HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance, 1905-03-30, Page 6Particular P.opIe----%
Tho average man knows more about tea (hart his wife thinks
ho doee. ()Ivo him.
TEA for a month. then try another tea, he won't drink it. it's
a short probietst, BLUE RIBBON'S the QUALITY that counts.
ONLY ONE BEST TEA• --•BLUES RIBBON TEA.
ly, stood off and evero amazed, but I
eared nothing for them. Thaetll;h all. the-
tune
he .
i 1 it a,'
:ages s title! 11 all the 1 t t ssa t 1i �i o'
tune and spztee, our two souls Iwtlebeen
eunung together, Miesing her, .I would
...\,‘„,...„ a solitary student, to ally
journey's end. 1 sintddeied, sometimes, . abies
to think what any life would. have Leen
if I had not gone to the house where 1 •
met her tied
"Missing ale, :lief would have laughed
and jested with the crowd of suitors,
until she wearied of them, and they fell
away, one by one, and left her still
heart: hole end alone.
"My life was filled with such dreams
an these, wllielt seemed eo trite, so nat-
ural that I felt it neeessary to speak to
Elinor, for she must see as clearly as
The flood was carrying flim on -ire re- -
___w_ sunned hurriedly, with. his eyes on. the
paper;
"One evening I went to her home. Eli-
nor was alone, with a shadow on her
Owe, and something took possession of
ine, and I ---I spoke. I see you are this-
- turLeci--for rile, You need not be iron-
bled --it was all over long ago. I have
'lived through it. I can laugh now, when
I think of at -ha, ha, hal
"She laughed, too, at the time, and
said it was the strangest thing that a
girl could never be friends with a man
but that he spoiled it by wanting to
marry her. She leaned bask in her cush-
ioned chair -there was something made
of silk and lace behind her head--and-
and she looked so fair and dainty and
gentle but she was laughing; and she
told me that she liked to have me near
her for several reasons,
"In the first place, 1 was tall, and she.
liked tall hien. Then, I could talk to her
about books, and that enabled her to talk
about them, too, without being at the
trouble of reading them herself. Then, I
was so deliciously serious, and that re-
freshed her -•-and above all, she knew she
was perfectly safe with me, for no one
would ever be insane enough to dream of
our marrying,
"She laughed a great deal, yet she was
vexed that I had spoken and spoiled it
all. She had broken her doll, and, find- ,
lug nothing but heart's blood inside it,
she threw it away, But men were all
alike, she said! they all took themselves
senousl
"And then I laughed also, and went
out into the night. A little while after
she left London and went abroad; and
I -I sat here at my desk and lived.
"Yes, I am quite recovered -fortunate'
(
The brides were visions of loveliness Ile began early to }take au Interest
to their r!eil ivory white satins, elude In public affairs and nhowed himself
vol:tniinous ve.t s and tragrant orange so thoroughly in earnest in the pro -
blossoms. Their costumes were ex- 1 ,:notion of every good work - so
sally alike, and, after the ceremony,
the guests wera continually making
- mistakes regarding the identity of
the two briees thus causing, no little i ,borough and took his seat as an M.
amusement and merriment ; but the 1'., lo which capacity be served his
proud and happy lru;ha,nde were. never 1 party --for years -in away that won
at a loss to distinguish them -their 1 Uim its unbounded nonfidenoe and es..
fend eyes were quick to recognize teem. .
each his own, 9s Sir Arthur Vincent Page grew
It hnpenrd, very opportunely, that , older ho began to manifest a great
the firm with which M. L4dghtot was) interest in the ieondition of the home -
associated --found it necessary toless newsboys, bootblapks, and other
-
send hilt on a trip to the United 'istceet gam'ns of atondon, whera, der -
States Just at this time ; thus the ing his early years, he had obtained
whole party sailed together, one so much exporlmeutal knowledge of
bright September morning, and a their deprivations and sufferings. • • so Y.
very happy company they were Are soon as She arrived at his major -
throughout the voyage ; young Sir ity he began Ito :pian, in earnest,
Arthur being not the least joyous how to amel'orate their sad exper-
among them. Arriving, in ;New York fences, and so, with the hearty co -
there came the first separation. Aeration ot his guardian, throwing
Senor Caatal'li and his bride deeming i I•ioitrszlr heart and soul into an enter- ly. With some men it might have been
it necessary to proceed directly to ; prise that had already been start- a very serious thing. There are men, you
their home in Mexico, but the young i ed:by another hilanthropist a grand. know, who put so much of life into a
roan informed their friends that ° be remit was ultimately achieVed in the thing that what is left behind isn't worth
hoped, by the eni o: a c..uele of years, establishment of numerous homes, considering. It would be so with you,
to be able to dispsae o: his Mexican . }loth in city and country, where the Howard. I have thought of you many
mine to such advantage that he could ` homeless could find refuge and where time, for I knew -what might eome-
retlre from busicesi and settle in a I --surrounded by pure and elevating and I wanted to warn you. When you
more civilized eemniunity-probably , influenoes, they were able to rise are pouring out your soul they are toler-
New fork, when re -event visits be- out of the old life to become noble ating you because -because you are tall.
