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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1903-03-19, Page 3Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup Cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis, lloareeness, Croup, Asthma, Pain or Tightness In the Chest, Etc. It stops that tickling in the throat, le pleatant to take and soothing and heal - 1g to the lungs. IVIr. E. Bishop Brand, the well-known Galt gardener, writes :— I had a very severe attack of sore throat and tightness in the chest. Some times when I wanted tb cough and. could mot I would almost choke to death. My wife got me a bottle of DR. WOOD'S 'NORWAY PINE SYRUP, and to my sur- prise I found speedy relief. I would mot be without it if it cost $LOCI a bot- tle, and I can recommend it to everyone 'bothered with a cough or cold. Price 25 Cents. THE WORLD WANTS A MAN "The Publishers of the Toronto World • Will Try to Break Record. The publishers of the Toronto World 'want a representative in every postal ,district in Otaario. They are trying to secure 50,000 oubecribers before the end of •the present year, and are offering liberal commissions. The World scored •a distinct success as the first one -cent morning newspaper published in Canada. It is easy to get subscribers tor a bright paper like The World at only $3 a year, or $1.50 for six months. Bright and entertaining always, The Worl.1 is eon- -ducted on broad principals, filled with good readieg for all good peoples A has been called the "farniers dully" beoause so Much space Is given to markets and farm news. W. F, Maclean' M. P., ,Editor of The World says that The World has now over 6000 well-to-do farmers on its subscription lists. New subsodbers, who send $3 direct to The World, Toronto, mentioning this journal, will receive credit up to the 15th of April, or nearly 13 months, for $3. .Any subscriber sending two new sub- satibers at $3 will receive The World free for one year. Nine young men were fined $2.25 each at Dundalk ior curling in the rink on Sundays. ABSOLUTE SECURITY, Cenuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of • See Fac-Similo Wrapper Below. Ter/ mean and as easy to take as sugar. FOR HEADACHE., FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS., FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION. FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR THECOMPLEXION gpoccet., t3ir ,olortvrew CARTEKS ITTLE IVER PI LLS. CURE SICK HEADACHE. A Bad Breath 'A bad breath means a bad stomach, a bad digestion, a bad liver. Ayer's Pills are liver pills. They cure con- stipation, biliousness, dys! pepsia, sick headache. 215c. All druggists. 'Nam your Inouitache or beard a beautiful brows or nob black? Then use BUCKINGHAM'S BYEVIIsiters Him wisp ex, es 0. 111 co, NfrahlW411.11. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE IN THE • TIMES • • WINGIIAM MARCH 19, J903, Pork Packing By Rule of Thumb (Front tho litezatztarY Tiniee) More then two yettes ago (in our Leslie of September 14th, 1900,) we dew attentton to the large number of pork -pecking eatabliehmente enteriog the ield in •Cinadaeethe promotere of many of which, bad evidently zto very clear idea us to the requieites or ewe - eves. At that time it looked to tre le if dare woald not be 01401111g like enough hogs offering to give tho var.. leas factoriee Profitable employment, thaugli even there egged 031 by the scarcity, the packers. wore Peeing more for their raw material than true market Yaluee warranted. Judging trent.a statement Which re- cently alma to our notice respeoting die poitian or the 1'41am:retell Pork Backing Company, faulted, which started ite faetory about the time the above article was written, I the warn- ing was not. uncalled for. tIt gamma front thi.s rstritement tjiat the nineteen months, ending with 'December 3let the net toes awaited by this comp my wog no less than $42,737. Among the excite are placed ;e24,104 for rea: estate and baildinge, $23,407 for maclenery, $6,355 for factory and tore fixtures, etc. Nearly 454,000 is here expended in teeee itein,s, of' a mere "gelaiug reedy" to do a businese which, judging by results, wile not there to be obtained. • le title not IL leasen to woule-be investars to keep Wane of aft:tits they del not properly reederstande 'Well it bels to teach them thee it in Cho tcughe ot the pro- moter alone which gives such a Swell- ing expanee and roseate hue to the profits which of tentimes do not take substance. In ro.uay induetries there ha room for two or three. establish- ments located .rightly, and rightly wined; while for half a dozen lac- tories premiers:mu:41y situated. inex- pertly nanaged line initiated in tee trail of the esti hureie.sm created by the first one or two, there can only pro- ceed eleseppointreent rind 1081. the pi aden.t founde- of a. basinees tawaY3 Pisoartutnis, lector° he speacle his tens of thousands on ;wicks and: mortar, machinery and plant, evAether there there is a reasonable prospeoe that such machiamry rem be kept employed ate n,n annual profit. And it seems nowtalays to be easier to get money to put Into productive venturere then to get 'directors with the foresight, er menegers witte the skill to make that meney earn dividends. LawesiDE. Below is appended the bi-monthly re - ort of the standing of pupils in regular attendauce at a S. S. No. 9, Kinlossas tested by examinations held hest week in February, 1903. The names of the pupils in the various classes appear in order of merit. Senior 4th, Total 675—Lizzie Hether- ington 507, David Kennedy 502, Myles McMillan 447, Charles McKinnon 282, Al.& (Aires 261. Junior 4th —Robalec Innes, Alex. McMillan. Harry Nixon, John McDonald, Watson Smith, Jt seph Nixon. .52enior Ord—Will el Wraith, Mery McMillan, Jenne McDonald, Lawson Smith. Junior 3rd,—Joseph McMillan and Sam Adair. Senior 2nd—Tommy McInnes, Robert Adair, Harry Hetherington, Jahn Mc- Millan, John Fraser. Junior 2nd— Annie McInnes, Cassie McDonald. Part Second—Janette Gillies, Evaline Gillies, Maggie McMillan, Ethel McDon- ald. Part 2nd Juniors—Sidney McInnes, Jimmy McIntosh. Part 1 Senior—Hugh MoMcMillan. Savalogging in this locality has proved a boon to achool attendance during Feb- ruary. The average attendance for the month was 22, which is comparatively good considering the unfavorable weather. For sluggish drains, good boating and excellent shower baths go to the vicini- ty of S. S. No. 0. Really the miserable condition of the school grounds and the adjacent corners should be attended to without delay as water lies uninterrupted from March 1st till July ist heady every year and so far, this year appears to be no exception to the rule. Turns Bad Blood into Rich Red Blood. This spring you will need something to take away that tired, listless feeling brought on by the system being cloned with impurities which have accumulated during the winter. I3urdock Blood Bitters is the remedy you require. It has no equal as a spring medicine. It has been used by thousands for a quarter of a century with unequalled success. HERE IS PROOF* Mit. J. T. Skine of Shigawstke, Oue., writes: "I have used Burdock Blood Bitters as a Spring medicine for the past four years laid don't think there is ite equal. When 1 thel drowse', tired and have tit, desire to eat I get X bottle Of /3.12.13. It puriSes the blood and builds up the con. Ititution better than any other rentiraly." EQUALITY OF RACES MAY BE SO THEORETICALLY, BUT NOT REALIZED PRACTICALLY, An Article Prom the London spretta WWI; Wiii Cause litallY linPreindieed Canadians to Open, Titeir Eyes Wide— The Coley 14ne Prohler“ Under the Proi Widen aaelt. India has not yet forgiven Lord Ratty for hie innocent soleeism. Preauitc. nue. Mad. Sometimes, I own, Me preitalice Lan be carried toe far. fitmse years tare0 yentig subaltern in India left his first-class railway carriage for a moment, and on his return he foaml a colored gentleman sitting there. "Jaen your cheek!" he cried, in a frenzy of rage and lindignathm. 'Out e you go, you black brute," and so Pitying, he flung him bag and bag- gage upon the platform. 'Unfortun- ately the "black brute" happened to be one of Her Majesty's J edges of the Supreme Court! could give many other instances of a like nature, but these will suf- /ice to show my readers that, with certain inodifications, we of the Brit- ish len-mire entertain precisely the seine feelings toward the colored man that the Southerners do toward their own negroes. It is a delicate question to Handle: but the fascination of the black man for the untraveled and inexperienced Englishwoman is inexplicable to one who huows What the black really is. Penalty of Intermarriage. In the Southern States of Amer- ico., I believe, and in South Africa also, I understand it is a penal of- fence for •a white woman to be seen talking to a black man; while, per- soeullY ePeaking. I consider that the white woman who can degrade her- self to ;marriage with a colored per- son places herself outside the pale of decent Inguanity. There is one satisfaction, and that Is that her punishment is swift, sure, and