HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1904-03-03, Page 3F
FI1.LLOW SKIN.
FdHE COMPLIMION
;Mtt'p�{,e-' �' TIIAr[ NAT_�/
n l Parcly e.1; e �F�7F r6
Wood's
iSler,,y
Cur•
gts, Cotds, Bronchitis.
N4 ss, Croup, Asthma,
Tightness In the
host. Eta,
dckiing in the throat, 11
and soothing and heal-
s. Mr. E. Bishop Brand,
Colt gardener, writes: ---
severe attack of sore
It stoj
pleasant
ing to t
the well
I had
throat a1nece b the chest. Servo
times whi,lted to cough and coOd
not I wo'
wife got
NORWA'
prise I
not be we if it cost $L00 a bot,•
tie, and I' ommend it to everyone
bothered cough or cold.
25 Cents.
st choke to death. My
bottle of DR. WOOD'S
SYRUP, and to my sur-
eedy relief. I would
MUSKR4OORE FEATHERS.
•
-GAME G (
I ORTAN
N MAKES AN IDT -
URE AT NORTH
BAY.
For way are dark and tricks
that are vialheathen Chime is no
more peeulin pot-huntors, in the
opin:o i of C�ame,Wnrden Tinsley.
Mr. Tinsley ust seized some :sus-
picious bone Orth Bay ea route
from the N..st to Quebec. They
'trc labelle
but under
led muskrat skins,"
er, of skins it was
found tl.k: bontainednothing but
prairie chick bleb, it is illegal to
ship at any Inf1 which are, long
out of scasor to prairie chickens,
alias'muskra , which it was in-
tended shoal -10 rho palates of
Montreal or aYork : epicares,
will feed the es of some Provin-
cial inslitutioClte authorities at
Regina have ilommunicated;with.
Recently 'the ertment captured
a consign me,n
from one para
through Onto
partridges going
ue,bec to another
They 'were label-
ed eggs, and ;h c layer of, e;,rgs on
top of the Par'
CqiEne
Ca .r
's
Little -r Pills.
Must Do
3
nature of
See Fac-Simiiiappe . Below.
'Very entall and as
to taloa ns sugaa
CARTEar
ITTL
PILLS.
R
CURE SION: DACHE.
Gooci Pills
Ayer's Pills . good liver
pills. You knoll-lat. The best
family laxative'ou can buy.
They keep the iwets regular,
cure constipatit IT4a F. :
Want your moiache or beard,
a beautiful brown rich black? Use
BUCKINGHM'S DYE
!Mr CT& 191ALL tt CO.. Nh3LUA, N, a.
IT PAYS
TO AD'EETISE
INTIK
rail+: WIN(xli. M 1IMES, :MARCH 3,. i904
FAO 111401511Y Batingtccame a Dread,
Hon. John- Dryden's Plan to .Ens
tablish Forest Tree Nursery.
WORK OF THE DEPARTMENT
Cu-operaelon, Qreanlzation and neueatlo.
iu 4grleuitnre—vompreheaatvu 1irv1.w
1{y the liluister of what the Dov..
ernmeut !las Dune For the Far..
Mora of the Provinou—
hndget Debate.
•
Toronto, Fob. 24. --In the Legis-
lature yesterday, the debate on the
budget was continued by Mr. Suth-
erland (South Oxford).
hon. John Dryden's speech.
Tho history of the practical work
of the Ontario Department of Agri-
culture, as related by kion. J Cala
Dryden in a most interesting and op-
timistic speech in the Legislature
Yesterday, can be summed up under
the throe heads, "Co-operation, or-
ganization, and oducatron," those,
together, having resulted in enthu-
siasm and pronounced success. Mr.
Dryden reviewed the various educa-
tional influences, originated and car-
ried on by the department, and in-
stanced the practical effect of this
simultaneous instruction by the re-
volution that had taken place in the
pork product of tho Province and
the consequent high place now held
by Ontario bacon in tho British
markets. No class of agriculturist
had been neglected in this educa-
tional work, ho maintained, and tho
best evidence of farmers was that
each declared the other had received
full attention. Mr. Dryden explain-
ed his proposals respecting farm re -
forestry In older Ontario. On this
proposal ho said:
Tree Nur,.l,Ey at O.A.C.