1
tweet: the cottsiva, who had become, men and women -for girls were also It would ricin your life, my boy. Don't
strongly etttaehed to each other, admitted, and Ioyal citizens. let them do it." .
would be possibieWhen It began evident that Lhe "Wait a moment," said the pale -faced
Or. and rs. th Beaver city home, redim-
mediately ryoung baronet might,
no eoesnger a his
hh-
istat daybringbonnea bridetr arm. Ner nindnI d Re not
Florenes and her husband and their the Towers, Cenral Leighton, who have heeded it -no man would but your
charge became their guests during ha j long co ter-; laced en:h. a change warning comes too late. I was married
their sojourn- in New York. ptirett:t•sed a fine estate a few,, miles last week. I am on my wedding tour. I
Early in November they returned from Worthing, aed, having made all `thought you knew,"
to England and took up their rest- tee money he eared for, retired from The elder paused, with ties paper held
dance at 'Worthing Towers, in order active business in order to give his out in both motionless hands,and stared
that the heir might be reared •
.,.$dent tutor, he be an in earnest "Married!" e w ispere to -to }els, an old friend of tate family, visite
to prepare for bis future. Here our friends made an Ideal - whom?"
Heves-the boy was as happy as the home for themselves, and when at "To Miss Elinor S-ancour."
day wire long with his "uncle Carrot" , length our noble here was knighted The paper dropped to the floor with a
and "Aunt S Toy," the latter hexing for a signal service, which Canis to crash, and in the pause that followed
become almost as dear to him as his ' the knowledge and touched the Howard heard his watch tick. Then the
bettetaetor. Here, to. the faithful heart of his queen, Florence became, man who had outlived the tragedy of his
Jane, now fully recovered, was rein- strange to relate, Lady Leighton, j life arose and heard himself saying for -
stalled as a trusted servant, and, I thus acquiring the very title and mails. a long way off:
later, became Mrs. Burns. Tom Dill t position wench she had aoorne• l and =`Allow me to eengratulate you.'—I1-
also became ra fixture upan :he place, laxed that nothing could induce: instrated Bits.
occupying, nominally, the position or ter to accept. e. - d
under-gard;.er, Iur. ii reel -.y h- was STs. ie :.cry prend of ler grand, . WHAT DR, OSLER SAID.
a tenderly cared for pensinrer, Car- whets -hearted ht•.sbanel, and he of
rot Leightuu feeling, tna, too omen] cis lovely wife, bots of wi out nil t —
could not bo dote for him in re- tines positions and dispense the hos-New York Medical journal Shows Point
turn for his Heroism in the past;
For many years this happy ho::6e-
hold lived at the Towers and with-
out a, sl3edow to mar their joy.
A att.rdy youngster, whom they i
named Robert, for Florence's null- t
loved guardian, mad=t his appearanen e
before the end of the ,second year
of air. and Mrs. Leigh -
tan's married life, and, r'gh-
teen rnontlrs later, there canoe
a. little golden -haired daughter who
was clr,ristathed Laura 'V]t:cerit, at -
ter her father's mother.
Mr. Leighton's husiness prospered
beyond his most sanguine expecta-
tions, and be bade fair, as the years •
went on, to amaee a Handsome for-
tune,
(straightforward and unimpeaeluab}e
in life and .'haracter, 'that ho wart
finally eleoted. the member for Itis
Fat is of great account
to a baby ; that is: why
babies are fat. If your
baby is scrawny, Scott's
Emulsioia, is what he
wants. The healthy baby
stores as,fat what it does
not need immediately for
bone and rn u s c 1 e, Fat
babies are happy ; they do
not cry ; they are rich
their fat is 1 a i d up- for.
time of need. They are
happy because they are
comfortable. The fat sur-
rounds their little nerves
and cushions them. When
they are scrawny t h o s e
nerves are hurt at every
ungentle touch . They
delight in Scott's Emul-
sion. It is as sweet as l
wholesome to them.
Send for free sample.
ee sure that this picture In
the form of a label is on the
wrapper of every bottle et
Emulsion you buy.
Scott Br Bourne
Chemists
Toronto, Ont.
tiOo. sad $1.00
An Druggists
Johnny Knew the Song.
