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The Wingham Advance, 1909-02-18, Page 3NEWS mommOLD LAND Many Interesting Happenings Reported rrom Great Britain. (London Daily Mail.) Remo blizzard tiwept Doreet, Devon, Soutereet, Welas, Leneashire, Yorkshire: the Border ettuntry and the west of Scot - Una auring the week -011d. in the wet Highlarals it etiolate/ Mem eantly for twenty-four hours, the bliz- zard, at one time beim; accontpanied bat lightning. The West 'Highland Railway from Glasgow to Fort William was OOnittletely blothed. A train. was held up at Ranuodo on on the traekleas moor of that mune. The oarriagee were stecmaheated, but the twenty padeengers were short of food. The railway official* supplied hot tea and. what eatables they could spare, and Mr. D. Menai], a passenger, who bed e large cake an& a bottle of wine in ids bag, Owed it with his compenions. Ile hut his bagpipes too, and throeglyout the eight played' spirited wire. latent morning the train struggled to,Corrour, a station 1,300 -feet above the see, level, where the track was again blorked. The eignalinan did Ids last for the wornout passengers, thine of whom re- moved a ettee of sausages from the van And 'cooked them. They were kepttagain all night till gangs. of men from Fort Wflhiam eleared the drift. So violent wee the blizzard at Built derslield that Moore, a player from York in a northern football league tnetelo luta to leave the field with a frozen. arta PERILS OF MOVING BOG. Impelled by heavy floods behind it a bog, thousands of ares in size, onagetuot Mary -Kilmore, near Ballygar, Cotunty Galway, began moving on Solidity and has engulfea farms and hamlets at the foot of the mountain. Early on Monday morning when Mrs. Martin opened her front door the found the house surrounded by liquid beg, She alarmed her husband, and it took their united efforts to save their ehildren. All their stook had to be abandoued. The occupants of the three neiglaboring ]louses narrowly escaped with their lives, and lied not time even to dress them- eelves. The cabin of an ola woman valued McDonnell is entirely submerged, wily the chimney appearing above the sur- face, and it is feared that she was up - able to escape in. time. No trace of her .ean be found. Several of the small farmers have lost all their stock. One man had. to rush out of the house with his family practically naked, and had no tine to release his six head of stock from an outhouse. The house was shortly after engulfed, FANCY DRESS TRAGEDY. The death of Miss Elizabeth Crayston, a nurse at the Liverpool Royal Infirm- ary, who was fatally burned. at a. fancy dress party, was the subject,of an inquiry by the Liverpool eoroner, The other night a number of the nurses held a surprise party in their bitting room at the infirmaxy, the sur- prise elemeot eonaisting of the style of fancy costume to be worn. Miss Cray- ston appeared as "were -wolf," her cos- tume consisting of cotton -wool. After a whist drive Nurse Crayston, who had. been. weaned about the danger- ous diameter of her attire, was etand- lug near the fire, when a spark flew out gold ignited her dothing. She WAS im- mediately enveloped in flames. Miss Griffiths, another nursEe, quickly threw a rug over Miss Crayston and ex- tinguished the flames, but tbe woolen was so badly burned that she died. The jury returned a verdict of tte-ci- dental death. "SPIRITUALISkI'S CURSE." Strange letters were read at au in- quest held at Manchester on Monday eoucerning the death of John Houghton, aged thirty-nine, a school teacher, • of Whalley Range, who shot himself. In a letter to a friend he wrote; The epiritualisin I thought such blessing has turned out a curse to me. "I have been urged into this for the last twelve months by the unseen world, whicla wish I had never found out," he wrote to hie 'wife. To his sisters he wrote; "This would never have happen- ed if I hact not bothered with spiritu- alism." Mrs. Houghton said her husband took up spiritualism three years ago, and it seemed to upset bim a great deal. Ile bad often threatened to take his own life and hers. "He had suggested that we should both take poison or both go into the river and drown ourselves." The jury found that Houghton com- mitted suicide while his mind was un- hinged. BRITON OR 130ER? Ateording to Professor Wallace, of Edhiburgh Univexelty, the _Briton cannot manage the South Africat native as well as the Boot can. He read a paper on the agricultural possibilities of Rhodesia 'before the Roy. al Colonial lostitution the other night, in which he pointed. out that natives sbow more respeet for noer than for Bra tieh mos tere. The Boer makes the native learn Datch„ and give si bit oraers ni thet Imo page, while the Briton tries to pick up a mattering of kitchen Raffia and "not Infrequently makes himself ridieu- loin by reciting orders,. tharaeteristieally pointed with .titrong language,width be does not more than half understand, "The elumge from the iron rule of Labengule to the paralyzing poiley British role has ben too sudden. The mares are subjeeted to no disciplluary influence. Their own