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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1902-09-11, Page 3THE POSTMASTER, Old Gentleman's Narrow Escape' From Reath, A Very Intereetlug Personal Exper- ience) Which ()outtalks some tome Advice fur Others W 4o.e L.ivee May be 'i'itreetteued. eoveltt, One., Aug. 'd:t.--,lbpcGlttl,l--• Ev.epry men, woman and child for Miele aro in i. knows Mr. C. A. H zrrtcs, the genial Postmaster at Lovett. ltir, ti terlesi Jo 14a1o. old; gen•tle- aua,n, 7e years or age, and conslder- 1ni; has atlaneeat•pl years is rentalkab,y well preserved., strong and healthy. Bat he wets not always so, Five or six scares ago Its) wait at the polar of death, being fearfu,ly run clown and a conpt(te wreck •dt Brigitte; ts Die - afters Ile was so low that no one (aver dreamt, t}4,tt he could pull through,. aniyet he isalive and well to -day, Thl4 it sel,tc,mant of the ease in Mr. Haeries' own words: "In 1897 1 was tit! ;the point of death with frirltt's Disease, and was a ce plelt,e wreck. I could not even dress rayed(' or turn, In my bed, but np\v 1 ($n a WW1'lnian, and, I'attribu.te itall to LocW's KidneyKidneyPIlle. am 75, years' ol.( , nd for a pian elf my semis I feel quite, strong and! healthy. I oorreLdcr Doeld's Kidney Pills a good medicine to take! in the spring, as I lutve Sound it+ a great blood purifies'. "As' Postltnastelr I come in contact with a "specie many people, and I kntow of my pes•sonal knowledge that a great mealy in tills country are us- ing Dodt1's Kidney Pills with, the; best Such elvlaence should be most con- vincing to any who may still doubt that Dodd's _Kidney Pills will cure Iii glhlt'e Dirteiase. The honest, earnest, straightfor- ward testimony of such reputable people certainly deserves the confi- dence od everyone. • . le Doidzl's Kidney Pills can and do cure Bright's Disease, which le the very worse form of Kidney Trouble., they certainly will cure any of the lesser forms. , , 09QQr^Cwead4'4fetea.1' 0teC(0:GG):J'. 11aDaa. eltelOC*Gate eteCCCVMDCI MOCCiaQ Ci`* t9pG> 4001:10pO 11 ��, For fair Woman's Eyes OnIy. , .. . Prettiest of the fall fashions- • Care of the noir and How it Will be Worn—Notes of Interest 1 11 ascot emt;eA,.`"CW;000C.PWAPaOC 14.00:00tKCC"3GCCQCOI0Jccoccostocc®e cceoesoe ,c000Cir�l That skirts are to be snugger and evening, carriage and duet cloaks to an acconpllehntent to be desired. more situ;; about the Ir:ps seems all be given up. The sales-11L;te'(1 and loose That kind of che('rtulner,H sloes not too true. Among a dozen early fall j tekets make by far the most satis- give odt the proper radiance. gowns, not one fueled tlo ehow the liablt butk, with little, if any, rip- ple, Below the krises the flare re- wains, le intensified of Hitch can be the case, bat the tipper portions of the new models are eutLtlese of told, ripple, pipit 01' fullness of any sort• • : i e+s elf -melte flounces In ao1u., :nsir nc are seamed to the lower edges, in others plaits are used to produee the fullness; but even when these ex- tend for full length they are stitch- ed flat and co cutaway at the under portions ae to mean no additional t,h!r.'knees about the hips, even while they at app ling a foldflounce depth. So long as title feature of fullness below ane extreme snugness above remains, we may look for cir- cular flounces tvhatev(r other styles- are added to the list. The box plaits, the tilde plats and the fan petits all are in style and all are admirable rightly used, but inas- much as the 1 o'nee proslles jest the flare deslred, it le not likely to dis- appear for some time to come, A few overskirt effe;ts are shown. It Le far too early to speak with au- thority, but let tie trust that they will not gain any permanent hold. Even on talose wonderful wax la- dies, who usually can bear such mar- velous dres5Ln„ they are far from attractive. As yet 1 have seen none worn by human folk, but the pros peat is rot alluring. The double and triple flounce skirts of this season have had eons:Lderable vogue, but not even they have become general. These later desrb;ns recall visions( of fasleon plates two decades old and are distressing' In the extreme. Long graceful lines are what we have learned to look tor, and what give seems scarce factory all-round useful coats. While the biter wagonIs certain to bring other designs these can be trusted to hold and to prove correct each in Its proper strhere, dignity to the figure. It - �ww" ly probable, in view- of these facto, that the overskirt with its unfortu- nate habit of cuttin;gethe figure and its most undesirable lines should succeed. By far the most chic and ef- fective gowns are those made with long vertical lines that enhance the apparent height, Box -Plaited Gown. One exceedingly elegant cloth, in a eat, mastic shade le box plaited at both front and back, but the plaits are stitched and eut away at their upper portional and allowed to fall un- eonfined as they approach the lower. With the skirt is an accompanying, 'blouse that, in its way, also is signifi- cant. The fronts differ little from those of the spring, and blouse slight - WHEN VISIT1NO YOUR FRIENDS. Do not stay too long, It is much to brealq lute the life of any family, even fora few days. Pay no atteu- tion to urging to stay longer, how- ever sincere they seem. Set a time to go where you arrive and stick to It. Conform absolutely to the honee- hold arrangements, especially as to times of rising, going to meals and retiring. Be ready in ample time for ly ; but, the back le laid la a single, all drives or other excursions. , flatly stitched. box plait at the cep- . Carry with you all needed toilet ire, watch meets that of the skirt, and In place of being drawn down snugly, mouses over the somewhat wide belt. The sleeves are in the later bishop style, full and large above the gulfs, and are enriched by applications of white, Trish crochet, which lace aleo ornaments the collar and forms the narrow vest. plastic, brown, tan and mode shades are to have great iogue. Gray, while always correct, is better liked for spring than fall, inasmuch as its lighter shades are cold and the darker are apt. to be tryltfg. Blues, too, ares (tdpnirable, and some fascin- ating new abodes; are used, while red always can be looked for with the first sign of cold weather. (tough cloths and cheviots, with many camel's hairs, are shown, and make eaeeedingiy smart early season suits. supplies, that you may not he ohlig- • ea to mortify your host by pointing out possible deficiencies in the guest room, such as a clothes brush—the article most commowly lacking. Enter heartily Into all their plans for entertaining you, but make it plain: that you do not care to be. entertained all the time, or to have every minute filled with amusement, Be ready to suggest little plans for pleasure when. you see your host at a, lose to entertain you. Try Trow Well you can entertain him, for a se -Image. Turn about le fair play in vlsitieg, as well as in everything else. Be. pleased with all things. If you ever were brlak and spright- ly, be so now. Your high spirits and evident en- joyment are the only thanks your host wants. Take some work with you, so that when year host has to work you may keep elm In, con,tenance by working also. More good times are to be had over work than over play, a,naway. 1}o not argue or dismiss- debatable matters. Few' things leave n. worse taste In, the mouth. Otter, to. pay the little incidental expenses than will be caused now and then. bvt your visit. A GRATEFUL TRIBUTE From a Man Who Looked Upon His Case as Hopeless Doctors Diagnosed Hls Case as Ca- tarrk of the Stomach, but Failed to Help Him—Many Remedies Were Tried Before a Cure Was Friend. (From the Bul1etlein, Bridgewater, N t5'.) late suppose there as not a corner in this wide Dominion in which will not be found people who have been restored to health and strength through the use of Dr. Williams' Plait Pills. There are many such cases hero !in Bridgewatter and its vicinity, and we are this week given permission to record one for the benefit of similar stutterers. The ease :ls well known in this vicinity rend the tenacity of the order was remarkable. For six years Alfred eeeenot, a. eurvpyar of lumber for the great lumber nllrm of Davison & bons, was eaviretlin of a serious dis- order of the stomach. His sufferings were excruelating, and he had and not a few ow capes over the Wasted to a shadow. Doctors pre -1 tallowshoulders, some single, some double, scribed for him, yet the agonizing ! come triple. Whatever tends to pa n.s remalneet. Many remedies were lengthen the 61oulder line' i'i cor- tried but to no avail. The case was rect, and as capes possess the diagnosed as catarrh of the Atom• 1 tendency to a marked degree, they web, food became distasteful, life a are sure to be conspicuous. A germ - burden. The eilx, 'ears, trouble nenwanggod Sit- gray