The love and admiration of the aver-
age boy for the locomotive was prettily
illustrated a few evening ago. A seven-
year-old had been to a Sunday school
concert with his parents and listened to
some of the beautiful songs that Bliss
and Sankey used to sing, such as "Too
Late," "Let the Lower Lights Be Burn-
ing," "It Is Well with My Soul," "Hold
the Fort," "Pull for the Shore," and "The
a ie young Cir mt� attention more fully to his property Ninety and Wine." The last made a deep
in his own home, and ;-here, with a at him vacantly. -and lasting impression. George H. Dan-
s4nd lite politica} work li whispered. And t t 1 d
THE MAN WHO
GOT OVER IT
p:•slidse of their magnificent home
zc•.t`l a dignity, grace -and generosity
that win for them the -'highest en-
ron:um_s of the, Entire county.
Lady Florence Leig`:too has many ial, Much Ado About Nothing, has some -
and very eostly jewels, but none'
that she prizes more highly than a { thing to say about the frenzied persons
certain tiny braided circlet, with its { who have been criticizing Dr. Wm. Osler.
layette pegend, "Love said hope," and It runs as follows:
wb t.it she always wears *upon the IThe Auaeriean favorite f ...any storyis
third finger of her. left band, with about the Englishman who cannot sea
the real wedding ring which wars' joke.The tomato story with "The eat
placed beside it when she became in; rhathey cart and tin the feat," has sir
truth, tie wife of the once unknown y
bridegroom, tr,Y w.om ale bad plight- Bled the ;lobe, and "What was the mat-
ed her yowfr in Itesedaie chapel on etr with the custard pie?'' is equally farn-
a certain tempestuous and meteor- sus But now it is the Englishman's turn
sills eight in .Tune. to laugh. We fancy that for some years
(She End.) to come no American on English soil
can hear the word "chloroform" without
' feeling silly.
Americans }nay ot know that with
all their ability to see a joke they are
world-famous for not being ableto take
a joke; and a more jovial joker, a more
epigrammatic and witty member of soci-
ety than Dr. Osler never made after-
dinner speeches.
The furore that has been raised over
Tice elder of the two men was still "Against women," he repeated, Ino- _hip retiring speech at .Johns Hopkins re -
young, but something had crossed his chanieally, stall holding tight to his self
face, as a fire crosses a forest, sweep- control. "For you are young, with a sen-
ing out the lines and looks that had sativenss, and delicacy of spirit which
been. The younger w ---s himself, buoyant, I have often noticed when we were boys
self-satistsed, in love with himself and together. If such an --experience•-- eame
the world, to you -why it might wreek your Iife.
of Joke.
Echoes and News, an important medi-
journal el New York, in an editor -
you are so very young. Howard- fully
three years younger than I- and I
know that ought. warn you -against
women."
The younger, who had bent forward,
leaned back again, and from this time
on he did not take his eyes from bis
companion's face.
them the following night, and the young-
ster, running to him, exclaimed, "0h, Mr.
Daniels, 1 heard 'em sing your everlast-
ing song Iast night!" "Indeed!" said
the dean of passenger agents; "what was
the name of it?" "The 999," replied the
boy, thinking of the most advertised en-
gine in the world, that which gave fame
to the Empire State Express. Best
thing Daniels has heard in ten years. -
From On the Tip of the Tongue, New
York Press.
THE GAME OF
violin's TROUBLES
Is Diseased Kidneys and the Cure
is Dodd's Kidney Pills.
Wonderful Cure of Mrs. James Kin -
Sella, Who Slept in a ()hair ler Two
Summers -What She Says of It.
St. Malachie, Que., 'March 20, -(Spe-
cial,) A cure of great interest to women
has attracted the attention of those in-
terested in medical matters in this
neighborhood. Mrs. James Kinsella, wife
of a well-known citizen, had suffered
from a complication of troubles for about
i h t I hgto from a complication of troubles for
Id f b ' bl t k about 'two years. She had a pain in the
right hip, in the back, and was obliged
to pass water every fifteen minutes in o
burning, itching sort of way.
She eould not sleep at night, and had
to sit up in a chair for two summers.
Dodd's Kidney Pills cured her.
Mrs. Kinsella, speaking of her cure,
says: "After the first box of Dodd's
Kidney Pills I felt much better. Then
I got more and they did me a world of
good. I have never slept in the chair
The elder had a paper in his hand and You might never recover. T doubt if to take ourselves very seriously. We since I used Dodds Kidney fills."
g can ha, ha at our neighbors' expense, but Woman s health depends on her kid -
he ceaselessly rolled and unrolled it' with you would even live through it. I have ` not at ourselves, neys. Nine -tenths of the smutted re -
an intentness that Wright have been thought of that often. As for `me I am Now, when Lr. Osler in his dry and male eomplaints are caused by uric acid
given to the calculation of eclipses or not sensitive nor delicate; and you see genial manner wished modestlyto indi- in the blood. Cure your Kidneys wish
o the evolving of new systems of phis- I have lived. Not only that but 1 have en.-' Cate to his fellow workers that e felt he Dodd's Kidney Pills, and you can have
osophy. The younger leaned lazily back tirely recovered. You could scarcely be- had lived his best days s with them, he no uric acid an the blood.