sweet will is their may guide." Professor Wallace believes that Rho- desia is to lti ,. one of the great gold - yielding eeuntrice of the world, It bas a great .future. as Cattle -breeding counter, hut the eoutplete destruction of the big pane and tile stamping out of lio»e are necessary for the agricultural improvement of the eonntry. WORK AND WORRY WEAKENS WOIVIEN New Health and Strength Can be Had Through the Use 0 Dr! Williams' Pink Plis, It is useless to tell a hada working woman to take life easily and not to worry. But at is the outy of every woman to &toe her strength as math us possible; to take her caves as light- )), as may be and to build up her sys- tem to meet any unusual domande. It is ber duty to herself and to her lam - for her futnre Itealett dapends up- on. it. To guard against a complete break- down in lietteth the blood must be kept rieh and red and .pure. No other medicine does this 80 well as Dr. Wil- liam& Pink Pills for Pole People. Tills medicine attually inekes new, red blood, strengthens the nerves, re- ethres the appetite mut keeps every organ healthy and toned up. Women enema always rest when they should, but they can .keep their strength and keep disease away by the occasional use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, which have done mere to lighten the eai•es of weak women than any other medi- eine. . Mrs. James H. Ward, Lord's Cove, N. B., sayei "About two years ago f suffered 80 much from nervous proe- •trotion that was little. better titan a helpless wrath, I suffered, from headathes and a constant feeling of dizzineas. '.ithe least unusual move would startle me and set my theart palpitating violently. I tied little or r10 appetite and grew so weak that 1 was hardly .able to drag myself about and could net do my housework. every way I was in a deplorable con- dition, As the medicine I hail been taking seemed to do me no geed, uty hasbana got a supply of Dr. Williams' Pink Pals. I had only been taking the pills for a eouple of weeks whet!. I seemed to feel somewhat better and this entiouraged me -to centime the treatment. Prom that on my strength gradually but surely returned, and in the COMBO of a few more weeks I was once more a well women, able to do my own housework, and feeling bet- ter than I had done fet years. I have since remained well and I feel that I owe my good health to the healing power of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." Every other weak, sickly, Worn out woman should follow the example of Mrs. Wood and give Dr. \Mame Pink Pills a fair trial. These Pills will send new blood coursing through the veins and bring brightness mid energy to the weak° end despondent. Sold ley all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box from The Do Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, & King Edward Tired. d -King Edward, even from his eorlieet years, was thoroughly taught the mean- ing of the Constitution of England. Daily he was gaestioned on the subject, until he grew to dislike it most heartily. One day he openly rebelled, and said to his tutor:, "I hate this duty, sirt It's too frightfully dry!" "Oh!" replied the abothed tutor, "bat it is very important that you should knew all about the Constitutiou of the countiy over whith you will one day have to rule!" "Yee, sir," reminder replied the prince; "the English aonstitution Is most im- portant, I know, but how about my eon- etitution?" Trouble for the Much Enduring. • Penelope was spinnieg the shroud. "Ulysses will need it if he gives me that detained at the office story again," she said tersely. Herewith she wound the cuckoo dock, -New York Sun. Lame Back Cured .1 nst nib the painful spot. with Nervi - line; uot much rubbing, Imam Nerde line le made eo penetrate. not suffer Icing After Nerviline is applied,: for it trete like lightning, swift and sure. NervIline is good for avything lint -neat ought to be gooil for -wherever there is pain. Apply Nervilino and. the pain dis- appears, No remedy so thoroughly three lame beak, stiff pinta, sore muselee, lutubego and mid in the theist as Nerviline The farmer, the mechanic, the man who worhe nt herd labor, le subject to the intrudel influence ot doomnees tog, and inclement weather. It's haul 'for htzn to escape pain. What be needs at litnne is a bottle of Nervilime which gives instant ease to every- kind of pain. Nervitine is about four thnes as etroug as the ordinary liniment It gets right at the core of pain tool enres it as no other remedy eau. So stroog aria Con- centrated is Nerviline, that one Applica- tion is always as good as six ordinary rubbings with other liniments. Try a large 25e bottle. -Sold 'everywhere. • 4 4 * NO SO MUCH HUSTLE HERE. South American Not Impressed With Businese Methods in New York. "So Many folks who visit SouthtAinew Iran coutUries," said the men from Co- lombia, "will talk to you about the WA- aess of the Spanish American and about the iniumuct. habit. 