Looking at the situation as it
stands to -clay, it seems strango than.
ono generation has hardly passed
away before we discover that largo
sections of the Province have been
entirely denuded of thesq forest
trees. Mon everywhere aro now
wishing that sonic of it had been
left. We aro discovering that some
of the lend which has thus been
cleared wduld produce far greater
profits from timber than can be re-
ceived from the growing of grain or
from pasture. But the farmer is en-
tirely without information how to
proceed or what to do. At the pre-
sent time it would be impossible for
hint to procure suitable trees for
plantiug, so that there seems to
exist a real need, and wo are, there-
fore, proposing to immediately pre-
pare to meet it. Wo shall set apart
a small area at the Agricultural
College Farm he a forest tree nur-
sery, where suitable trees for plant-
ing may bo grown. Wo expect to be
able to commence the sowing of the
seed for these trees within a few
months, so that in tho course of
two or two and a halfY ears we
shall have our first lot of frees
ready for planting.
An Education Campaign.
In the meantime we shall com-
mence an educative campaign in
this respect and effect such organi-
zation as may be needed in order to
cover at least a portion of the
country, and in such a way that tbe
work may be enlarged year by year
as the interests of the case demand.
I shall not live to see its full fruit.
ion, but I have no- doubt as to the
influence x
beneficial in en o st will exert upon
the agriculture of this Province, as
well as the added value it will give
to the land itself. In this case we
shall plant in order that others may
reap, being satisfied that in this
work we aro only performing our
part in adding to the future great-
ness of our country.
In conclusion, I want to say that
I am proud of the farmers of On-
tario, whom I specially represent in
this Government; they have respond-
ed splendidly to the educational
forces that have been set in motion
—they no longer stand apart look-
ing at each other with a jealous
eye, but aro united for the common
good. At this present moment they
have an impetus which nothing will
for some time intercept; and if the
same policy be pursued, for the fu-
ture, this Province will certainly
stand as the first agricultural dis-
trict of North America. and will
more and more command the atten-
tion of tho whole world. (Ap-
plause.)
Mr. Eilber made the feature of his
speech a protest against the unfair
discrimination practiced by the rail-
ways to the detriment of farmers
living on branch lines.
Mr. Sam C1arl a (West Northum-
berland) went on till 10 o'clock and
will finish to -day. After paying
some attention to the previous
speaker, he hit on a new idea, which
was that it would be far better to
build spurs to the 'P'emiskaming
Railway into districts desirable for
settlement than to push on north
just for the sake of going north.
The Government did great things
when it built the road. IIe was for
Government owiterehip.
Mr. Poise, Kingston, presented a
petition in the Legislature yesterday
praying for some chances in the bili
amending the charter of the King-
ston Street Itaiiwat' Co.
A number of bills sere read a
first time.
Daniel Derbyshire. president of the
Eastern Dairymen's Association,
called on the 'Minister of Agriculture
yesterday to ask for an increased
grant towards the payment of cheese
instructors. Thr sunt given last year
was $4,000 for 22 instructors, and
;Vfr, Derbyshire wants it doubled.
Modifying the Taxation Rill.
Tho special committee on ttsc,'ss:
stent again grappled with the moo
taxation bill yesterday morning.
There were several deputations pre-
sent to argue for a change in the
draft bill as it effects certain tax-
paying classes.
It Was agreed that malting should
ba treated en the basis et Inti butiee,
HOW MANY' PEOPLE ARE ALMOST
AFRAID TO SIT DOWN TO
THEIR L ALS
YOU MAY BE ONE OF THEM.
IF YOU ARE, THERE IS
A CURE FOR YOU.
BURDOCK BLOOD
BITTERS
CURES INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA,
BILIOUSNESS, SOUR, WEAK AND
ALL STOMACH' TROUBLES.
Mr. J. G. Clunis, Barney's River;
N.S., tolls of what this wonderful rem-
edy has done for him :--It is with grati-
tude that I can testify to the wonderful
curative powers of B.B.B. I was so badly
troubled with indigestion that whatever
I ate caused no so much torture that
eating became a dread. to me. I tried
numerous physicians, but their inedicinea
eeerned to make me worse. I thought I
would try B.B.B., so got a bottle, and
after taking a few doses felt a lot better.