in his chair with his hands clasped be- Zieve that Dean even laugh now when 1 facetiously quoted from Anthony Trois -.7./r
hind his head. think of it. lope's novel, The Fixed Idea, the scheme When the Czar Drives,
"It was good of you, Howard, to He laughed then, to prove it, and at on which the plot hinges, of a college The Tsar of Russia has four separate
hunt me up es soon as you came back the sound of that laugh, the face of the into which at 00 men should retire for "services" of horses and carriages --•
to the eity," the elder said, for the third other man grew white, a year of contemplation before a peaceful namely, the Russian, English, French,
,a - have need -ago,"
missal you -I a
have mdeparturechloroform, r r t
time. I y "Olt, yes, it is all over long he by c to oform, He adds, and gala (rets. Each set e,rnprdges s(
ed. the old companionship -1 somehow, added. "I have thanked heaven many pointing at himself, the barb which till least fifty horsre. The Russian set ee-
1 have seemed to be rather --rather times that I was made of coarse fibre, the solemn readers of the daily news companies the Emperor wherever he
alone of late years." and could triumph aver such experiences. claim was hurled at, their self-respecting
g
oes, and
at Out
shi
ne. it
is
used
ed
togeth-
There was ahcsitation in hisspeechButasfor you„ myg,oy,don,t ever trYrelves, these word's: i caItlab1errwithth,I•� i stet.hr Gala and
that the other found very curious. it. Keep them -from froyamen.b benefits i t foliose' cv MAI scheme is horses and n r'a es are hrt ( !
"You've been sticking tothe officeThey will not wait to see if you are the apparent to anyone vita, like mssefle at tyt, Petersburg in the Winter aline
too closely, Morrison," he said, kindly. kind that -that lives through it. They nearing the limit, and who, like myself, stables, The `D'ear's gala turnuift '',n. -
"Of course, ambition and building ares wilt break your heart all a thrid breaks had made a careful study of the calami• sfsts of fifty Hanoverian horses, wtrn•Ir
self up, and hard work, and all that are a doll -to see what is inside, es and ties which may befall Wren during tht are perfectly white, with bine rye4,
all right, but youve overdone the thing. thougyour heart m beats afterward, the seventh and eighth deearlr!. .._;�.,, .. •�,
It's taking a good deal out of you. quickness is gone from your spirit and He then adds, after recounting some of SPRING EXCURSION TO NEW 'YORK,
i,
A wintry smile flickered Around the the fire from your brain, That is it th.h well-known follies of the a; A, West fillore cheap cil In l5lrin t', •4e!V
lips of the elder luau as he unfolded would be from yours. You can see for Ilio teachers life should bave three 1
the paper and looked at it critically yourself that I have entirely recovered periods, Study 11n1i1 `e:i. investigation un- ,York, April ft. White fe Moon, tom,
and then carefully rolled it again. -.entirely. til 40, profession until (;0, at which. time (Ilan I'aeeenf;er A;srnt, (l.lf'1 1onge retrr'+•f.,
Ambition; lie. said. • Yes I used to should }s3 retired. d on a double allose. 1'oronio, fur full partieulal'.
O.
be ambitious, didn't I? and rather tat -
,o
waited until 11A had unrolled the enc(!." The press 7nl9gr�r1 tyle point.".'"" "`," "t`"`�'"""
anted, tag, pe•'Ide tlu,nriht:, paper' and 1,o1 (41 at it on all sides, and or round up his playful allusion, lir, Ari User in phony,
�' 1 thrown all swiftly rolled it lignin before he went save,tvith.lffcsteiltc.,:i,lli,rr. !'Vl I r ":r",L ry 1 0 ;,;' 1 (" r
minds one of the "Hobson's kiss" episode,
and the "Dewey house" business. It is
on a par with the marvellous facility of
the press to kindle a .mighty flame from
a very little matter, and it illustrates
most delightfully our national tendency
MONSTER STAR IS ANTARES.
inns. is.
No Other Luminary the heave 1_
Anywhere Near It..
Irl `the eollstoilatiou f+corpio, seelt,when.
visible at till, low clown ill the soutlierll
sky, is a star of about the first ivagni-
tude called Antares, This object is, ac-
cording to measurement of its parailav
by Sir David Cill, enormously th4taut,
and must, therefore, be rt, colossal Linde. -
One astronomer, J. I,, tore, has coaupnt-
ed from photometric considerations t:liat
its mass is probably 88,000 times that of
the sun,
As a rule the tentleney of astronomers
-is to doubt whether such differences as
these figures imply exist among the ee1-
estial orbs, but undoubte(lly the mass of
Antares must be exceptional. .fir. Lar-
kin of the Lowe observatory, California,
points out that round this great star
is a wide region "about as void of stars
as any known to the teleseopist." Many
starry fields are encountered in the
heavens. "'These Glace( nett and waste
areas show no stars, or, if any, they are
an the extreme limit of vision in this
eplenditl and pure mountain air. In those
dark expanses no trace of the delicate -
pearl white shimmering background of
the sidereal structure can be seen. 'ilia.
inference is that all the ]natter once in
this area has been drawn in to build up
the colossal sun Antares."