unerring. As a colored 13ishop once said to me: "It is a viotation of the laws of nature, which is bound to end in disaster," However much the sentimentalist may deplore the statement, the fact remains that the black on close. and intimate acquaintance and in the mass wins neither tbe liking nor the respect of the white man. That is be it understood, when he claims equality. As a soldier, as a servant be is unapproachable: our colored soldiers are the glory of our Empire; the ne- gro or the Hindu servant is the most charming and the most faithful being on this earth. But the white man rubes by virtue of his superiority, and the British Empire is based on the unswerving assumption of this fact. — London Express. Throughout the, whole British Ena pire, wherever the white man is Con- fronted by the black man en mosso, the prejudice aguinst the latter is bitter in the extreme. The theory of equality, the "Man and brother" doctrine, however boau- tli it may appear ohpaper is ab- solutely unwoHrable in the practice ot every -day life. Wo rule our de- Pendencies—India, South Africa, the West Indies, Ceylon, Australia, the Straits Settlements—by a rigid en- forcement of the superiority of the white man. And this is inevitable; and it is as necessary as it is inevit- able. ehould not hold Iodia, for a day did we not realize and act up to the well -proved and absolutely -untleai-. able feet that the white man, in 0,314 essentials, is immesumbly the super- ior of the black. Of course, to the ignorant, untrav- eled sentimentalist this is appalling; and he will indignantly deny the truth of my assertion. To many an un- traveled cockney the black man is as good as, if, indeed, he is not bet- ter than, the white man. • A Stern Duty. Dut to*the initiate, to the minority who know, as opposed to the un- thinking majority who do not know, the suppression of the black man is tt stern duty. Nothing, surely, is more remarkable than the dislike and distrust of the black which is invar- iably felt by the white when he en- countet s the former mass. Them must be a reason for this. Carlyle and Froude—the latter to mo- personally—both pronounced the emancipation of the slaves in Amer- ica a very mixed blessing indeed. And certain it is that in the old days the condition of things between white. and blade was infinitely happier and more desirable, safer and more nat- ural, than it is to -day. For one Legree there were a hund- red owners who treated their slaves as friends more than servants; to- day there is nothing but hatred be- tween the two. In India, of course the line of de- markation is necessarily very rigid. We are in a minority, and ff -we aro to keep the upper hand it is absolute- ly essential that white supremacy should be enforced, even at the sword's point. Inevitable Distinctions. It has to be remembered that the differences between white and black go so deep and are so intimately connected with the subtlest physiol- ogical problems that any attempt to do away with them would be fraught with danger to the whole human fam- ily. And they cannot bo done away with; they lie too deep; they are a part of the race: Some years ago there was a great public meeting held in one of the West African colonies, presided over by the Governor. At this meeting a native—a K. C. M. G.—clad in the white waistcoat and swallowtails of Western civilization, delivered a pow- erful and eloquent oration. After it was all over a friend of mine con- gratulated him on his splendid ef- fort. • He sighed, quaffed a glass of Pom- mory, and then said; "Yes, and yet do you know I often feel that one day I shall throw it all off, put on the loin cloth of my fathers, and rush back into the forest?" I can assure you that poor Grant Allon's "The Rev. John Creedy" was based on solid fact and a deep knowledge of colored human nature. :However brilliant the veneer of his civilization, the black man remains, forever a black man. "East is east, and west is west, and never the twain shall meet." We are loud in our condemnation of the methods employed by the Southerners of the United States in punishment of the offending negro. I quite acknowledge that burning an ating negro alive is a horrible me- thod of dealing with an evil -doer; but though we English do not usual- ly resort to such extremes, yet with- out a doubt we treat our colored fellow -subjects in a manner which would not bo tolerated in the heart of the Empire. The -Thumb -Screw in Use. • Within the last seven years 1 my- self have seen the thumb -screw ap- plied, with the full knowledge