for Om cloth With yokis eendrimming ade. TheI darker Hams' Pink lan viP1110. The pills sed the use of rwere etyl. WIle of eain in a le thesalt fitted( box, with given a fair, patient trial, Mr. Vel -1 applied yoke, cut In points at the tower edge, and the trimming round the lower edge to a band that also Is pointed. The sleeves are among the latest in bell shape, but arrang- ed to give a triple effect, eaelt por- tion overlapping the other. Sleeves are notable. holm( (.oats Still in Vogue. Doubtless the season of furs will demand less about the throat and shoulders, but even tit midwinter there are oceaFione when boos and the like are less to be desired than a single high wrap, and It le prob- able that thee' becoming little rapes will prove a, feature the season through. As et spatter of couree there are coats and cloaks of other sorts, and among theht Is :to be noted a marked tendency !•)ward sung fit aboste the waist, lett for g neral wear the models described can be relied open ae quite et erect. The Louie coats that struggled so hard for ex- istenee (nestyear are seen again and are always el emelt rightly worn, but butelntteh are they suit elegant Mater - tale only. they serve a limited nsc. The nets); loose wraps of the Summer (Magi }Oen found too entlsfaetory CHEERFULNESS THE BEAUTIFIER. One woman who saw In her inir- ror that the wrinkles of old age were creeping upon her face be- fore her time prayed to the gods � to renew her youthful app_ara,nce. "Ye gods, ye gods,;' elle cried, "'smooth away the lines from my face and make me beautiful and be- loved of men once more." In those days skin foods and the art of facial massage were un- known, and the gods in council gave her advice in answer to her prayer, saying, : "I1 yon will no longer scold, nor fret, nor frewn, The woman who has an occupation which sloes not overtax her lute the best start in the quest of a genu- inely cheerful hpirit• If site has something to do in which she is in- terested she has no time to mope, to pine for the things lvhioh shelmayl nigh L t for the 1n1- not have and to e posslhle. chair, but 1f one, after sitting a while, /should need to rest it little mora, be sme Ruppert. may also touch RESULTS OF WINTER upon the /sazae /support, Tho hands + K, 4�tJr r should remain as they naturally fall frons thin position, lianging at the stases, or they may be placed eaeits over the amus or back of the shall', 1 ! or allowed to Ile reposefully on the lap. To rise properly front a carreet . COGitaOC eacpa scam paaa0 ereaaaCGCCallealCCG sitting position there should be eev- era! preparatory movements, Winter wheat experiments taco- harvested when ripe. In *be average The chest le first poised far fore Pial one hundred anti eighty-eight resuLta of these tesiS it le found that ward, and at the same) time the foot , leases! as tate College, nal rail hu11urelt the heaviest weight of grain per is drawn back under the seat. The nal three plots *throughout °uteri()measured bushel and the largest • foot drawn in should be the one op- ( in 190e. On the whole, the wheat f yield of both grain and straw were pe) ttte from the direction to be tame' tdu'ott,glt the winter well, and produced from .Reed taken fromthe taken in startin'; up. the yeti t or both grain and straw crop which had becomo very ripe by As you rise throw the weight firm- wets eatrslactory. The weak strewed remaining uncut for the longest ly upon the foot in the rear. As the varieties were badly la(h1ed, and, ow- period 01 time. body comes to its full height change the weight to the forward foot, so that the other foot merely touches the) floor very Tightly. This brings you to a standing position, ready to :ilk east( in the direction w Yyou are going. 17,1y sitting positlans and awkward movements in rising will ale/appear followed. 11 these principles are 1 a w Something to do—that is the se- cret. Complainers who do not have to work, who are weary of being amused, bored, and sulky of spirit, conte out of their complainings 11 1 es a little emse v they forget1 tl while in (loing something to help or amuse someone else who needs just their help or amusement. 