The spae'e has been swept clean. In
the constellations Sagittarius and Senr-
pio there exist many blaek fields, with-
out star or nebulous background,
Vegetable Growth in the Tropics.
To people of the temperate zone the
rapid growth of tropical vegetation
seems almost incredible. In many parts
of the tropics the climate is so favor-
able and the soil so fertile and condu-
cive placed upright in the earth will
spring to life. in some portions of Cen-
tral America one may see utile after mile
of fences apparently composed of grow-
ing trees which, upon examination, are
found to have once been barbed wire
fences, the. posts having branched out
and grown into good sized trees. Many
a Central American telegraph pole will
be seen with. a crown of Leaves et the
top, which have sprouted since the List
visit of the lineman. In the tropical
countries they have so much trouble to
keep the trees from growing as we have
in our northern latitude to snake then}
grow, and one of the greatest difficul-
ties encountered in that country in rail-
road work has been to keep the railroad
ties from sprouting.
, r , • . n C' ye 41Pr A_,p hay Y4v!a'fkJr
I hope you tavctn't nvnvn it"
away," cried lloward, teitll ti. r,hoel:cd ol;,,Anthony t1'1ollope's suggestion of n Vril Heyward to au eitsleietsts "Jii:sh4l,
facer 1t way three years ago, just after lege and chloroform eelionld be carriart Overs WAS (1I;siaset 4i n,il)".:11ta1 dos
Stoops
NUGW:
REDUCE$
E71CpEN,Fit.
$5,000 Reward weveit} boBrothpaid ers by
Lr
Limited, Toronto, to any person who
can prove that This soap contains
any form of adulteration whatsoever,
or contains any injurious chemicals..
A.•*, re* it.. o e1n :nil liar. iss
A Recent Railway Invention.
An ingenious device has been adopted
on English railways by means of which
engil(es can be run on a trial trip with-
out leaving the seene of their construc-
tion and their entire mechanism as thor-
ouglily tested as if on an actual rail-
way, The testing plant is fitted with
revolving tires, into which the wheels
of the locomotive fit, end by this means
a clever representation of the "tread"
of the permanent way is produced. The
tires of the testing plant revolve with
the wheels of the engine, when steam
is turned on, so that an engine' can be
made tt, tun at full speed, as if it were
an the metal rail, without moving an
ineli in a forward direction. It often
has happened that an engine on, its trial
trip breaks down and will block traffic
for some hours. But this device obvi-
ates such a possibility.
MESSRS C. C. RICHARDS & 00.1
Gentlemen—My daughter, 13 years
old, was thrown from a sleigh and in-
jured her elbow so badly it remained
stiff and very painful for three years.
Four bottlee of MINARD'S LINIMENT
.completely cured 1(er, and site has not
been troubled for two years. •
Yours truly,
J. B. L1VESQUE. '
St. Joseph P. 0,. 1$th August, 1900.
WHY HE MISSED THE. LYNCHING.
At a recent dinner in London the con-
versation turned on the subject of tynelt
ing in the United States. It was the
general opinion that a rope was the chief
end of a mail in America. Finally the
hostess turned to an American, who had
taken no part in the conversation, nad
said:
"Yon, sir, mast have often seen these
affairs."
"Yes," 110 replied, "we take akind of
to -t municipal pride in seeing which city can
show the greatest number of lynchings
yearly."
"Olt, do tell us about a lynching y1u
have seen yourself," broke in lialf-a,-doz-
en voices at once,
"The night before I sailed for Eng•
land," said the American, "I was given
a dinner to a party ot intimate friends
when a colored waiter spilled a plate of
soup over the gown of a lady at an ad-
joining table. The gown was utterly
ruined and the gentleman of her party
at once seized the waiter, tied a rope
around his neck and at a signal IrOm
the injured lady swung him into the
air." .
"Horrible!" said the hostess, with a
shudder.
"And did you actually see this your-
self?"
"Well, no' said the American, apologet-
ieally. "Just et that tiine I was down
stairs killing the chef for putting ntus-
When One is Sleepy tard in the blanc mange."