and consent of British authorities, to a thieving native; and in West Africa the methods adopted by the white of- ficials are frequently cruel in the ex - trate, We in Englznd say that the black man es in all respects the equal of the white. if you go to Bombay, one of the daintiest jewels in our imperial crown, you will lind that not even the greatest Indian Prince is allowed to putso much tes his face within the doors of the Byculla Club or the Yacht Club. Some time ago a distinguished col- ored cricketer was staying with the Governor of one of our great Indian provinces. The Governer wrote to the Secretary of a certain club and asked that this cricketer should be put up as an honorary member. The reply he reteived ran as follows: •hty Dear Lord —: X have receive ed your Excellency's letter. If your friend chooses to Come in his turhati, and take oft his shoes. and welt at table like his brethren, he can enter the club. Not unless." When Lord Remy was governor of Ilombay he gave a large dinner par- ty, to which he invited it certain 'testy high-clase native gentleman. • This gentleman he introduced to att Ilitglish lady, Saying: "Will you take Mrs. So-and-so into dinner?" the lady at once left the room, areont- panted bY her husband; and Anglo - .Deafness Cannot be Cured by local applications as they cannot reach the diseased pertion of the ear. There is only oue way to eure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies, Deafness is caused by au inflamed con- dition of the mucous lining of the Eusta- chian Tube. Wheu this tube is inflam- ed you have a rumbling sound or imper- fect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, deafness is the result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its uormal condition hearing will be destroyed forever, nine cases put of ten are caused by Catarrh. which is nothing but an inflamed condi- tion of the mucous surfaces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot lie cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. Cheuey & Co., Toledo, 0. Sold ay Druggists, 75e. Hall's Family Pills are the best. The army of Genghis Kwan first used gunpowder in cannon in China in 1234 and the Chinese then learned its military value. AN OTTAWA MASON AGAIN AT WORK. Dr. Pitcher's Backache Kid- ney Tablets completely cure him of a serious attack of Kid- ney Trouble and Backache. Inhalation of fine dust, heavy lifts, ex- posure to ehillizig winds—these are some of the things which make masons general- , ly subject to attacks of kidney trouble and backache. Mr. Wm. &Georges, whose home is 651 Cumberland Street, 0 t taWa, Ont., is a stonemason by trade, and was so unfortu- nate as to become a. vi in of kidney com- plaint. The history of his case he gives as follows, in a recent letter; "Dear Dr. Pitelter :—Peemit Inc to write and thank you for your Backache Kiehey Tablets which have done int, so much good. "I suffered for two long years from weak back and kidney trouble. Last year was completely used up so that 1 lost all courage, and had no hope of recovering. No one could do anything for Inc. "During the first. weelc of April last, I mot with A friend of mine and lie advised me to take your Ieldney Tablets. I thought 1 woulel try one box, and after had finished this I felt so much better that I continued the Tablets until I had titled in all six boxes. Every box I took made me fed better and stronger till now I am perfectly cured. "I am now as strong and healthy as over I was in my life and can attend to my work, which is very heavy, as I am a; stoneMason. I feel eonfident from the benefit I received that anyone suffering from lame back or kidney trouble will not be disappointed if they take your Tablets. Yours irtilV. Mt. *ST.. Gt012GIS." Dr. Pitcher's Batimehe Malley Tablets are the most effected remedy known to faience for promptly relieving and perma- nently curing backache, lame or weak bank, swelling of the feet rind legs, bedd- ing or irritation of the urine, sediment, brick dust deposits, he:Weigle, rheumatism, specks flatting before the eyes, pain in the head, torpid liver, kidney troubles of old people, bed-wetting of children and all forme of kidney, bladder and urinary diseases. Price Me. a bottle or for $1.26, M all 'druggists or .by ma% The Dr. Zink Pit011Ot CM Toronto.. , IrVALST.Gzonces. MATTHEW ARNOLD. -- a Pane ;from lawyer mermen tharie* ttlerivitle's itevent Houk. Matthew Arnold's was, says Her - watt Charles Merivale in hie recent hook, the most evenly clewed el:spo- Bahia I /man trier known, never in