1 have been doing bosineee in Latin Amerienn pleats for minty years uow and also I here had some experience itt the Milted States. t want to say that 1 haven't observed auy very great amount of hustling being dome in the natitea States of late. "For iustence, a man in business here gets to his office about 0 o'clock and roes out to lunch at noon or so. Then after he comes back, after spending a fair amount of time at hie meal, he is pr. pAred to quit work at 5 o'clock. "Now, down it, Botoga, for instanee, folks get to work in their offices_ at 8 o'clock and they stay there until 0 or later. They don't take so very much time for lunch either. No man in Bogo- ta thinks of making an engagetneet for dinner 'until weil along toward half - past seven. They do a lot of retil Imsta "A. South Amedean came into the of- fice of a company here one day when I was there and asked for the price of a certain commodity that we handle. It happened thatin order to be sure about the terms the factory had to be eon - suited.. That mon complained to me Of tlie leisurely business methods here. • "He said he thought the information should; have been in the office, and, fail- ing that there was no reason why he should have to wait teem weeks to hear from the faetory. He said the process was like this: "A day oo so after he asked at the oft dice a letter was sent to the factory. That letter was put on file and answer- ed in due course, probably three or four days later. Then it was mailed and re- ceived in the office the next day. "Then after other letters ahead of it bad been atteuded to it was P op i e d for him. The next day perhaps it was mail- ed. and the day after it got to him. "Altogether he figurea • cut that It took -about two weeks for him to hear of it. He Wasn't impressed with the hustling, of the Americans." . WANTED MORE TIME. Patron -Are, you the proprietor? Barkeeper -I've only worked here an hour, Give me a chance. ert* Civil ization. Missionary -You claim to be civilized, and yet I find you 'torturing your cap - titres. Native -Pardon, but we do not call this torturing, now. We are merely haz. Ing him. -Cleveland Leader, 4 • • The Matrimonial Spur. Long -To what do you attribute your great business success? Strong -To my wife. She made it ne- eessery for me. to earn more money. -,- Boston Transcript. 1111=112211111111111111111111 Coughs,Col s nd Brotichitgi athe Catahzzie It Cures Quickly Cured by "CATARRHOZONE" A Breatheible "Direct" Medicine 'Every sufferer from coughs, eohle, broneldtis and all throet and chest ailments neede a soothing, healing mediehte Whieh goes direct to the breathing .otganti in the .chest and hinge, (Weeks the trouble at its thuree, disperses the germs of disease, and mires the ailment .thorough- ly. And this medicine 14 "CiltartheZelle.-" The genn-killing, balsamic vapor mixes with the- breath, &vends through the throat, clown the bronchiel tubes, end finally reeehes the deepest air MIA in the lungs. All oerte are soothed with doh, pure medieinal essences, whereas, if a. litolit remedy were ueea, the affeeted parte coull not be veaehed, end harm weld result through beaumbing the stometh with dingo Remember this: You don't take thugs when using Catarrhozone; you .eimply inhele a heeling. 'Vapor thet turn every type of catarrh; bronehitis, Asthma, throat itua nose soreneee, Ana irritetion, o medicine bringe siteh prompt relief, -exerts .suelt an invigoratizig inflame Or so thoroughly taid Speedily 'cures throat froubla as "Cat. .arrhozone,” Doetors, hospitals, sanitarium -all say' that for tkitose Ittbo -suffer from ehangeable tweet/ow, for those 'Who aro predisposed to .eatarrh, lung tronide, deafness 01 bronehitis,no treatment. is so indis- pensable act "1.111 farboznim" For (attain cure, for relief in an hour, use Catena:nein:a the only direct, breathrable medieine. Two monthet treatment retatrauteetl; priet With smaller eiee Me; at all dealete, or The t Ili oiotto Company, Xint,fst on, t In t. NEW KIND OF ROAD MATERIAL. Sait end Alkali Scale From I.:tonere Used in Pens Kana. The farmers in rellirdi ns web as tlie people 141 OW 1111 r0 'PPR 111 gond roads 1.1r seyeret years, cola in this part of the Stlto cau•See elnuott any kina of it inade road. At one or two plaga in this e nuttry there are short roads whew treatment has been given 'that le similar to the pavement on Douglas avemui in Ells- worth. Here there aro two Inoelts dot fool fom•-fliths nf the visitors to the town. The treatment .of this street watt commenced about two or tbree pellet ago, consisting of course ana fine ebonite in layers, then a eovering surface of salt and alkali Reale. 'Ile water itt this eountry 14 very hard and in all the steam bolleys at the salt mills and other factories it sort of alkali forms which must be removed frequent- ly; cola thit, with the salt end alkali Seale that forms in the salt. pant, at used on Dougles avenue. It forme a hard erust aud utalece a most exeellent street. It is a, success on the meet busv thoroughfare of this town, anaif the :supply weenot an limited the fart/toe would nee it for the rural roads mat more of the streets of this city woulti lit paved witl. it. The salt end -Alkali cam, on Douglas avenue is now abont three inches thick. end thit lies ou three Melon of coarse ciuders and three incites of fine cinaers, It makes a pretty street, In appearance being like an asphelt pave- ment before it beeomes dirtyeaTtlatworth correspondence Kaneas City Star, • to DO JUST WHAT IS CLAIMED FOR THEM That' S What Joseph Macklin Says of Dodd's Kidney Pills, They Cured His Neuralgia, Cramped Muscles fled Heart Disthee From Which He Had Suffered for Two Years. St. Paul do Metis, Alta, Feb. 8.