Scientists disagree as to the cause of
drowsiness. Some curious and remark- Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
able reasons are assigned for the desire c - e
everybody'has for sleeping. It, is attrib- The Doctor's Safety Deposit.
uted by some persons to an aceuinula- (St. Louis Globe -Democrat.)
tion in the system of the poisonous pro- we do not expect a doctor to give us a
duets of the wear and tear of the body . souvenir when he performs a surgical opera -
during the day. There seems- to be some tion for appendicitis upon us, but it is coming
measure of truth in this, for in manydie. : more and more to be the fashion. One patt-
rent in a distant elty has recently been re -
ease the patients are often sleepless. An- - lieved et a pair of nose glasses, watch the
other hypothesis is that the nerve cells surgeon generousry deposited in the cavity
of the brain dwell apart from each other, n /the t e0ying`taity'th ng about 11. It was unit'
as it were, during sleep. The brain is atter a long period of time had elapsed that
composed of millions of tiny bodies called the sufferer discovered the nose glasses. Net
cells, each having several delicate pro- long ago another patient bore around to his
1 abdomtuol oavity a steel forceps which the
longation, or branches, for the purpose genial surgeon had not taken away with
of communicating with other cells. When 111m. It seems quite the common custom.
the brain is fully active all these cells, ---c - t-
are in contact, or ready to be in contact, • Minard's Liniment Cures Burns,• etc.
with one another, but the time occasion- *-•-• _ .Y------
ally comes, it is thought, when the Good, But Not Good Enough,
branches of all the cells curl up, and (Atchison, Kan., Globe.) •
their isolation means that complete coin- of course, Bill Westunberry 1s a good man;
mnnication between the cells ceased. The every map is a good man, under our form of
state of body end mind that follows is government, but suppose we hadn't any bet -
What we call Sleep. ter men than Bill? What would the country
amount to? 13111 Is 44 years old and ho has
The most probable explanation of never earned more than $1.50 a day in his
sleep,However, is that, in some way or life, and ho couldn't hold that Job. Ile has
Conquer
She usually 1105
to—but with a
Newia
Cerntry
Waeshs i n II
Maclaine
she will gaitt an
easier victory
sitting.
You cannot afford to deprive
your wife of so valuable an aid
wbeu it can be bad
for Aso. Thorough.
ly cleanses a tubful
of clothes in five
minutes, and with-
out injury.
Have your dealer
show it to you or
write us for booklet.
THE DOWSWEIt. MFO. 00•
Hr.M1I.r'oN,
' never done ani•tliIl5 fur himself, fot lits
other the internal condition of the veils Dunt •y or for lits town 7iiv wife supports
c t
is changed, partly from exhaustion ami filth with two .cows ,Ind forty clticlten,,
partly because of diminished stimulation whit% lives taint ample trine to tell what nth
front •other arts of the -hotly, er people should do. Really, now, white 73111
pis n goof. Winn, suppose we hadn't any het -
ter? What would the country amount to?
An Effective Ally. - -
Fred. ('. Kirkendall, the Democratie Minard's Linitnedt Relieves Neuralgia.
Mayor•elect..of Witicesbarre, attributes t -'
his victory at the pone on Tuesday last What .a Woman Misunderstands.
to advertising. Following in the foot- (New York Press.)
steps of Governor Douglas, of Massa- it's hard for a woman to make herself be-
chweetts, he u:vr'd newepaper space liber- !leve that the man who pays all his home
ally during the campaign, appeaiing to bills promptly and can't do any more is as
the voters of all parties., through both good a husband an the one who doesn't,
Demoeratic and 1(eptil,lir'anjournals, hilt who i,rini!s 1113 wile home a heath of
novae every Saturday rdpht
with the. result that lie received 2300
plurality, while the only other su0(058- 2 .
Ertl Dernoerat on the ticket hail it mar-
gin of but 8(), Adtelti:+irlg 14 an effective
' a •
t't vhf ht r
1 a
i
ann ll n
ural, religiyous1tor eommt't`ria1. I'hil th'1 ,
plea Reword.
Paradise for the Men.
r
r
fi�r (or. r ,,r 11 ) t
P arafiuoy wa3tald c+•, m t„ toff PIA 18n sr„all�
n,:t ;aa.r'v for wol1,i,i,':. r 14:.14 ;rPt.rl" •; fv be
found ou the ,artir. Ir, too rnnutry
ere. ensile woo r s, t , r, +. 1,0o. Cr fl�Sr'+r•,r,,,ttd _ .
the men are i,rttn+l ar,d 10500 tan greatest
riff' 4?. t;vr,v,ri4.^! I .Nr t: ]•,,hies ,,1,t +,r
rivlsy i nbr•• h/ to v,olnnn ftan fir' •t1
n, '3r•'. a 1+.,1••t -...q Hot, ,.;a„ d1'iv"s,
r,y diem, aliel 141 '7 cVe11 sr, tee env. 94 4510404109, , Cbl' 5,4 r, , , It ,'1 h„1,+ 7.tr apple 1.
f'4., ,,f al,• Tia,, "f tf•,dY
001 4„noon 141t1
1,01110 !WI./ 104 44 Ve:11pit,1,4.11 tCGrrts It a pew,
fe ni ). ewe.