high el hits, as 1 renumber him, and never in low. Arnold was an tulker on the subject of the dru- 100.g *ullnittldly elessic Ile looeed upon ibe cothur- ill:S as the truest analyst of the per- plexities send destinies of life, and had small sympathy with the laugh- ing portraits of the Muse ot Comedy, which had in them to hint something of the nature of mere caricature, at best. The plays of Atistophanes were it, reality but satire to bur- lesoue, and even the comedies of lio- aere were to him but as weaker imi- tations L saw him one day on the opposite side of the street. pacing along and smiling to himself in the way I knew so well. Amused, I went acro zei to hitn and asked him what had hap- pened. "What is the fun?" I asked. "Have they been attacking, you again in The Saturday?" For to break lances with that periodical was an amuse- ment to both, Freeman, the histori- an, being reputed to be his advers- ary. "Oh. no, my dear boy, no! I went to Drury Lane last night." "Oh! to see Helen Faucet in'"Cym- beline?' Didn't you admire her?" "Oh, not that—poor dear lady"— his inimitable longueurs, which could not be described as a drawl—'she was charming, of course. But it's the play, you know. 'Cymbeliner such an odd, broken-bacted sort of o thing! It couldn't have happened anywhere, you know." A curious Plaint. One chapter, "Hanoviana and Di- gressions, will come home to hun- dreds of men who also have suffered. The. following extracts will suffice to give an idea of its tenor: 1 never shall, and never could understand, says he, the principles on which I was educated. Why was I 'pitchfork - ed into a bad private school . at eight? Why was 1 made a fifth -form Harrow boy when 1 was only a nerv- ous child of twelve? Why was 'I withdrawn therefrom just when 1 was liming under Vaughan, to matricu- late at Daniel when 1 was not quite eighteen? Why was 1 not discourag- ed more consistently—as I was not to be encouraged—in all sorts of lit- erary and theattical bargains, when at 25 I was to be, by an expensive modernism, dumped down at a bar which from meal:curt and soul I loathed? 'Why was 1 permitted—nay, obliged—to live the extravagant life of an Oxford undergraduate of the day, with winesand rides, and ten- nis courts, and all the rest of it, and then hauled severely over the parental coals beeause I left college with a few—a very few—small debts behind Inc? lie complains that "money was spent on him like wa- ter." but, in spite o; "years of cost- ly training in nothing," he remained at the wit a "man self-educated," having :taught himself, as .est he could., what others' teaching left 'him time to learn. Survivals of Useless Fashions, Aran is unquestionably a highly ra- tional being. Still, if you traNel and observe, from the mouth of the Danube to the Golden Gate, you will find most men wearing a coat with O useless collar, matked with a use- less V-shaped slash and decorated with two useless buttons at the small of the back and one more use- less button at the cuffs. The collar, the slash, and tho buttons are there in answer to no rational need; it is not a common climate or a conunon racial need of protection against cli- mate that they represent, but a com- mon civilization whose form and rit- ual they mutely confess. Over this entire arca those who aspire to be of the Brahmin caste deck their heads for wedding, funeral and feast with a black cylindrical covering suited, so far as we can discetn, nei- ther to avert the weapon of the ad- versary nor the dart of the rain, nor to provide a seat whereon man may sit and rest himself. And as for the wwnen contained within the same area, we behold that the amplitude of the sleeve, the disposition of the best, and the outline of the skirt all obey the rise and fall of one resist- less tide which neither moon nor sea- sons control.—The Atlantic Maga- zine. A Socialist Duchess. Tt is seldom oee discovers a Soci- alist Duchies, but the Duchess of Sutherland professes deeidedly Soci- alistic views. She once attended a Socialist meeting under the assumed name of Mrs. Sutherland, and was so much innwessed by the arguments of the Socialist lady orator that she sought an introduction and eventu- ally revealed her identity, and ex- pressed a desire for a continuance of the acquaintance, which ripened into friendship and resulted in the Duch- ess declaring herself converted. Some persons might imagine that this was a mere pose on the part of the beautiful and extremely wealthy woman, but it is not so. Few wo- men, surrounded by all the pleasures which rank