By the time I had taken the last of two
bottles 'I was as well as ever, and have
had no return of the trouble since. I
reeemmend your medicine to the highest
degree, B.B.B. is for sale at all dealers.
ftilTn'g 'eldirarn and 'assessed at 50
per cent.
Hotels •were reduced from. a 50 per
cent. to a 25 per cent. basis. Shops
stay at s0 per cant.
,Departmental stores will remain at
50 per cent.
Tho Attorney -General submitted an
aunendment to the bill providing that
when a man is engaged in a, business
concern bo shall bo assessable on his
salary and on his dividends from
other companies, but not on divi-
dends from his own company. This
was adopted.
WORTH $1,500 TO CANADA.
Moreton Frewuu Eslina es the Value of
an-Aide.ltodiedt British Emigrant-
-The Fiscal Fluid.
London, Fob. 24.-(0.A.P.)—More•
ton Frowen, speaking at Notting-
ham, on the Empire and emigration,
drew attention to the immense
waste of. the vital forces of the Em-
pire, because, instead of being dis-
tributed by preference among the
colonies, the enligrnnts of the past
sixty years had been given over
wholesale •to our chief competitor—
America. He estimated the value of
an able-bodied British emigrant to
Canada at £300, because, judging
from the American returns the an-
nual wealth product of this emi-
grant would be 1:100, and ho would
pay £15 a year to the federal local
(axes. With ten emigrants .as secur-
ity, Canada could borrow £3,000,
which would build and equip a ,nil,;
of railway. Thus the Empire paid
tho railway built by emigrants not
by financiers in Parliament.
Sir William Macdonald declared it
was impossible to attract immi-
grants to Canada until the Ameri-
can fiscal systeiit was adopted
throughout the Dritish Empire with
the privilege of a free market and
the prerogative of citizenship. The
country to -day was tired of the
cosmopolitan altruistic experiment,
and was eager for a national pollee,
to benefit the Empire.
'.'uley Against i'rotectinal.
London, Feb. 28.—(C.A.P.)-3fajor
Seeley, af.P., speaking of protection
and preference., and their relations to
Imperial defence at a free trade
meeting, said the results of
protec-
tion were asuatlll
mercantile '
11, 1
u tm -
tl
rine, less varied employment, less
contented people. The British naval
reserve has drawn from the British
mercantile marine and it would be a
strategic disadvantage to adopt a
policy that would mean diminution
of the number of ships. IIe saw a
' ,
divided Empire as the result of a
preference in time of war.
Sir John Gorst said there could be
no greater guarantee for the peace
of the world or the safety of Britain
than that she was supplied with
food by the United States. The
Americans would never allow wheat
so bo considered contraband of war. •
,Metric System Favored.
London, Feb. l.—(e.A.P.)—The
bill snaking the metric systole coin-
plusory in Great Britain ' in two
years passed its second reading in
the House of Lords yesterday.
Lord Wolverton of the Board of
'I'racle, eaid it was a duty to finis
simple English wards, instead of
kilometre designation.
Lord Rosebery believed the adopt -
tion of the system would do more
to benefit traders than all the fiscal
remedies.
Troubled with Kidney Trouble
for Six Months.
litany Men and Women Are Troubled
With Kidney Trouble, Some For Less
Time, Some For Longer—No Need To
Be Troubled For Any Length Of Time,
If They Only Knew Of The Cures
Being Made By
DOAN'S KIDNEY PiLLS.
Backache Is The First Sign Of Kidney
Trouble—Then Come Complications
Of A More Serious Nature.
DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS
TAKEN AT THE FIRST SIGN OF
BACKACHE WILL SAVE YOU YEARS
OF MISERY. Mrs. tVilliam II. Banks,
Torbrook Mines, N.S., tells the pub-
lic about the great qualities of Doan's
Kidney Pills in the following words: --I
was troubled with kidney trouble for six
months, and had sueh terrible pains
across my kidneys all the time that 1
could hardly got around. After taking
one box of Doan's Kidney Pills I began
to feel better, and by the time I had
taken three boxes I was completely
eured.