1 cant do 'anything well ; I have . no miesion in this world; I am of no use to anybody ; I wish 1 were dead," said a young girl who took herself persons(,. "AO, my dear," the serene old'la(ly answered her, "can't you sec that the people svllo are of the moat use iu title world are just the ones who go about their wn:ye doing the little( New Coats. Early suits seem to show jaunty and becoming blouses in big numbers. That we are to have twenty-six and seven inch coats with cold weather appears to be a settled fact, batt the Mouse is =canoed for mild days and is found in many advance models. Some exceedingly chic costumes are o!f rough cheviot, In Rhone blue, with revers, cutfe and collar of, canvas em- broidery in Persian ehfeets. Canvas work and there rich colors, by the way, promise great prominence, and are essentially elegant as all needle- work wrought into the fabric al- wayis is. Novelty in Shirred Sleeves. Longer jaokete are twenty-six or twenty-seven inches in length, both when they make parts of suits and when made for general wraps, but for the carriage, travelling and evening wear we may look for the long cloaks of theaumrner ani the three-quarter lengths that have been no fashiona- ble in silk, pongee and linen, made up In cloth, and silk interlined. A most elegant costume of blue camel's hair, ,showing threads of green, Le made with a skirt that is side plait- ed from the trout .seams to the back, where the plaits meet and form a boa plait, and a• twenty -six-inch jacket that enggests the "Gibson" idea, with Its plaits that run over the shoulders and extend down both fronts and back. Otherwise, the coat le snug and belted at the back and under the arms, but le loose at the front ,and finiehed over with a vest of heavy string -colored lace. With these the sleeves are the big blEhop ones, but many bell shapes are ,seen, Loose Norfoiks, almost counterparts of those worn by men, are eeell upon the sults of morning wear, but are trying. All round ust'- ful jackets are of covert tan and binek cloth and are in box style or half -fitted backs, with loose fronts, not using about a dozen boxes, and before they Were ail gone a per- manent cure was effected. Mr. Vet - not le now able to attend to his bus!.ness when it looked as if he was doomed to die. He to grateful to this great medicine for 1110 'Cure and. has no hesitation In saying so. Because Of their thorough and prompt action on the) blood and nerves these polls speedily cure an- aemia, rheumatism, sciatica, pars WI paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, Hero- fliLa and erupt:eine of the skin, ery- ttpelas, kldneaj*� and liver troubles rued the functional ailments which makes the ldve.s of so many women a Bounce of constant misery. (le•t the genuine wall the full velum "Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People" on the wrapper arouud h• box. Sold by meds cine dealers each or sent poet paid at 50 cents a hos or tiLrt hexes for $'3.150, by address - trig the lar. Williams' Medlolnn 1ltockv'Lile, Ont. Bonne people have the unhappy Pee- ulty Of $eying the piglet thing at the eVetlalit +tifne, TRAVELLING COAT OF IVY GREEN COVERT CLOTH WITH BLACK TAI'I'ETA TRIMMINGS. WHEAT EXPERIMENTS. THE BACHELOR GIRL'S IDEAS. •1 (By Harriet Mice.) The improper study of mankind id Well. The llal•deet career for a woman is to and a husband with a career. ,Happiness depends so absolutely upon ourselves that 1t is the one thing we can never be sure of. Many persous are never quite re- verent except when they speak of money. Moet men's kisses are so cheap that they do well to make their gifts expensive. ;Good women spend years to build up In a man what a bad woman overthrows iu a day. Many leen regard life as an alter- nate round of high juiks and hygiene. Men call on some women to strengthen their likes and on others to strengthen their dtsllkes. Matchmaking is left to the women because men know 'too much about men to be willing to take any chances. Diplomats have merely to manage men, but women manage diplomats. "Love is for the individual." Where man is concerned the individual is always himself. No other woman is justified la knowing quite so much about men es a clever old maid. The world of fashion works hard to exhaust all the pleasure of a thing before the rest of the world becomes aware of its existence. If respectability could be relieved of its monotony it would no longer be respectable. When a girl begins to treat a man especially well he may be sure it is because el some other man. Men are sate in calling themselves the 'avenger sex, for moot women are too weak to contradict them. A man loves a woman became she seems different from every other woman he Vast known, without re - fleeting that