and money can command, lead more unselfish lives. The Duch - en does not consider Socialism to be incompatible with beauty and per- sonal charm. No woman demos better and none could seem more perfectly designed to occupy the ex- alted position which she so greatly adorns. An Adv. Ariewered, A Brietol paper tells this story, which has reached it from Canada.. It hangs on an advertisement which appeared in an English paper. "A lady in delicate health wishes to meet a useful cornapanion. She must be domesticated, musical, an early - riser, amiable, of good appearance, and have experience in nursing. A total abstainer preferred. Comfort- able home. No salary." A few days afterwards the advertisement ready - ed by express a beaket labeled, "'This side up ---with care--perish-. ble." On opeang it she found a tabby.tat . ..—...... ESPERANTO'SLONDON Mew the Coratealon of Tongues Is **Iv :001.e:::ON BOOM. M When Dr. Zamenboa a Polish X. D., was eight years old his mind be- gan to be troubled at the confuelon of tongues in an around his nativ• village, which is near learsuae. Later on, to emsble the people Of four or five different nationalities, who were his ne ghbors, to indulge in mutual intercourse, he set himself to the construction of another lang- uage, which he hoped might one 44ty become cosmopolitan. lie called the new tongue "Esper- anto," which, to the 80,000 "Esper- antists" now scattered over the world, means hope. The language has many little strongholds on the Continent, at beast one in England —at Keighley, Yorkshire—and a, se- fliectin erntyfor London. sndsotnudy has just been. Mr. Felix Mote:hetes has !been elect- ed President, Mr. O'Connor Vice - President, and Mr. W. T. Stead ensurer, and a l'ooro in Mowbray House has been placed at their dis- posal, where gratuitous lessons will be given every Monday evening from 5.34 to 6.30. "Esperanto" is said by its adher- ents to. be so simple that eight hours' study will enable a man to read any "Esperanto" book with a dictionary of 800 words. The two great peculiarities of the language are its Invariable termina- tions in "o" for nouns, "a" for aa, jectives, and "e" for adverbs and its systezn of word -building, by means of which from one root word—such as "slim)," meaning health—fifty other words can be constructed, An h:sperantist, who was inter- viewed yesterday, said, "Esperantu esperanto sukcesos," which means, "Let us hope it will succeed."—Lon- don Mail. Not to Be undone. A correspondent was yesterday shown the vieitors' book of a werthy London institution, which is at the present moment the centre or very consielerable interest. Two or three months before His Majesty's ac.as- eion to the throne, the King and Qum' visited the institution. A new Nisitors' book was produced, and on the first page Their Majesties and the Hon. Sidney Greville, who was then equerry, signed their names. Since then many visitors, including a large number of well known Ameri- cans, have gigned on succeeding pages. A short time ago the mayor and mayoress of a metropolitan bor- ough made a tour of the building, and they also cntered their names in the book. - Instead, however, of writing below the name of the last visitor, they took the clear space which had been careft.11y preserved under the royal signatures on the first page, mhich now reads!: Alexandra. Albert Edward. Sei(iiiS iiera"Zil;hil,len Edwin zityor — Angelina, Smith. mayoress of — We, of com•se, suppress the real names of the utnyor and mayoress.— London Daily Chronicle. The 11101111 Could Wait. A certain Scotch laird recently in- viter] an English friend to stay with hint for some fishing. One day the Englishman, who was a novice at the Nara hooked a fine sahnon, and in his excitement slipped and fell in- to the river. The keeper seeing that he was no swimmer, hooked on to hhn with the gaff, and was about to dreg him ashore, when the laird call- ed out: "What are ye aboot, Donal. aet huud o' the rod and look IT.I, if a fush. Ma friend can bide a wee, but the Lush winna." . . A Bight to Judge Persons who have used Dr. Chase's Ointment have the best debt to judge of its merits, and there is no preparation on the market today which is backed by :Inch a mass of unsolicited testitnony. It cures eczema. salt rheum and piles so promptly and thoroughly that people feel it a pleasure to recommend it to other sufferers. See testimonials in the newspapers. Every large town in India has its Delhi darwaza, or gate opening in the direction of Delhi, which was to the whole country what Mecca is to the