Price 50e. per box, st 3 boxes for $t.25;
all dealers or The Doan Kidney Pill Coy
Toronto, Oat.
POINTS OF INTEREST.
IN CONNECTION WITH' Tile. IN -
6 i i:("TI+PN O;r' Cil 1iRU1i4' ,
(Brantford Ilxpositor.)
Inspection of local churches twill
be continued next week .by Ald. Il.:trt-
ntett and Chief Lewis. In view of
this fact it may be well to point out
a numb.r of defects whioh are conie
mon in most elturclies of the 'present
day. Tha main questions to be gon-
s.dered are, of course, aisles, exits and
stairways. s
The his . glaring defect in churches
is at the doors, which do not: open
outward. No exit should bo less than
Lour feet clear, handrails should
be on both sides of all stairways, and
there sbould be eighteen inches of
exit space for every one hundred peo-
ple that the audience room will seat.
The most essential thing is the exits,
and all o hurohes should have more
than one exit, no matter how targe
that may lee, Stairways should not
converge, nor the final exit be of less
capacity than, the original aisles that
lead to it. Curved or crooked stair-
ways aro always dangerous.
Perhaps the most frequent cause of
fires in ohuroltes is the hot
eurnaces and yet the registers of
these are almost. universally placed in
the middle of the aisles. This ought
never to be, for it may easily, block
the uisles and compel escape over the
buck;; -of the Pews.
As to seating cupaoity there is :some
difference of opinion among experts
es to the present danger, some or
them claiming that 'loo much atten-
tion is Laid to securing seating capac-
ity, fine, showy vestibules and largo
altar spasm, while others aro of the
opinion that, as a 'rule, the seating
arrangements are all right.
The placing of the gas jets is an-
other me iter which is done very rare-
tcssly. These should never bo near
the woodwork, and out of the, way
places, such as the organ loft, should
be avoided. Frequently tires origin-
ate 'cram such causes.
STOR IA
For Infants and Children,
The Kind You Have Always Bought
Bears the ����-
Signature of 2:�iLG;4f/)./.
WEATHES IN STORE FOR MARCH
According to weather-wise Prof. Pe
Voss, the coming month will bo a poor
one for picnics, river excursions and
other cuts:de jollifications. His ;vea-
1 her bulletin 'for March is as follows:
This will be the great storm month of
the year. It will enter with a storm
fotming over the. Missouri valley.
T31is storm will move eastward across
tin.: northern part et' the cou••Itry,
causing a snow storm. First to 3rd,
cloudy with snow, turning to r: -in.
Fourth hto 6th,and pleasant.
c mild
r
G: • .
..ninth cloudy, followed by
re:n. turning to snow. Ninth to loth,
cold soave. Eleventh to 15th, pleas.
lot. On the 10th the great cqu:nee-
•;:li e!,ornl will form over Texn;, .Ind
nscv' northeastward, causing a great
blizzard for Si. Patrick's day over all
northern states. Eighteenth to lith,
cold Prove. Twentieth to 23r.1, mod -
ere tlag. On the 24th a storm will
ferns over the Missouri valley. and
:love eastward. Twenty-f'ifilt to
G h m'; d , follow,:' by ra'n. Twen ty-
sevcnth to 28th, pleasant. On the
31st a severe 'storm will form over
Texas and move northward, causing
snow over the. western states; and the
month will e1os3 with a cold wave.
tPrcgnostications for the remainder
of the present month are : A cold wave
ie. dues on the !Oto to 20th. Twenty-
first to 22nd, pleasant ; on the 23rd
another storm will fora! over Texas
and move northeastward, causing
snow train. Texas to Maine on the 24th
tcu 25th, followed, by a cold wave on
the 26th to 28th. ' The. month will
clos3 with unusually cold weather.
MEMENTOES OF WAR.
Before many months have passed
the principal ce.ntres of the empire
will each have erected in a prominent
open place a Memorial of the South
African campaign in the shape cf e
gun captured; from the Boers.