- (Specia1).-"Dodd's Ridney Pills Lave done for me all that is claimed for them." So says Joseph Macklin, it well known fanner of this diettiet. "I was ill for over six years with Neuralgia, Cranme in my lunacies, Backache and Heart Disease, I called on different doc- tors but got no help. I heard that Dodd's Kidney Pills were meant for just such cases as mine and bought eight boxes of them. Now I feel just like a new man, I recommend them to all as a sure euro for Rheutuatiem mol. ali troubles arising from diseased Kidneys." Thousands of farmers ell over the west relate similar eeperiences to that given by,Mr. Meeklin, They find that Dodd's Eidney Pills do just witat is claimed for them -etre all diseased Kidneys and all diseases arisieg from diseased. Kidneys, FRANK NELSON'S STORMS. (Toronto Saturday Night.) At it social gathering of newspattert men, Mr. Prat -ids Nelson, the sporting editor of the Globe, told three. excellent stories picked -up on his tour with the Canadian Olemple aterosee team. One of the trains on which tbe teem travelled in Ireland, was exasperatingly slow. At the twelfth stop -which hap- pened to be at a village station-- the famous Joe Lally, of Cornwall, stuck his head out of the carriage window and asked of a milway guard: "Say, old libek, when ao we get to Sligo?" On the instant atom the answer; "tin - meetly after tit' en -gine, sorr." Lally -asked nomore questions during the remainder of the journey. In Dublin the Canadian visitors were driven .around. the city in jaunting cars. One of the drivers, pointing to a fbamous brewery, asked Ids "fares" if they want- ed to go inside. It was worth visiting, he said. They detained his suggestion.. Ite said, regretfully, "O'rn sorry. 1 tuk a par'rly there yesterday, an' th' manager am' tit' brewery axed Inc in, too." Then he paused. "Well, what hoppened?" asked one of the Camulians. The driver -smiled. "01 drunk sivin pines ev porter,"the replied, "an' Oi cud a' had me fill av ut if Oi had been want- ing to." Mr. Nelson's final story was this: Willie, who lived with his mother in London, stuttered badly, being almost; ineoherent wino excited. His mother was trying her (two method of curing him. She sent lint down the cellar one day to bring up thine potatoes. He re- turned quickly, and greatly agitated, "0-0-0!" he began, "Now, said his mother,- "you know wot I've allus told you. Dont try to speak when heeited. Sit down and sing it." Willie sat down. • "0-0-0-monama he began again. "Stop!" died his mother, sharply. Willie dosed: his mouth. "Now," .slte went on, "sit you still till yott are carm, Wink." The boy waved his limbo shuffled his - feet anct tried once more to talk. "Den't hopen your lips axial. till :idlta can sing it, or thresh you," hie mother eommanded. An interval of -silence. Finally Willia with Ids hands tightly clenehedand his feet drawn up, burst forth into seek "0, mother," be warbled, "the house - the boast -as on fire ---fire." ••••••••,*Orm FATHER KNEW. Bert -What is notion, pa? Pa -Any story that ends, "they mar. vied and lived happily ever niter." Pinatas. Mrs. Jenner Lee ()adept. How neve San maneeted in keep your enoli no long1 Mrs, thidahottt----Uy husband bas pull with the pollee department. We lave the bamienmeet effieer on the force stationed in our :theta, Any Change en improvement Photogradher -Pt that fitt, 11104 ples- iltg eepreseunt you tan at -newt" Kit ter -Yea Cr. Phelogtapher 11. for leaven's taloa glare feroeieutit et bar. ‘we eLOTCH ES All skin diseases such as pimples, originate through iallure of the kidneys and liver. All taints that bloc% the avenues of health must be removed. Dr. Handl. ilton's Pills do this ;middy; They cleanse the system, malo the skill smooth, restore roses to the cheek, and give clear dainty complexion. PR. HAMit,Tortios PiLLS For good looks, good health; amsi good spiritthere is nothing so sure as Dr. Hamilton's Pills, 25o hozes'at all dealers. __— BLAZE IMO FEET HIOH. The greatest oil fire in history ie supposed to have been the lire *Welt by a conservative estititl'. destroyed more than 5,000,000 barrels of oil last year in the San (leronimo field near Tampieo, Mexico. The oil stratam W118 struck ttt it depth of 1,840 feet in a s:x inch etteed welL Time torrent of oil burst forth and 1%as quickly followed by a blow out of gas whith opened a big otifiee in the earths surface, swallowing up the derriek and whole chilling Math, includlog the engine and boiler. The gas and all were ignited from dlio fire under time boiler and the great fire Was in this manner started.. lt burned for sixty-two days. The vortex or tauter ti ..aroegh which the oil poured was gradually enlarged .0 - til it was more than 