o0fall kind,.
Alt doalor
50.
September. "Men would also be glad ;to
avail themselves of such a person. The,
woman who will sew on buttonsand holes
and eyes, and darn etockinge and under-
clothing, is sure of constant work, many
customers and regular compensation. A
bright young girl in an eastern city, vM0
was suddenly compelled to aseist in adding
to the family finances, sent little notes to
her friende, and also to her acquaintance,
notifying them of her desire to undertake
the charge of their skirts—to keep them
freceof spots and dust, and to attend to the
facings and bindings. It was not long be-
fore she was able to keep two women at
work under her supervision, and the finan-
cial result from her plucky ventere watt en-
tirely satisfactory."
IT'S so pleasant to take that ehildre
•
ions.
e▪ on.
Scott.
nd Pope.
read Milton.
jamin Frank -
and Kipling.
kespeare and
Milton and
s, Whittier,
n and Haw -
go read Jane
ervan ea an
words read
nature read
servation of
ton.—Kansas
, The
DIAMOND D ES
Produce All The New Shades.
A Rich and 'Marvellous ariety of
F4shionable Colors fir Aut-
liunn and Winter "ear.
The great majority of wise
womeri collect and -examin
dress* skirts, capes, jackets,
band's and ohildren's suits this
the vi
'so as t
wear.
The
for ho
beaut
w of having them• clean
fit them for autum
Diamond Dyes (prepare
e user have a wealth
and bri liancy possessed
make ef dyes. They produce
and faShionable colors for autu
ter weer—colo s that, will not
strongest sunli ht. Every pac
mond Dyes is vrranted, and w
fed results wh n simple direct
lowed. There
if you delight i
safety Of your
dyee means'rui
ph, For
"Put that
John Quincy
sheet of paper
a letter. " T
ment. Here is
other end of th
letters on priva
This iconeeie
many Would co
pear eXceseive.
twoen Ivioe an
boundary is
and it is jua
pereon !to daily
child td toy wit
fire. He who
nd prudent
their old
shawls, hue -
month with
d and dyed
and winter
• especially
of variety,
by no other
all the new
n and win -
fade in the
et of Dia-
n give per-
oas are fol.
re imitations ; flVOld them
o good colors and value the
ateriale. The itee of poor
o ot goods and lo s of money.
•
onesty of 0 d Days.
ack 1" exclaime President
dams, when his son took a
from a pigeon h be to write
at belongs to the govern -
my own statio 1 ery, at the
detaiino
ke.ls.tlway use it for
to
b
tiousness in reg
under a mere tr
Bue the dividi
virtue i3 so fi
ften unconsciou
as dangerous
with conecience
a dagger or to
rd to what
Ile may a.p-
igey that chi rnaoetsstebhdoe:
or• a young
s it is for a
play with
a honest in smal things can
always be trusted in great.
There is truth not to be ignored in the
old fashioned rhyme:
It is a sin to steal a pin,
Much more to steal a greater thing.
No Matter how little value ti e thing we
appropriate from another may posses, the
fact that it does not belong to us should
make it sacred.—Success.
INSTANT RELIEF guaranteed by, using 51 IL.
BURN'S STERLING HEADACHE POWDERS. No 13
d epressing aftor•offoct. to
•
A
Mending Clothes For Other
People. 0
"Buelness and professional w men, who fa
have but little time to look fter their
clothes, would be glad to secure t e services
of a ekilled mender," writes mimeo Ifi; ea
Lanigan, in the Ladiee' Home Journal for Pi
ery for it
DR. LOW'S
th_ounghotn,stolv."aiitt faorndgrelt
by cushions. No remedy helped him until
heart, pity is the etraightest.
a wonderful change that he writes he feels
before I married hirn." Crissie—"I•
bgfear_gteiaanKltn. iiptntaIgiiet.n_,can,m,omre sib
ytiht rionuag h h hisair •exlecidepntetpar-op:ivisa
they, of conrse, have bee perfect from the
about all they have to ptit on.
that they won't even ent rtain an idea.
what she gits ? Not miech i Marriage, sir,
of —peorcfeappliotnh.e
cra—ekThehedweav.il has no grer.ter ally than wait
sheep, skims twenty pahe of milk, washes
50c at,Fear's Drug Store,
cures backache and kidney trouble, purifies
the blood and builds up your bealth. Wily
like a new man. This marvelous medicihe
he tried Electric Bitters which effected suoh
Think I could hire anybody to do it f
back got so lame he cold not stoop without
wise the hogs, likewiee some motherless
lier, of Cherokee, Iowa., that nearly proved
fast, starts four children to skewl, books
is a success—a great sudeese.
arter the other three, feeds the hens, like -
the clothes, gits dinner, et cetery, et eatery.
farmer. " Why, therers Lucindiy, gits up
in the mornin', milks six cows, gits break-
-Time improves ever thing but women ;
—Some men are so la king in hospitality
—Some people put on airs becaese th, ie
—Gossip is like water, and will iget in if a
An attack was lately ade on C. F. Col -
Where Marriage is a S ccess,
"41 should say not," remarked an Oregon
" Is marriage a failure ?"
A Fiendis Attack.