Finding at their disposal about fifty
specimens of E,oer artillery, the war
office decided to distribute them
among the different municipalities, in
order that they might serve to remind
future• generations of the sacrifices
made by their forefathers in the cause
of empire,
A committee was appointed to dent
with the numerous applications re-
ceived, and it was 'decided to place
about a dozen, guns at the disposal
of the colonial offiee in order that
they might be ;dispatched to Canada,
Australia and; New, Zectland.
When ,their destinations have been
decided upon the :remainder will be
sant carriage paid! to the principal
towns of the, United. V.ingdoin.—Lcn-
,dof Dolan. ,
A WOMAN .SLEUTH.
vvtbTl Or 'I nl:litlll:lil% MAN
CAUGHT D9URDERER WHEN 1'O-
LICE )fAILLD.
New York, b'eh. 18.—After an unre-.
witting search of nearly seven weeks,
taring ,which she has walked day and
night en the , Bowery, spent hours, in
unsavory resorts, and exhausted every
resource of a skilled detective, :Mrs,
Katie Duffy of Brooklyn early to -.day
caused the arrest of the man who is
accused of being her husband's tour-
dere r.
Richard 'Puffy, her Husband, was
fatally stabbed on the• night of Janu-
ary 1, in front of a 1#owery resort, and
before his death said that the wounds
had been Inflioted by Charles Deviance
The police used every effort to capture
Devuno, but in spite of a full descrip-
tion given by Duffy were unable to do
so. His wife, however, undiscouraged,
kept up the search without remission.
She patrolled the Bowery, visited
haunts Devuno was wont to frequent, •
shadowed bis friends, and even watch-
ed railroad stations and steamship
piers in her attempt to find him.
Last night she saw tbe man, eater a
hotel on the Bowery, and notified the
police, who arrested Devuno after a
struggle. Devuno, who, with Duffs is
said to have been prominent in the
"gang" life on the Lower East side,
was arraigned to -day on a charge of
hnmioidc.
Deward of Ointments. for Catarrh that
Contain Mercury,
as mercury will surely destroy the
sense of smell rind completely dearauge
the whole system when entering it
through the .mucous surfaces. Snoh arti-
cles sho ild never be used except on pre-
scription from reputable physicians, as
the damage they will do is ten fold to
the good yon can possibly derive from
them. Hall's Catarrh Orme, manufactur-
ed by F J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, 0.,
coutaius no mercury, and is taken in-
ternally, acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces of the system. In
buying Hall's Catarrh Cure be sure you
get the genuine. It is taken internally
and made iu Toledo, Ohio, by F. J.
Cheney & Co. Testimonials free.
Sold by druggists. Price 75o. per
bottle.
Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa-
tion.
CURIOUS FACTS
Salt water has a teudency to eat into
or clot up iron pipes.
Ilm several places in Idaho hot water
is now drawn from artificial wells and
used to heat dwellings, and near Boise
!City they do not have to go down for it
much
1,000 ver f feet.
e t.
There is ouly one statute in Great
Britian with an umbrella. This is to be
seen at Reading and represents Mr. G.
Palmer of biscuit fame standing bare
headed with a silk hat and umbrella in
hand.
Before a recruit can be said to have
joined the British army his name mast
be entered sixty -ono times and that of
his superior officer twenty-nine times in
the documents required by the war
office.
A well near Pittsburg 3375 feet deep is
the deepest artificial hole in the world.
The next deepest bore hole on the
globe is at Schladeback, drilled by the
Prussian government in search of coal.
A student of church statistics finds
that twelve is the age at which religious
interest most commonly begins, and it
rarely begins after uineteen. Conversion
occurs most frequently between sixteen
and eighteen.
Pharaoh's chariot in which he rode
at Thebes has been discovered, it is said,
in a perfect condition in the valley of
the tombs of the kings at Thebes, along
with the tomb of Thotbmes IV., which
is nearly 4,000 years old.
Speaking of the production of arti-
ficial food Sesta says; "The most van
i nable food products which may be sa-
eured artificially are compounds of
nitrogen and the cheap production of
these is the key to the solution of the
food problem. Oar atmosphere eontaius
and inexhaustible amount of nitrogen.
READ 1T THOROUGH.