500 feet wide,, A rim of rocks and earth was formed around its outer edge resembling a volcano's orator. At-wordingto the Technical World the blaze extended to a height of from 1,400 to 1,a00 feet and the column of black smoke roee above it to e 'height of about 0,000 feet. Oa top of the smoke ratted n. great white elottd of vapor withal watt estimated to extend eltyward to an additional height of a too feet. '1'lle blaze could be seen 200 miles. The great oil tire nes eetieguished by means of six couti,ifttgal pumpe which were Rept eonstantly busy for weeks throwing med and vat r into the crater. Heavy diecharges of dyn- amite Around the rim of the orifice also aided in the eetinguiehing. work. Shortly after the flames were put out the oil burst forth again in greater volume than ever mut fie output was estimated at 150,000 barrels', aday. lt has been a difficult problem to care for the oil. The Mexican Govern- ment sent several hundred soldiers to the scene to assist the owners of the well in building earthen r gvoirs for temporarystorage of the product. Tho ail overflowed these teservoirs and large cemetities escaped into the San Geronimo River and Inke Tam- itthatt, Meore proof that Lydia E. Pink.. hanesVegeta,ble Compound c, araa sick women.* Miss M. R. Morin, 830 Ontario St., Montreal, writes to Mrs. Pinlrb.am: "I was in very poor health and doc- tored for months, receiving very little benefit. I had lost all ambition, was nervous, and subject to dizzy spells and painful periods eacla month. "A friend suggested Lydia E. Pink- loten's -Vegetable Coinpound as the proper medicine for me. I procured a bottle of this remedy and began tak- ing, and before it was !loathed, I felt so much better that I continued its use and gave it a thorough test, with the result I Mu to -day well and a much healthier girl than I was three years ago. I have no more painful periods, dizziness or nervous troubles." FACTS FOR SICK WOrvilEN. For thirty years Lydia, E. Philt. ham's Vegetable Compound, made from roots and. herbs, bas been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women wit.° have been troubled with displacements, infiammationoficera- tion, fibroid turnors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear- ing -down feeling, flatulertcy,indiges- eon, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don't you try it? Mrs. Pinkitam invites all Sick women to write her for advice. She has graded thousands to health., eadielreSs, Lynn, Mass. A Sign of Death. There May have be,en many "eigns". of death -so some people believe - bat tettei described here is peobably new to Marty. Mr„ W. 13. Cooper, of Chelt- enham, tolls nf his father being ill bitt not confined to bed, and one satiny day in Julie when he walked aoross the garden another man, the facsimile of hie !ether, met hint and "apparently passed into him," "Shortly after in'y father cated to me and said: '1114 you set me go, aeross the garden?' X said 'Yes. 'Well,' he said, '1 shan't be hero long; our family see themselves before they Although t had seen this, I said, 'Nonsense.' He shook his head and walked away.. Shortly after he took to his bed and died on Tidy ti. My father during the few days he was, in bed -we were haymaking, at the time -asked each morning, 'Which field are you in now?' When we came to it eertnin field veiled 'Cadley,' it gad, with a high, oa great satisittetion, 'Ah, I ..etall ale WM.'" lie died the same morning near midday.- Fr,on '1'. P.'s Weekly, Preparation, imam 4.114.1 th IL ;I',/1:1' friend hie 1al...31 pi eliminaly tt.ett taeara -Why, he u it modal only tide morn- iaen' "Yea Th it was et a T hot in mied," 1.• al. RUSSIA'S ANTI.KIOSING LAW, CORNS CURED 4 j()•Ititi:g"'lftiaatfir.NVM4 ti.41110iltit 111414'1' , multi:Sits neat-kis:Is ha ;mit' 11 Volt eau peleleedy remove tit/t2411TRI77 e`38'‘en'lunr8P41nuy of healing gums na bah11'tl7rtlseta CureguarauterA, sai1y tillltagimteetabooe. etefute PUTNAIVI'S PAINLESS CORN EXTRACTOR Cost art Actress Whie Kissed Her t • Mother in A Street Oat. $1. *la Ilutsitt ie rtilea by rigonitie !ewe. The irony and bunter et NOM(' Of 010111 01)1114 11011)0 1.1tin. foreien oultaker, whit. of antra. the talon:me rept only the tthie hatta. The latrst iletini of nit antakies• Mg in -puling. leo le it 14111IOUS itil•ti all 101 1111pel 10014 aerreas, tflle. Trepoff. who ate intliv limn the temerity to • late ter mother in a tramcar,. 