site too, may have known those women. Oaring indiscretions of speech and conduct are the only sure signs of perfect respectability nowadays. It is only with some girls that chaperons are necessary, and they are the girls who don't have them. in order to be intellectual it is ants necessary to sacrifice one's gen- ink to the wet weather, haute at the grain was- sprouted before It was harvested. Tele damage done by the Hessian fly was very alight, the tees of winter wheat were distt•l.bu- plots at the College being practieetlle ted throughout Ontario far co -opera - tree v r e i Ids . The a n et't rimenta. T e y title i s Use x g s, f t e e from the ravages oA g in 1902. pee of the co -o erati ve experts t - Varieties—Ninety-five varieties of menteacre u/s follows; winter wheat were grown at the CoI- v- 1The tovarietiesgiv- ing•e tale year. rt ing the greatest stela, of grain per acre, starting with. the highest, were as follows; Extra Early Wioaieor, a st's Golden Chaff, t lmp e 1 a1 In- ber, Pedigree ilenest o (dant, Prize taker, Rcononiy '`ie -w Col umbla,'W1[tte Golden Croat, Early Ontario, and Ioprnson.The Leers), Lar1 y Windsor r very closely resembles the Dawson's Golden Chaff variety. Those varieties Remelts of Co-operative lexperfineut In the autumn of 1901 five varie- o .0 a 'Varieties. inu f+ Dawson's Golden Chaff,,. 8.2 82.7 Imperial al Anber... 3,2 32.0 . Early Genesee Giant ...8.1 ..9.J Michigan Amber... ... 8.8 27.5 Turkey Teed.., possessing tate stiffest straw were the The •popularity of tho varieties Dawson's Golden Chaff, Extra Earle with the experimentore is represent- ed by the follow'Lnti figures: Daw- eon•s G.rljen Chafi, 100 ; 1mpecs.a.l Am- ber, 78; Early Genessee Giant, 55; Meehiian Amber, 50, and Tuzkay Rad . 47,. Dietrlhuti n of Seed. Material for any one of the four experiments here mentioned will be sent free to any Ontario farmer ap- plying .for it, if he will conduct an experiment with great care and re- port the results after harvest next year. The seed will he sent put 1n tine order ea were!) the applications are i'eoeived aa long as the supply lasts. 1. Testing Hairy Vetchets, Crim- son (:lover and Winter Rye as fodder trope—three plots. 2. Testing three varieties of red winter wheat—three plots. 8. Testing five fertilisers with Winter wheat—six plots. 4. Testing autumn and spring ape pitLoations of nitrate of soda and common exalt with waiter wheiat--five plots. The proper elate 01 eachplot in one rad: wide by two rods long. The -Ma- terial for either of the first two experlm'ents will be forwarded by mail, and for each of the other two by express. Each person wishing, to conduct one of these experiments should elppiy as soon as possible, mentioning which test be desires, and the material, with instructions for testing and the blank form on which to report, will be furnished free of cost until the supply of et- perimental material is exhausted. C. A. Zavitz, Guelph, Ont. • Agricultural College, Aug. 23, 1902. Windsor, Clawson Longbnrry, and American Bronze. Experimente have shown that the sprouting of wheat greatly loaves it for seed purposes as well as for flour production. All of the varieties at the College title season were more or less sprouted before they could be har- vested. 'Those varieties which sprout- ed the Tenet were the Rett Cross, Mc- Pherson, Wisconsin Triumph, and Re- liable, and those which sprouted the most were the Pedigree Genesee (Giant, Early Arcadian, and Oregon. Fifty-seven varieties were sprouted more than the Dawson's Golden Chaff. The varieties without beards were sprouted as badly as these with beards, and the hard wheats were sprouted slightly more than the crofter varieties. The white wheats, as a class, however, were sprouted much worse than the red varieties;. A deputation of ten persons from the Dominion Millers' Association vis - ted the Coilege during the past sum- mer, and, after examining the differ- ent varieties of winter wheat, re- commended that the following vari- eties be grown extensively 10 Ontario: Red wheat, Michigan Amber and Tur- key Red, and white wheat, Early Gen- elsee Giant and Bulgarian. Selection of Seed—Trite average re- sults of six years' experiments show that large, plump seed yielded seven bushels f fty-one pounds of wheat per acre ((rare than the shrunken seed; and eix bushels thirty-three pounds more than the small, plump seed. Sound wheat produced five times as great a yielder teeth grain