'Twould Spoil This Story to Tell it iu the
fieacilines.
j To use an eighteenth century phrase,
this is an "o'er true tale." Having
happened in a small Virginia town in the
winter of 1902, is a story very much of
tho present. I p to a short time ago
i Mrs. John E. Harmon, Of Melfa Station,
Va., had t,o personal knowledge of the
• rare curative properties of Chamberlain's
Cough Remedy. "Last January," she
I says, "my baby took a dreadful cold and
at one time I feared she would have
j pneumonia, but one of my neighbors told
! mo how this remedy had cured her little
boy and I began giving it to my baby at
once and it soon cured her. I heartily
I thank the manufacturers of rhambor-
i lain's Cough Remedy for placing so
great a euro within my reach. I cannot
recommend it too highly or say too much
in its favor. I hope all who read this
will try and be convinced as I was." For
sale by Colin A. Campbell.
If a son doesn't take after his father it
is usually because the old man left no-
thing to take.
If a girl loves amen and his best in-
terests at heart why does sho spoil it all
by marrying hila?
Unique and interesting.
Oen newel; :—
I apo happy to sent you what
I have eee and what I can tell. .he
Frost Fence that I have erected near .my
orohard is in a good place for tested the
Fence. AU the Winter he conte near
eight feet .height snow on that and the
Feuce come down and when the snow
went off the Fence take ilia firstposition
like if nothing bad been on. The Frost
Wire Fence Co.. in my place look like the
better Fence than he never conte on the
market.
Yours very retiree,
(Signed) B. VLAU.
St. Louis de Gonzagae, Que.,. Oct, 27th,
1903.
The above letter isboth unique and
interesting, and a few words of explana-
tion will be appropriate. Mr. Visa is a
thorough French Canadian and has only
recently taken up the study of the Eng-
lish language. The Wire Fence referred
to was built by bim over four 9ears ago.
It was the very first piece of Frost Fence
erected in Beauharnois County; wasiput
up mainly for a test and, of course, the
very worst place to be found was the one
selected. As per the letter, an orohard
pear Mr. Vitae's house was the chosen
spot, the drifts in the Winter time being
often as high as eight feet. The strain
on the fence was therefore exceptionally
severe, as every farther knows that snow
drifts will do more damage to the
average Wire Fence than years of ordin-
ary usage. The tensity of the strain can
hardly be imagined, the weight of the
snow often being so great as to pull the
staples entirely out of the fence. As
soon as the suow thaws the fence is re,-
stapled.
e.stapled. That is all that is necessary.
And, as per the letter "the fence takes
his first position," viz: Is as strong and
tight as the first day it was built, Mr.
Tian then goes on to say that in his
place the Frost Fence is looked upon as
the best fence on the market. It might
be of interest to state that "The Frost"
is the only Wire Fence which has been
found to satisfactorily stand the severe
and heavy snows of Quebec and the
Maritime Provinoes, and the hundreds
and hundreds of miles that are erected
here in Ontario prove that our Western
friends also appreciate a good staple
artiole when it is offered to them.
THEY KNOW IT.
Thousands of people throughout the
eonntry know that the ordinary reme-
dies for piles—ointments, suppositories
and appliances—will not cure.
The best of them only bring passing
relief.
Dr. ?:eonhardt's Hem Roid is a tablet
taken internally that removes the cause
of Piles, hence the (sure is permanent.
Every package sold carries a guarantee
with it.
It is perfectly barmless to the most
li7
t '
delicate constitution. A month's treat-
ment
e o package. Sold .
S at.1.00.
Further information with regard to it
at the drug store.
Sold in Wingham by Walton McEib-
bon.
PAYS ARE FROZEN
AND TUJ% BRICK 011' VISIT IXAS
TE1UALLY 4fVANCIfD.