011e Willikt have thought evert a mag- istrate Or pulite, or whoever ethninis- toed cages of lawbreaking tif that Mod in Misfile, would. be melted he the Itento ttful pielorct of the reimioa (ie it mother and stAughter eelebrateil by sa Int e, hitt Russia undersientis no jokes. says tha lady's Vietminh the fitet of ten Mika te8s, OtIO fot it kiss In public vonvoyatieve, stielt 04 ralliV0ye and intuit:aro was vigerouttly elrforeelt A Mee in the street is penalized to the eetent ttf eetati rublee ilia, lod..). and it deelaratimt of love sent by posteanl, if anybody it fiteed brazen enough to_ do such e, tltitcg, le punished to the extent of five rubles (148. '22.). Otot would like to knew if intailt is beepeci on in• jury and the fair reeipient imitated in clanteges if the tirelaration is sent with- out awe 111141A:e1 to identify the sender. Chapped Froth Fifigers To Elbows. Bay's Agony Relieved by Zarn-Buk, .11 you are suffering from badly ehapped hands tolt will be able to.eotnprehena n Ilttle of the agony witieh emery Walker, Of 14 Ilataufaeturers street, :11ontreal, endured be- fore Zorn -Buis are hint relief. Ills Mother, telling of the case to a noes, reptetenieuve, semi- - ..lienry works with hls &Wet sleeves roiled up above hts elbows, and passing front a warm room to the biting cold, as he Wild °bilge(' YO d(10, he got the wevse ease of chep- ped hands and arm I have ever teen. -From his fingers to his elbows WKS 0110 011489 of raw flesh, with bad eraeks here and there. 'Whenever lie washed, it brought teers to bIt eyes, the pain was SO smite. Ile tried several kinds of salves, but nettling relieved him realiy until lie trled Zeitt-Buk. This baltu setmed to lake away the burning and smart- ing almost at once. 'rue oratas began to heal, nue a rew appiteattons a the balm eured hltri. 1118 betide and arm are now smooth and soft. "Wo hare alto used Zion -13u4 for °Ulm' eniergeneles. 1 sustained a born Pu one of MY fingers. Zain-Buk took the fire out and Imola up Cie sore. 31 really aeons it wonder- ful household preparation. .0n one occasion my 2011 Harry had his met frozen. It was very swolleti and dis- colored. but Zant-liuk both relieved the 13114111115 and removed the diseOloraLlon. Zam-Bulc is so handl. and ao that We Shell always keep a entirety handy." Miss Hattie Bertrand, of Salisbury (Ont.), says:-"Eivery winter 1 stiffer from chapped hands. but 3 have found a Mire In Zam-Buk. Applitd at night, it Iteals the oracles by morning, and takes away ull the soreness:" Nadler effects follew its use for eczema, team sem, blood -poisoning, ulcers, ring. - worm, chIldren's sores, 01119, burns aud bruises. It also cures piles. A:11 druggists and 440505 sell at Iee a box: or pest free from Zam-Buk (3o., Toronto, for price, 4 HANDBOOK FOR HUSBANDS. Women Know How to be Curious, But Men Make Blunders, ad. Y. Sun.) "Women are curious," add Uncle Henry, when he Was quite sure. She teas down al; the other end of the flat. "What I mean* in they have curiosity. ttty fler. oioel m knows they're ettrioue, ean- iriglq"Yes, sir, they never take anything for granted. Men alwaye do, that is, married men. They do if they know what's good for tem. You hear me, sou? “Now, take the man that ate the first oyster. lre was tte womau, more than likely. That is to say, she was probably a man. You know, 'twee a woman ate it, or else she put him up to it Prob- ably got him to open thteeliell and= then double dared him, sante as Eve. "Ifer desire to know whether it would poison him, together with his dodbust- ed pride, laid the foundatiott to the im- mortal oyster fry in a box, of width, youtig friend,. she has beget the mitre -Ott recipient ever sinee. See whit 1 mean? Ire got tho first oyster and she got the lof011110t101And all the rest of the fut ture oysters. "Now Adam. Of course he wasn't mar- ried to etart with. Ire was merely hap- py. Then the snake gave ltim curiosity, which he had no business with, and he began to wonder what a woman looked like. One Mind along and married lain. And marriage then became the mother of invention, and has been ever since. (bit the idea? All the sons of Adam are it leetlo tainted like. "Don't g.) by. me son. Look at his- tory. Hannibal, he Itttd ouriosity; the male kiwi He was itthing to see what sort of a collar and elbow customer Scipio was He wanted to see Scipio very badly. He saw hint very badly, and he saw his finish at the same time. "And how 'bout Traroun Anlaaseltid, the orig.inal Arabian date maker?" He eu was rhaus. Do you. know what hap- pened to him; son? No? Well, neither do but it was sure something awful. "And Richard the Lion Hearted, and Peter the Hermit, atid the painted red- skins who wondered what Billy Penn wataed with their golf links; And Wiley Riley, and Gen, Issy Putnam And Cotton Mather, and Aguineldo-how 'bout 'em? •••-c. •-ra MI, envious, by gracious, and .dodking , bridge. that 44, the ourvieorti. 'thee watit I mean? Mena got no bud - nese trt ing to be minus ettecerefully. No, sir. Now take Inc. I'm not more than eo so on •wonderiug about taint. When 1 ehp ma foot and begin probing around I get move You hear reet ton? I get mine plenty. ho'z'nie46atloTn "adlifleYa 1;1: :tiled llik.egittiltIv.i rtbn:cifell8 e1- lug round about the isnot. way. I go% itt and takes off nor •th,oes, puts on my Slippers aud houee coat and waits for the dinner hell. riglit. Prette SOOKI it begins to ring, 'Up I gets and goes in to dinner. Like thatoAll right. "Sex,- MP, she had a layout there that teas towelling neat and nobby. The hand that wields the ladle rulee the world, MI right. Our cook came with a truck full of refereuces Chet smelled like eitirogropby exhibits in a diyoree enit. She hail references in every laeguage -but you ean't eat referenees, "But my wife is MAO cook herself. You know what the had done? She had clouted the cook for the clay and hadit•ot, up the ohole feed herself. Honest,. 