-4..
paths that lead to a woman's
husbandas sight was poor
••• 1
•
oipspdo°rMtun*i ties. A ..
for
long, continuous walk will get you over
more ground than a shorerun.
—Lily—" Jack propoiied to inc while
turning the music for Me at the piano.'
Elsie—" Ali, I see; you played right 'into
his—hSahned--8.1
Don't lee pe pie think we're on
our honeymoon, clearest,. It seems so futiny
to be stared at." He--" Very well ; yen
carry the valiee."
— Peter—" You never now who are your
friends till you are in need." Bauldy,--,--
" And even then you onl discover who arte
not your friends." .
— The man is rich wh has a good dis-
position, who is kind, patient, cheerful,
hopeful and who has a fla or of wit and NA
in his dimposition. The hardeab thing te
get on with in this life i a man's own self,
—"I've come to ten i OU, sir, that Ow
the photographs you took of us the other
day are not at all satiate tory. Why, my
husband looks like an ape !" I' Well„
madam, you should have i thought of that
before you had him taken."
—"That's a bride and groom over at that
other table." "How do you know?" "1
heard him say thee he would order Kansas
corn, so that they could lboth eat off the
same cob,"
*
What's Your Face Worth?
Sometimes a fortune, be ' never, if you
have II sallow complexion, i4 jaundiced look,
moth patches and blotches sn the skin,—all
signs of Liver Trouble. 3ut Dr. King's
New Life Pala give Clear Skin, Roe
Cheeks, Rich Complexion. Only 25 cents( at
Fear's Drug Store. '
He Was Inexpe eiaced.
The country twain andf his sweetheart•
ad come in from the mountain fastnesses
be married at the minister's house, in an
dirondaelt town. The ceremony was '
ver, but the bridegroom hesitated. There
as another important function to be per-
r`ril'Wedhat do I pay you for this ?" he asked.
"The law allows me a dollar and it half,"
id the minieter, willieg to swell his wife's
n money fund to that extent, but not
jailing to ask mom -than would be con-
nient for the bridegroom to pay. A look
pleasure came into the bridegroom's face.
Well, here's 50 cents," he said cheerfully,
handing him the money. " That will make
$2," and he departed with a COMformble
feeling that, the minister had been well paid,
while the minister's wife heaved it sigh of
regret —New York Sun.
•
SICK HEADACHE, however ainwying and dl:
tressing, is positively cured by LAXA•L1VER PILLS
They are easy to take and never gripe,
AC
ACH
If you have Backache you liacercet
Kidney Disease. If you rie
Backache it will develop into
something worse—Bright s is -
ease or Diabetes. There i no
use rubbing and doctoring our
back. Cure the kidneys. T ten!.
is only one kidney medicine but
it cures Backache every time-
Dodd's
Kidne
Pilis
ve
of
Destroying the Children.
"Do American men and women realize
thi
at in five cities of our coun ry alone there
were during the bat t
at seheol rm over 16,000
children between the ages I of eight and
fourteen taken out of the public schoole, be-
cauee their nervous systems Were wrecked,
and their minds were incapable of goleg on
any further in the internal cramming aye -
tem which exists to -day in our scheols ?"
inquires Edward Bok, in the Ladies'
Home Journal. " And these 16,000
helplees little wrecks," he continues, " are
simply the children we know about. Con-
servative medical men who have given their
lives to the study of children place the
number whose health is shattered by over -
study at more than 50,000 eaeh year. It is
putting the truth mildly to state that, of all
American institutions, that which deals
with the public education of our children is
at once the moat faulty, the main unintelli-
gent and the moist cruel."
too
Doti
take`
It
once
one i
dowt
or c 6
the
shor
A25
saimis
zei
that
"A bo
dying
cure n
since w
uiedici)
wild I.
Jan. 18,
Write
eomplai
best ma ,
freely.
1.411... -
Mark
The ve
that I eve -
think it was
right along t
of a farmer's
another cuat
w ithdrew, —
tarried it to
yard.
I broke it
eat watermel
year. The
-sorry and be
*Reflection
you don't re
then that cri
he well have
elec. You in
you ore not
it again. I
self—What
!stolen gree
George VVash
country, the
ten a lie ?
only one righ
to do who ha
elass—he m
restore that
owner,
I said 1 wo
.good resoInti
oblig
stronger and
I -carried
'wee left of it
and—made h
place. Now
put of cri
against furth
up.
A man can't
esteeditig one
melons ; but
'PAINE'S
Is Now
IT SAVES 8
DESPON
Builds IT
"Those who
'most reliable
eines, and at
Weight, nervf
healthy eolofe
and disappoint
'Compound is e
At this seem
lees, fretful,
gloomy men a.e
poseible to obt
and, al a co
physical wreck
the ahyse of i
sufferers to t
'The weakened
tem must be te
up at once.
There is but
edy before the
newed health a
Paine' s- Celery
a noble physie
his professiona
Paine'm Cele
the reach of al
is it very simpl
the expense is
able imitations
you get " P
wrought inch _
Queer
One cf the n
Paris exhibit
Vienna, who
With him—in a
the whole -
after his del's%
adventure did
When he appe:
trate and was
unauthorized il
the expenses of
Although Oa
the manner
tramped eata it
Paris, her jouri
feet that she et
This siguature
Laxative
44 remedy the,