and straw as seed which had been broken in the process of threshing. Treatment for Stinking Smut—L3 the average of four years' tests, seed wheat infested with smut spores pro- duced grain containing the follow- ing number of smut galls par pound of wheat : Untreated, 456; treated with potassium sulphide, 11; treated with copper sulphate (Bluestone), 2; and treated with hot water, 1. s� The Copper Sulphate (11hieetona) •Hiss Jackson," he began, as he treatment consisted in soaking the removed hie hat and soaped his foot seed for twelve hours in a solution as they met pu the street, "I done made by dissolving one pound or cop- liab de happy facility to .meet up 'veld At WealeWerafellereeeeFeseitiretMeleilf COURTING MISS JACKSON ern( intelligence. per sulphate in 24, gallons of water, vo' de odder night at de cake -walk." A man makes his place among sten and then immersing tits seed for five ., Yes, sah," she softly replied. by Mie work; among women by his minutes in lime water made by •, What first distracted my attea- pteaFumes. ' clacking one pound of lime in 10 gal- shun to.yo' was yo'r purtiness," lie If a woman Is to study it should ions of water. The hot water treat- continued.' " It was de gineral opin- be with w man. She w211 not learn meet consisted in immersing the yun dat yo 'was de handsomest gal meet, of the subject, but may strike wheat for fifteen minutes In water in de hall. In fact, yo' outshone de an average by learning a great at 332 degrees fabs. After each shiniest ob slat vast aggregation ob deal to much of the than. treatment, the :grain was spread out shatters" The tvisjom of the world is bitter- She and stirred occasionally until dry ledge She bowed ber thanks. nese and never a woman yet learn- enough to sow. " What next distracted my atter e w•lsdom except through! a know- Qtiantitiee orSeed—From sowing shun was yo'r clothes an' style. One ledge o£ men. one, one and one -halt, and two busts- glance prognosticated de fact dot yo' bilin who don't understand women eta of winter wheat per acre for each was a bo'n Iady. I felt dot me an' yo' saoald comfort tltem•-elves with the fact that, next to man, woman 1 of six years, average yields of 402 was two eagles 'mong a lot ob crown. t bushels, 43.3 bushels, and 43.9 bush- Does yo 'anticipate de suit of clothes the greatest mystery in the world els pet acre, respectively, were ob- I had on dat !fight ? Made to order, to herself• twined, As five) varieties of wheat an' cost mo Heb ne dollars. Coat-tatle were used each year, these averages drat celluloid 1colary jest frowned all lelef,•Fd,•1,"F+•F++++++ao.14*++++.l••l•+ rcp2'esent twelve distinct tests. de mashers down. More dan one bun- comes of Sowing—Winter wheat tired pussons called mea swell. bat be allvays cheerful, whatever I things that keep other people happy, 1/ JAPANESE IDEAS which was sown broadcast by hand c yourway,you will look who chow a bright face and who •F "But day and night de t ougtt �, sav p tlratly the same results as Jot mellifluous lubinese filled omen t ob young again and be beloved of men love and let themselves be loved and •p that which was (titles in by a me mach - as before." ;caret( for in return by those who »e- ABOUT WOMEN 1 results of tests heart like de music ob a camp mee Go the woman, having faith in , long to them ?" the gods, followed their advice so tt oleate, persistently that she found herself The earth had been made, and man in due course of time with a new had been made, and beautiful skin, glossier hair But sameen it lacked in the upon her tread, and men waiting at bloomlho every corner to propose marriage to her ; so that she would have Till the God of the good to whom none of then, but ran away with ages have prayed, her father's chauffeur (or what an- swered to hits in those days), and he turned out to be a millionaire and a devoted husband all her days. Ho bntlded her fair like a lily of This story is not exactly to be • white, found in Bulfinchis "Age of Fable," And with love did He perfume her but it points a moral, nevertheless, bein tin'. ae ins in the average r Turned it into a garden with Woman. such as tlto0e old tales are suppos- ed to indicate. The woman who would keep beautiful, or become so, must, first of all, be cheerful. A cheerful spirit is a miracle worker In producing' faces of the highest beauty, those that radiate the restfulness of easy and unforced joy of heart. No one acquires this spirit merely by effort for the thing itself. There are 'women who pretend cheerful- ness, practise it, because it seems 410 BABY'S OWN TABLETS Heip Little babies and iilg Children in Alt Their Minor Illnesses. When your child—whether it is a big child or little baby,-. ufferefrom etomac•h or bowl troubles of any kind, is nervous, fidgety orcroesand doesn't sleep well, give Baby's Own Tablets. 