4011, I .CoUld have kicked myself for e4`tillnriarest,, ll'illv11. ' the says, ait dom.' elm nye, 'ea eat it all up,' she eays. 'I cooked it for you.' you know me, 1 :darted With 0 00E4 of eater,- rota 1 Watt gaiug strong Admit we paesed the Lae quarter With A near cup of Meek toffee itild ttpiceP of pie like mother couldn't make if she get the recipe direct front Nirs. Gabriel. When I romped aCrotre the tinish line with A t00:41Ck in one liana mut te fin. ger bowl in the other I was so eouteuted and ptheefid I was breathing to the taile of "Now I Lay Me Down to Sleep." "Then chaos! Then the home of cards crumbled up, into a landslide and got it good. At that psythologicAl moment, as they say in the classica, I began to won- der wity, oherefoie end how 'in— The fact is I hegite to be curiouti. " 'Wife,' f says, with difficulty on aecouut of the too much feed, 'wile,' ova, 'aecepi the aSSIMineea of my es- teemed coneideration. You have done yourself proud,' I says. Aud, pritheea eays, 'why this unusual but most de- lectable repast() haucinetn 1 says, 'Did you expect compaey?' I says. "Nod she says, didn't, expect any. thing,' she says, 'and thet Just what I got,' site says, like that, sort of die - agreeable. 'It may interest you to kuow, Ilenryn she says, like that, sort of dis- agreeable. 'It may lancet you to know, Henry,' she says, 'that this is our wed- ding anuiversarya she says, 'or it limy rot, now you have eateo my lovely food and are not likely to get any more, elte says. "You 'forgot our wedding day, Every, and nay feelings are hurl,' site says, 'eti I sludn't forget it 'ever,' she. says. "And sh,i won't forget it, either. Nei- ther will 1. She's got it in for inc now for fair. Too melt euriosity, sou. "The may safe way for it man is to never open his mouth unless he's go- ing to put something into it. The min- 113titeur etyoeu let any thing out you spoil the "When it man begins to ask his wide questions, just that minute he begins to make it noise like a goat." 1. NOT EXACTLY. Miss Woodby-So Mr. Smart really said he consideted me very witty, eh? Miss Knox -Not exactly; he said he had to laugh every time he met you. 4 4 How He Spent His HalftHoliday, A young man was industriouely wheel- ing a perambulator along the pavement in front of his residence. "My dear!" mitea oice front an upper windOw. "What's the matter?" he shrieked back. And he went on wheeling. Art hour tater the same voiee came front the same win - clew. "George, dear!" "Well, what's the matter now?" be shouted, "This, George dear -you've been wheeling Lottle's doli all the afternoon! Let baby have a tern now!" -Philadelphia inquirer, 4 • a - Corrected. "These cars are alweye cold," grown ed the Fathering patron. - "My dear sir," interposed a meek pas- sengot, "your etaterneat is twO sweeping, When I traveled ite these care lest stun mer they were not tolcl at all." RHEUMATISM Strikes the CAUSES: A. run down condition of the . Heqrt and then kills system, poisoned blood, and 'Uric Add. The joints beeoine dogged With irritating SOPrOti011s and pow stiff.' Every movement tortures and mks the sufferer. (lure is uot pos. sible until the blood is purified. The most potent blood purifier is Perrozone. It is a perfeet solvent for rrie Aeid and an antidote for all other poisons liable to cause inflammation or Ithemnatie pains. But Perrozone doesn't stop here. It provides the enfeebled sufferer with an abundant supply of .pore, invigorating blood. This quickly results m more strength with whieh to fight the disease, starts a rebuilding of the system, ends in a permanent cure. :>tr. Thos, Egan, of 92 Pearl s(reet, New York, suffered so intensely- from Rheumatism that his friends be- RRozoNE );(„,(1. he conld not reeover. "The Rheumatism," writes Mr. Egan, PURE'S "eripplord nit for four years. It seemed to run to the 3411M5. NOWA swelled and caused dreadful pain. I wasn't able to walk and 1111' strength rapidly deereased. ty heart became 140 Wellk 1 Ilftd Itt 110 holsderta Up in bed. I was ta Itly %VHS/. Mit When T beard of the wonderful elves of Ferrozone. Twelve boxes enred and 1 am now stronft and perfeetly well." There is no heti er remedy, Severe tests have proved it superlative to all others. If yon Irma the DIP.ST and nMat treatinent for Ritentaatism, flout, Neuralgia,. or 8c1ation, Use rerrozotte. No ease top ebronic, Pr!ve ;:tt vents per box or six boxe.4 for C.1.'60, kiold all dria,111,:. SOIATIOA Prayer. 0112' Father ill ReaVell, we hilalblY bow Wow as the alLesing One. Thon art the Troth kr,tut Thou 11,s1r. est troth • ig the tr part. Thy light penetrates tho innermost rees;4,.!. es of our hearts, and Thon •knowest an the motives which prompt onr tuts. Peareit us and sec 11 there be any hidden wiekednees or root of falsityItt tun and cleanse us from all pnrisitteensuess. May Thy cleansing Arta, purge na front every form of preemie() and shant end unreality, Make ue altogether what Thou trotting him us to be, pure in motive, in thought, and in act, nest nifty we more and more become reflectorn of the Christ whose wo aro and whom we nerve. Anlell. •-••••••••-•6•,.