Mohammedan. Boxes containing supplies to aid per- sons accidentally injured are to be placed in the streets of Paris. The appratus re- sembles a letter box and it contains a l small medicine chest, a folding stretcher, and a telephone for signalling to the nearest ambulance station. Access to the box is gained by breaking a glass panel. MILBUR.N'S HEART AND NERVE PILLS Make Weak Hearts Strong. Make Shaky Nerves rirtn. THEY CURE Servettaneria — Sleeplessness — Palpitation el the Ifeart—Nervons Prostration—Faint and Dizsy Spells —Brain Fag —Aftet Meets of La Grippe—Antemia—And all troubles Arising from a Bun -down Sys- tem. Read what t. L. Poster, Mitte.sing, Ont., has to say about them'. --I was greatly troubled evith palpitation of the heart, a sudden blindness would come over me, and floating speeks before my eyes caused Me great inconvonionee. Often I would have to gasp for breath. and my nerves were ht a terrible email - (ion. T took MILBURN'S BRA.RT AND NERVE PILLS, and they have proved a blessing to me. I cheerfully recont- Mend them to nil sufferers from heart and terve trouble. Nee 50e, per box. at' 13 for $1.25; all dealers or The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Teroatut Ost., . owsswis* WilliamAppleto-a paratIons "Mt DNT4 Good- and the Sands His Life Were lkst. Slip:4-4 Away. friend Adv!sed ,rovelty's fled Ozone --So Sick W That He Had Commenced the Fourth Bottle More Feeling Hater. Then, With the Pisease Gems Dests the . improvement Was .Rapid, lie Was Soon at Work,,,Ilas. lied No Lost Time Since, POWLEY'S LIQUIFIED OZONE CURES DISEASE BY DESTROYING DiSEASE GERMS %MERV/Eft LOCATED. heti Some ti was a nuaii from trouble. medicine .1 tlii t hie Vie81. g the sands of were fast sli away. I was vised by A to tey Pow Liquillad °eon it bail ralee4 team aereey LC4141;3 1:10 feet he .11.11, wire at One* chase,. a whea co.umenced tthing yo medy. I Ives very mach run et this time. I 1 ad ias thr tnntles arid commenced tho four Core I began to fee: tete benefit, feom the f ourth bottle I xueedede my cough left me and my eller ;anted. 1 bvan woz:t again ant been working, ever since 1 ha greatest con.adence in your remedy` feel that I ceunot afford to be wi O bottli iti oer Louse 41 the t You aro at liber y to %Melt tit' the benef:t a other sufferer& " WM. APPLETON*, 67 Stafford street. Tor e'• Tte Strongest Proof Nitarrie r Iles it ever occurred te You ittr ing Ozone advertise:210MS that proof ive furnish 03 to the remark curative qualities of Powley's Li cad °who is of the strongest imp kind? Never has a remedy bee eethusiastically endorsed by sue great number of people. but the of the proof wo furnish is that i not from a man in Maine or a evo in Mexico, but from people righ home. in cases of kiduev trouble home proof is pwacularly krone.. destroying, the disease germs that c the trouble Ozone efeects cures a drug preparations have proved enti werteleee The following arta tieetefaa from the statements of other par who have 'been cored: WM. FLETCHER, Mindale, Ont., says: "For about years I suffered from kidney dis and finally became so ill that my tor advised nie that if I had any 11081 to settle that I had better ha attended to. Fully expecting to had him draw up my 'will. About time Mr. Connover, a neighbor, re menace!. Powley's Liquified Ozon felebetter after taking the second and after taking five bottles was tirely cured. Although 7.1, year age I am so well that I can do a amount of work and feel that I good for at least ten years to com Itr. A. PRIIVIRAtt, Chatham, Ont.. says: "For six mo was much troubled with my kid during which time I tried. a numb medieinee supposed to cure ld trothla but derived no benefit any of them. A friend advised try Pawkier's Lig:eh:led Ozone. I found it to be just what I requ and in a short time Was in line ve ill; condition, with every trace of disease gone." VAL'T'ER. RAM, city traveller for the Ilough LI graphing Co.. Torpnto, says:" some time I Was troubled With ki disease, which I believe Was fax veloping into Bright's diem°. 1 had rhoutnatism in my shoulders knees and my digestion was far good. I tiled Powley'a /Attu Ozone. The first bottle helped nut I continued taking it until I had t four bottles, when every syrapto my old ttilinento WM gone. I now Ozone in the bouse and find it eellent rowdyfor any sickness we may have:', Powley's Liquified ()Zone is only by reliabie derders..-neter poddlers. Price 50 °We stid $1. bottle. Our booklet on kidney ble and rheumatism matted receipt of tame sad addreira. TEE OZONV 01, • Torment*