Tent this year isconfronted by tai
trethely high flab prices, an inoonveni
eat contingency under the 'Arcuate
stances. The e,xocssivvly cold weather
Ls the cause. "Bays are frozen Overt
and drifting ice has made thin work of
thra fishing fleets perilows," said 1
large Toronto dealer. "Already prices*
have gone up fully twenty-five per
etnt., and before Lent is half over
there will be another twenty-five per
cent, edvanee. Not only that, bud
tasvexal varieties of fish will not be obe
tainablo at all. While there may riot
be an actual fish famine there will be
a fish scarcity, People have been, er.,
petting Dent .to moderate meat bills,
bust there is little prospect ol* relief'
from that source now. Word, comes
from New York that flounders, which'
generally sell there at $-i a barrel,
are now bringing $7, while. lobsters
are scarce at 40 cents a pound. Lind
codfish at 12 1-2c,"
Comfort for the Aged,
Judging from the letters of people up
in years there is np medicine which so
promptly frees therm of aches and pains
and insures regularity of the liver, kid-
neys and bowels as Dr. Chase's Kidney
Liver Pills. Even when all other means
have failed old people can turn to this
great medicine with full assurance of
relief and cure.
My Lady.
She walks unnoticed in .tbe street ;
The carnal eye
Sees nothing in her fair or sweet;
The world goes by,
Unconscious that au angel's feet
Are passing nigh.
She little has of beauty's wealth,
Truth will allow;
Only her priceless youth and health,
Her broad, white brow;
Yet grows she on the heart by stealth
I searoe know how.
She does a thousand kindly things
That no one knows;
A loving woman's heart she brings
To human woes;
And on her face the sunlight clings
Where'er she goes.
And so she walks her quiet ways
With that content
That only comes to dukes days
And innocent:
A life devoid of fame or praise,
Yet nobly spent.
—Pall Mall Gazette.
The secret of popularity is always to
remember what to forget.
If a man has no ear for music he oan,
at least use it for a pen rack.
It keeps a lot of people moving to get
enough money to pay rent.
Successful political orators says things
that sound well and mean nothing.
WHAT HAPPENS AFTER. FIVE HOURS.
Dr.lioneltard. the eminent French physician. has famished fart...A.10eh shoosthatif
fond is retailed in the stomach attire thaii five hours it bowlers fermentative and
putreilietivo,—not digestive, — and that this is the starting-poi:it of disease.
Eating
Zo much
starchy
ii foods
FOR SALE IN
This food mass be -
costes putrid.
ra
Gene .sa.!,
a
Tho stom:teh !litotes.
i
There 14 a seemingr
lump -weight. 'Awning, or
belching.
Blood; fibre. ti,sue. aril •
cells begin to absorb
poison from the stomach '
and alimentary canal in- 1
stead of nutriment. and i
right here i. the produc-
ing cause .If Constipa-
tion. Iliabetes, Bright's
Disease, Uterine an .1
Ovarian troubles. Rhea- t
matism. Gout. Nervous
and Mental Distress,
Bronchitis. heart 11Tec-
tinn, Pulmonary Con-
sumption. at n ,l i l' e,
Liver and Skin DWeases.
Inability of the stom-
nett to properly handto
fool . aiulmsea by
t lr y c:
y
overeating*. thinking r
too
O
mien liquid, gases gen-
erated from slum diges-
tion, preventing the mitr-
ing "t food with mistr•ht.
iiii:•e to prnm.11y prepare
1; f"r 11,1O in :h,• burly.
Ur. .f, Leooliardt
Ptnri„'1 far sante lel per=
feiete„ l:::;-i'1:t. «1 that
it weeei ,o . ..e ,.tt -
lar-tn••I.te11 .el.inil.:{nd
its a.t'.i 2 11h t+ 'lire.+ are
Proof of it- mission he-
ir; fu:liiic•I; ,.f its being
illy great"-: .ystenL
'1'rca!meta in the world,
au tents or druggists, Or
mailed to any address by
Wil.soN-Fvt.l: Cu.. Niag-
ars ,alts, Out. Sample
free.
WINGHAM BY WALTON McKIBBON.
„,thrc�r.
"lei fly GOLD DUST winz 370 WC.291e247
Don't plod along like your grandmother did !h,liCre
you, scouring and scrubbing; bonding and , zt ,b ,
Make: houieworlt easy. Tt ;loans everythps l.t-.
injures nothing. More economical than coag.
Made oily by THE'. N. 1:. FAt I ANK C'J": P r i, ,
Chiceao. New York, I3oston' St. 'Loin. Montreal,