• When We Are Believed In, No man elm overcomci the terrible adds of thinking that ma one believes itt hbn. What any rnan-reaelos tbat depth, be is gone, Therefore God gives os trionds, whose eonfidenco itt us is our greatest lituaan resouree, and Ito gives us the still greater privilego of being friende, and of saving mei fitrengthening Oben; by shoiviog them our egnfideaeo 14 thorn. Aolf as a sorer resoureo than ally liuttiit frincTsliip tit its best own be, be tiv.- 1435 the saving friemishio ot it is own Son. 1( 114443 been said that the power Of the Christian religion 15 the triali, that there in SOilleone Who helle1,14:i you, No imitate what our pnota hove been, no matter how atrophied, 'rata annihilated, our spiritual powers may seen to be through abuse and dittese, nev how helpless scoms the outlook for our mastery of merselvee ond our failures, we know -the t Christ not mita, hits the power to overoome aur pant but has unlimited 000 ' 1Ceill our Willirtguess to let hint do this Tor us. That is the NMI NOWS that has NOON' (100111 with, life for many a who had tlioug•la that ha wee be.yood, any one's ever again believ- ing in him, -S. S. Times. One Prayer, (Thendoela Garrison). Let me work trod be glad. 011, Lard; and I ask no morez.. With will to turn where the sunbeams barn At the Oill of my workshop door atoretime 1 prayed my prayer For elle glary and gain of earth; Butenow grown wise' and with opened eyes I hare seen Whitt the twayer was worth. Give me .itly work to do, And peace of the task well done, . • Youth of the Spring and its blossoms tkiuthtighe. light of the moon and son. Pleasure of little things - That never may pall or. end, And fast ia my hold no lesser gold Than the honest hand of a friend. Let me forget in time Ino1.1:yra of dreame that I had; Give me my share of it world most Let mo work and be glad. Independent. Commended. A 111;111 of client -caw is It Ilinn to be mummified; he le already head and thoulaere above the surging mass.. Seeth thou a man diligem in business, he shall stand before king:. 744:1:1'h:a is to commend? To exitoL. to praise, to glee tharge, to render Oita - tricots, to nuike more acceptable. 1 com- mend unto you, Phoebe, our sister, from the port of Cenerea, carryingdin her it a patroness, or deaconess, wearing .eatntdhehol:raelb°81: litettlet7 of Paul. She Men eommend themselves, men cone mend each other, men are commended of Out Ond eteninciiiled IBS own work. How near 1 men to God; how dear is men to God? Tie is not far from ate' one of us. Olt, to have eyes to see! "Thou hest given me the heritage et them thet fear thy name." Then how rich ant It I heard a, man say as I Wats passing, "There is to he it great; party to -night in here. I am not invited. All that comes to my share is the fumes that come front the kitchen. I am riot in the swim. So the world passeth on, hungry, jealoue, greedy and empty. How delicate are the operations of nod! When be toilettes us it is not by the .eudgel, of a policeman, but by the gentle yoke of: a Father. Observe, it le lint lie eommandelle but Ile ronanoun eth 1114 love towards 119 in that wbile we were yet sinners; Chvist died for nt. 11 14 'my privilege to be en the list Of Pendia:tees for commendation. How it that men get nominated? They aro known, they arc interested, they make saerifice of more thao one kind; they leave the wife to darn the socks rind to alt by the fire Alone, while he is fit the dub or the CAUCUS. HOW ia it with men who tire looking higher? Where nmet they go? They ran stay nt home, • they can comfort the \volume they can oecnpy the most preeious hour in the whole twenty-four. They Om eultivate the home vh•tuee; then they are near to God. They ere on the high road to promotion. Standards of ebaraeter are on the ue grade. The soul is found to be larger than the tonr walls, larger than the town,larger than the country, larger than the universe, larger than the Eternal nod, for the heart ean take Hint ha and Ho cart be enterteihed. Yea, it in Hie 'Thalia. "This is my rest for elm. (the human heart); Itere will dwell for I have (haired it." When you aro commended of God you are permitted to sit; in the heavenly photo. Even while On earth this is the t OII1 yt1'tto, "Men will pttIi43'ttie llite does( nen Itt tit•yself." The( is it world- ly MINIM. tOthe a little higher; lot another praise thee Ow humanity, sin- rerity, ilevot ion. for a a reverent attitude, for n tartar out- , praying spirit, for taty joy it in Thy heauty (If teatime"; ty etenite.t Iti lap duly that Wells me - life to Thine. O. fur that eleaeett fileseing of living in lity het*. And tate. tei earth pneteeeitet tht. dote,. Id leaven ;shore; 1, for flit, Hite that by it the eteil tin- t( vely Itttaiit The hely :tam and :atter et fa Rita serene repos' ," 11. T. Nliner., An Eveet Break, "IN nal happen.: Oat en nreet ,T11)0 biter, ineel4 au immovable leiayt" "Day (Beide tie gate insoey," 81155401- e4 the 11 CV (41 niemlor of the elate. Nita the pre lel it go mi that ...ead ashe irgtou limed .