'Atte medbinc is the quick- eet and enre/st cure—and the safest, because it eoutatne no opiate or harmful drug. No matter how young or how feeble your little ono is the ( Tablets Can be given wine a certain- i ty that the result wilt be good. 'or very young infants crusta the Tablets to a powder. Mrs Geo. W. Porter, Thorold, Ont., says: "My baby head 1 iigestion lastly ivhen he walk about three months oil. Ile Wee constant - And if throu.glt her did come the first shade) of night, Ever ranee by her light we've been. . seeing. For you know that a new wick gives no light at all, Till it's blackened and trimmed with the shears, So perhaps that is why she has brightened -this ball Through all of its varying years! And I think it is sweet at theclose of life's day, When we part hands with all that 1s human, erla be led to the light at the end of the way— • As lbever has been—by the wo- man. Leigh Mitchell Hodges, in Atlantic City Sentinel. �r ,rvwv�w"v"`iww ly hungry and (tis food did him no upon the woman who ELts with her HOW TO SIT, HOW TO RISE. 'Wen I was decoratin' de walls ob 4 made in each of eight years. The land Meese Jones' barn old de whitewash "4"4"1"1"1"4"1"44++++++++++++++* ; wait in a good state of cultivation In every instance. Dates of Sowing—Winter wheat sown at the College during the last week In August o'r the first week in September yielded better than that sown at a, later date 1n the aver- age results of tests made In each of the past eight years. In 1902 the highest average yield was ob- tained from sowing on September 2, Respect always a silent woman; great is the wisdom of the woman that boldeth her tongue. 4 vain woman is to be feared, for elle will sacrifice all to her pride. A hanuhty woman stumbles, for she cannel see what may be in her way. Trust not the woman that think - 1901. eth more of herself than another; Preparation of the Land—In an ex - mercy (vitt not dwell in her heart. periment conducted for four years, "My dear," said the old lady, "it is worse than a crime; It is ill-bred.'" Nothing points out the well-bred woman more quickly than the posi- tion she takes when she sits down. The stamp of vulgarity is marked good ea he vomited it as soon as Ire took It. He wile very; thin tend pile Mel got but little sleep, as he cued knees spread far apart; Zack of re- finement Is shown by knees crossed offensively; laek of rase by stiff nearly all the time, both day and and constrained positions of the night. Ile was eonreepatetl ; 1110 ton- aboniders ; a general carelessness and gave coated and hie breath) batt. Neth- indlfferenee by the very common ing tlid him any good until I eat fault of "eeltting in the shoulders," Baby's Own Tablets, and after giv- that 'le, of detailing the spine) so ing hint these a short time lie began that the upper rattier than .the to get better. Ills food eligested lower part of et sesta against the properly ; his bow('lea be:'ante regular, hack of the eh&tr% he i ' rn u to grow, a.nd Is flow a bag. The body should bo placed well healthy boy. 1 always keep the Tab - tete on hand and .cait reromme nd them to other mothers." The tablet.,; one he ohtn2ned at any bark upon the seat, chair, sofa or whatever It 11111y be. The feet should rest on the floor, 000 somewhat n front of the other, heexause 11 le drug etore, or you tan get thein by reeler to else from that l.ocite:M. hnallr past pelt, at 'wit Cents a bot, !th.n heart 1111181 be kept web up anti by Writing (lir(('t to The 1)r. Wil- the Cheat posed ell, tats ferteard. (tants eixil:•ine Co., 3lroekville, Ont., bsh"liresb ler' parttr,f tl,iranne ote ltb or at-henectudly, N. Y. p The gode honors her who thinketh long before opening her lips. A woman that respects herself is more beautifni than a single star ; more beautiful than any stars at night winter wheat grown on land on which a crops of field peau was used as a green manure, produced an an- nual average of 22.1. per cent. more wheat per acre than on land where a crop of buckwheat was plowed un- der. In another experiment, which was carried on