11 i.s tut" 116'11 11,1- t%r,rh1 Will talar,
,t anon (.13 6111ff, 1,1,t 1r tanit't tithe hint
ley f4it.
"Thrown it away, Oh, no.;ome men left tern --that T first met her, f out I have breome a little dubious, ass fughis stay be }net King, a negro 'spur
41, - wool bare dune that. lint 1 a Frear, will not tell you her name -you would my
hadown time i:i gel tiller ton "bort." safer' on my pdantiation. ]sue uu,rning
steal of self control. I renr(In1bei 10(1 5. afar not know her -but she was young ---I Ih'. Usher 14 txi.mig will bin) f,, ()>s tint Blom,said rtoan(•lbii )]bout Iba, nln'
ward that I had been ambitions. with tat young then too.-. and she was so ford a (11110114 el,t,dnlary n1,11(1tion, for at tv)llr•h a elan f(('nc,ally 1, IJIs t+, tail.heautiful that alt lien were attracted he bas been boli,l,arcied with letters, tele. a Before any vnr, r•l:,o could r.` t,ly the old ,
certain objects in view. and so 1 put to ser. ]inns, and Al1it•la.s Irina tb(! Hoi,ilc an,1i rl;e 1nitfe4J SU.
myself at thle ofd ta„1;q nntl have ;;ane •1)o yeti smile to think that T was the jrre 5011110 all over the Country, stet 1 til
]lis way, J3isla,p,' be raid; 'ung ,
teei111eierl?:insert [tg thallrluadetitlldifterr altrsleted, 100? Trac = --1 had not lived ing in goad, set term! why they should • tri you gits to 1,e fifty you is on de up
some, of cotu•ge. I am a plodder now, thn lift! Ltlnst men lives. 1 ivus a student, not be ci+loiofornred• ! grade, After dot you La on ,le 1+'1.4.1, Llll+l .
011(0,e I used to rim tv0 Lny srn,l oit and hnd lived among hooka and dreams, If 1)r, Osler watt to s?iay with ul 111)10l,' after dat you :•iort drain hill.'
*belShe was the embodiment of all that longer we fear that he wnutrl have tar esnsir,p •1 apetc, tie, is nteey years -
fire."
"What in the world mitt happened 1e1 was pure :end loteiy in literature and take to heart the advice of .Ir,bn 14. .lase', poet fifty, was ;n4R,411'F to (icl r,rlt, Wile -
all. oht nt:lu?" a.•ke•d ilt1� attnc r. ntittt fancy. 1 lead worshiped ser afar off vnr- who says: user he avis V.(II1 11 the level, and :a:rld4(1
troubled ars on ko 11110 he fire had til shit called me to her. Howard, she «1,eavn to wear a doss'] p1,iz, the negro nt Villa 1, age ai mon generally
5 Brut the otlicrs, away stncl ,ailed uta, ail Be stul,id, if you call; slatted down i;ra+lo.
swept• a rineen ealiq a eourtirr and I went." It's 811015 a very serious thing
"'Dal; depends entirely; L('plied ilio u1,i'
The, eider roiled the paper into iigltt,'t' Tim li:rper wa:t growing ragged at the '[''0 be a funny than."
negro, `nn the train of speed dat sett
roll. ami britt }1 in both baud.+,
IP' edges. lie held it air a moment and ++r g on de gyps up,'"
though it were self-amltr0l and it might f` looked at it, then Chispcd Isis finr;ers 'Mere are 1040 than Hint! million e0• ,,,,...y,_ -oases �
r+,eftpn, from icirtt at any 5nulucut. 6 around it till they were ivlliae from the . ile living in Siberia at the pre enh t Ine, Cash Better 'Then Automloi$fed.
i .}tri i+lad yon came to Int' 21,4 -.lull; 111`1•;.atu•e, and went on: I Phe agricultural zone of I.astern Siberia t1'f,uad+ald,la Itr,,,in.t
as :pet re,trherl tott:u, he ::rid :tf!ttin.l '"Tref •tceelcq I saw her every slay. Y r ua 1?G times as large ns the wl►o1c of lttobba•-.f ivlsh L hap mc,ney enouaii to hue
always with the 0111145.14 hesitation in itis; found that• I could say brilliant dings 'Switzerland, and it is said that 400,• sea entofnobtre.
(manner. •1 have thought of you many to amuse her -.I, the recluse, the eileri . 000,000 people could easily live frt the 1 Xblr,h 17.,1 wou1`an t etst nn,Yp1 gsfatilply w: t(
times. --and kava wished to warn ;lou Other men, wealthier, well-known, social- fertile zone of Siberia. 1 hat% the metier.
ISSUE U, 14, 190 5•
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing setup should
always be used for Ot+tldren Teething, I1
*Dottie the chllri softens the gems cureswtill
collo and is the hest remedy, for Liarrhwp.
.
MISCEL>ANEQUS,
LADIES VrwiSIN Iry 1z'EI), lvg+„„�,,.,
tatting remain trrelief qulek land scale. nDept
ANTED) 71NGINIDE Sautto 1 iviT
100, Paris Chemical Co., ?dUw
Wn , AL naehtu-
tans] firemen, wlrenien, Rud machln-
fats, to send fpr bpatigenberg" Steam anS
Electrical Engineering; 048 illustrations; 1,-
011 questions anti answers; best boolt ever
A b21e leis' St, Uoulsp !01rlue sent tree. 020,
-D. H. BASTiED° & GO.
77 twig Street I6stet T'oronto
86 years In the fun tree..
FUR MAI ITFAACTURERS,
.op4p,000 worth of Vino Furs, elearing at
lowest prices In Canada, paying for Catalogue.
Yorkiprices Send for price list,hlghest New
DEAR SISTER:
If you will send me
your name and address
T will send you some-
thing you should know
all about, Send no
money, R. S. IVVOILL,
Siincoe, Ontario.
Great Men Who Are Little
Canon Kingsley not long before his
death drew attention to the slumber of
short ]nen who could be seen in a Lon.,..,.
don crowd. IIe looked upon it as a sign
of the deterioration of the race. But
these are those who look at it as an in-
dication of progress it1 intellectual lines
at Ieast, for many if not most of the
great men of history have, been mien be-
low the medium height, Canute the
Great was it sigularly small man. Napo-
leon- was undeniably short, Nelson had
no height of which he could boast, and
the great Conde was Jiardly more than
five feet tall. Hildebrand -Gregory VII.
-the greatest of all the Popes, was quite
a diminutive person. Montaigne was
short; so was Pope, . "a little crooked
thing that asked questions"; so was Dry-
den, and so was Scarron, who alluded
to himself as "an abridgment of human
miseries," on account of his short stat-
ure and ill health.
When you think yon have cured a
cough or cold, but find a dry, ,
hacking cough remains, there is '
danger. Take
ShiRoh's-
allEt1 ction -
The Lung
�+r� Tonic
, at once. It will strengthen the
lungs and stop the cough.
Prices: S. C. WEs>:s & Co. $05 •
25o 50c $1. LoRoy,N.Y.,Toronto.Can.
Salad of Flowers.
Many flowers are eaten as vegetables
in Asia. In Japan the common chrysan-
themum is eaten with relish as a salad.
For this purpose only the petals are
used. These aro plucked while the blos-
som is fresh and are boiled until they
assume something of the consistency of
a jelly. Salt, vinegar and sugar are then
added, and the salad is served with any
dressing seltiel' may be preferred. Some-
times at a large dinner }tarty the room
is decorated with growing chrysanthe-
mums, petals .from plants chosen by the
guests are Hien and there dropped into
boiling water, and a salad is soon ready,
tinted with the color of •the flowers.
Lever's Y-2 (Wise Head) DisinfeetantSeelt
Powder is a boon to any home. It disin-
fects and cleans at the same time.
The Largest Bridge Span.
It is stated that cantilever bridge
under construction across the St. Law-
rence at Quebec, will contain a Ionger
span than any bridge yet erected. The
bridge consists of two approach spans
of 210 feet each, two shore arms, each
500 feet in length; and a great length
of the bridge is 4220 feet, the span men-
tioned being estimated to be the longest
yet built by 00 feet.
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
a 1.
"A DOLLAR SAVED."
An amusing instance of the well-
known thrift of l.i'r. Russell Sage, is giv-
enclal by a circlesgentlenianl prominent in linen -
One day a lady approached Mr. Sago
in his office bearing a book of subscrip-
tions for a certain charity. She sug-
gested that Mr. Sltge night like to add
his name to the long list of talose con-
tributing.
The financier took the book and ha
sly glanced over the,names. Seeing the
entry, "Mrs. Russell Sage, 150," -he took
up his pen and wrote before the same,
"Mr, and,' making the .entry read:
"Mr. and Mrs. Mussell Sage, $60."
K
#4
INDURATED C'
FIBR[.WAR[[
There is nothing in the market approach!**
the quality of
MIDDY'S
batlike of this wars, I3ea that EIDDY•s asses its
tbo bottom of auk pan sad tab.
+4 4+++++++4444+0-00+.4++.09-044110
UBE
MICA
ROOFING
ror Flat or Steep hoofs. It Is
waterproof, fireproof, quickly and
very easily laid, and cheaper than
other roofing. Send stamp for
sample.
Hamilton
Myles Roofing Co.
lit Rebecca ttreet, I1*inlltttiui
Un(1(iit. ,