Tor one year, winter I t'ought you an Miss Cleveland wait de most excructatin' tubly ladies in de wort', like de angels lade Sunday school books, on'y dey Hint beau'fue brack like you le. Yer showed too dat you tubed me fur shore." She looked blankly at him. She bowed again. "Perhaps yo' percolated de re- membrance dat I equoze yo'r hand, ,tLss Jackson, an' yo' must have ob- served dat it was my Intenshun to ambulate a few remarks when in- terrupted by dat very common an' undistinguished pusson known as "My husband, sale" she icily In- t.errulpted. "Fo' de Lewd, Mies Jackson, but yo' ain't done married to Moses Phillipe?" "Two weeks ago, sale" "An' yo' ain't Mise Jackson'' Give heed to leer to whom children wheat grown on land prepared front , n, have come; she walke in the sacred clover stubble, produced 20.7 per ni"No mos ,soh." ways and lacks not love• cent. more wheat per acre than on "Den I dun bin a fool?" land prepared from timothy stubble. "Yes, sah." A woman without children has not In a two years" test with commer- "Buhl souse me, please, Reckon I yet the most preteens of her jewels. sial fertilizers, en application of 1811 made a mistake. I see now whar It pounds of nitrate of soda per acre was. I got yo' mixed up old Evan - Her Ulstake. increased the yield of wheat 18.8 per settee Thompson, dat party, stylish A couple) had been engagedtube cent. young lady dot was de belle ob de married for about 1.d, years, and still Value of seed from wheat cut at occasion [tn' called fo'ta! de undle- tho swain hal not mustered up sour- different stages of maturity—For guiseci admiration ob de gigantc as- semblage. age enough to ask her to namethe seven years In succession, five plate 'Yes, I recollect yo'. Yo happy day. The other evening he 01 each of two varieties of winter one 'e alkin' around on de elbow ob called, in a peculiar frame of mind, wheat were sown at the same time Moses Phillips, an' people was 0 - and neared her to sing something ten- in the autumn, and cnt at five till- piano ilt- dayin' dat yo' had a bombaslne dress der and toucihing. Imagine his sur- 1erent dates in the following sum- tint b'louge+i to yo'r rxrandmurider, prise when she sat down at the met', a week being allowed between an, dat Moses done had a pa'r ob each two dates of cutting. `]sed from trousers made out ob a blanket. grow andl sang, Dosing, I amr melt of the seventy cuttings was rend -day, bins• Phillips. �'cuse my growing old:' There) was no further i sown and the crop thrrefoz'm was bean' mistook."—Leavenworth Times. delay. , no Remarkable Recovery From Nervous Collapse. A Methodist Minister Tells How He Was Rescued F'0111 a Helpless Condition by Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. • That Dr. Ch'ase's Nerve Fool pos- sesses unusual .'entre)( over the nerves and rekindles nervous t'n- elate when [til other }newts is fail Is well Illustrated in the case describecd below. Me. Drown tons forced give up his mfnleterlal work, and eo tar exhausted "the t for n, time he wait positively helpless. l(e)ntos were ooaeulted and many renedtee were resorte;i to, 1n vain. Every ef- fort to build up the esystenuseetued in vale, anti. iC is tittle wonder that ,the sufferer 5800 losing hope of re- covery, when he began to use l)r. C!ltaaet's Nerve 'Pool. Rev. '1". Drown, M011otltSt tnlnie- ter, of Omemee, and late of Bethany, Ont., wt•ites: "A year ago last No- vember I was overtaken with ner- vans exhaustion. For six months 1 did no work, and during that time 1 had to be waited on, not being able to help myself. Nervone col- lapse was complete, fine though I was in the lilty.aielan s hauls tor months, I did not teem to improve. At any little exertion my strength would leave m'•, and I would tremble with nervot !pees( From the first I used a great many nerve I'eii,lle9, bot. they seem. ed to have no Meet in my rasp. 1 ha(i almost lo.>t hope of recovery, When 1 heard of Dr. Chase'[? Nerve ]rood, and began to use it. As u{ system became stronger I began do >v little work, and have gradual- ly incr'eaaed In nerve tome and vig- or, until now I rim about in My normal condition again. I consider Dr. ('tense's Nerve 1• orris the beat iuedicine I ever mid. Not rely ,s, it proven tta wonderful reetoratays powers 111 Me' ewe east, but &leo to several other/ where I have reeom- 1ne11ded Lr. t'hase"e Nerve Fn,si, 50 cents n "sox, 6 bovee for $2.50. Al all (sealers, or tit leatnariecu, Batas Co., Toronto.