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Clinton New Era, 1910-05-05, Page 7Nay 5th .1E9t43 Don't try to.patcb up a linger- ' 'log cough by expertmenting, Take Alien's Lugg Balsam and relief is certain to follow.. Cares the most obstinate coughs colds, sore throats, or bronchial inflammation, k All dealers. DAMS & LAWRENCE CO., Montreal 9 * His * Courtship. By HELEN R. MARTIN. &tither of "Tillie: A Mennonite Maid." Copyriitht.zombi, Meatere.Phatitps&Ca (Continued from last week-) -nut now tnat ,you know way you say that you commend my 'wisdom' in keeping silent?" "Ah. but what good did it serve? For you see here I am at your side - in spire of your wisdom. In spite of my own -for 1, too, Eunice. have been acting wisely since we parted, else a whole month would not have passed Without our looking again into each other's eyes!" '!'here was a passion In his voice that caught her hresth. "Ton have been repressing your feel• logs in stayinc away -your feelings for me?" vile asked breathlessly. "Did you want to see me?" came her wish ful question. "Lid 1? here ewer. "But," her eagerness suddenly drop- ped; and she spoke mournfully, "it can't last, you know." "No. Your aunt is going to"take you to Europe!" "Yes." "She says you are wild to go!" "Oh:" She lifted her head and flung back a lock of hair from her eyes. "In spite of all the delights that, wealth can give. what is it all when it can't feed the soul, when the heart is always longing -for just one thing that"- She checked herself, and again her head drooped. "And that one thing, Eunice?" She raised her eyes to his. "It is you I havg wanted! Rather than go to Europe -so far away from you -I would bring hack those days- of last I am!" was his an- xn.m the meeting of her life and Mine. the deepest needs of spy nature had been met and fed; and at last 1 came face to toe with the knowledge that she was ail to me that a woman can be to a man; that I loved her utterly!" Eunice walked at his side like one moving in ;a dream. For a moment the silence between them throbbed with their strong emotion. "And then," he presently went on, the gravity, of his voice calming her throbbing heart, "carne wy bitter struggle with myself. I was not will - Ing to take advantage of yourinexpe- rience-before you bad had an oppor- tunity to see other, men. I new you cared for tae. but how could I be sure that your feeling would bear the test or your larger knowledge and expert, once? Clearly ply honorable• course was to be silent, to withdraw into the baekground of your life, until you u should cove into a mature understand- ing of your° own heart. • "Then, the simplicity of the life I would ave tooffer . ou as th e wite of a teacher compared with the brilliant •career you might have -possessed of large means -a man would have to think better of himself than I thought to ask a woman to rnal:e such a sac - "The possibility that you might think ine a fortune Minter I put aside as an unworthy thought of you. That your aunt might attribute such a motive to rite -I was indifferent to that, though I l,elieve she would ,t'avnr ihle as a euitur, .she's so daft about 'family' Anti she's not mercenary either. So my own comparative •poverty would uot stand la tiny way with Per. NOVEL CURE .AOR CATARRHAL Stops Bronohitis, Relieves IIoarseneser Cures. Seth!, ma, Preyonts Throat Irr1= tation. 01 Tlie most effective way to treat and cure ailment of the breathing organa is by inhalation. New as this method Is In applica- tion, its practice is as old ,as man. Down from Adam has spread the re- putation of the air of the pine woods, charged with balsam and healing for diseases of the throat, lungs and nasal passages. Yet medical men neglected to em- ploy the natural curative agency for diseases oftet rot tunsand nasal assages until the � wonderful t'esults Which attended the Catarrhozone dry air method were brought to their no. tice and compelled attention. ention. t p The air of trio Mae woods, charged. with little dropsof balsam and ozone, has been enhanced by the Catarrh- ozone ' method through the addition of vegetable antiseptics more power- fully healing than the air of the pine, Woods. This balsamic and healing vegetable compound is broken up by the air INTO MINUTE PARTICLES so small that the air is enabled to carry them to the remotest parts of the lungs, throat and nasal passages—in fact,. it. Is the air of the pine woods concert- trated a thousandfold, and you can have it at home, FATIAPIIE IS IMPOSSIBLE. 'You can now understand why Ca• tarrhozone cures with such certainty,; It is medicated air carried to the seat of bronchitic congestion or situation here the micro-organisms which ex- cite asthma or hay fever exert their baneful and dangerous influence. The air distributes evenly over the entire diseased surfaces a covering of healing . Catarrhozone, Immediately congestion is relieved, inflammation li subdued, them microbes: which cause the trouble are destroyed, and cure follows as inevitably as the sun fol- lows the night, THOUSANDS CURED DAILY. , No other medicine has' achleved such remarkable success, and to -da not less than. twenty thousand physit- cians in America alone are prescrib- ing Catarrhozone, And why? Simpis because they realize that a healing remedy like Catarrhozone which air carries direct to the sore, inflamed membranes is hound to cure every form of Catarrh, all typesof bron- chitis and throat trouble, and will al- most instantly stamp out coughs, colds, sneezing and, • bronchial deaf- ness. CA'TARRHOZONE CUES. The reputation of C't tarrbazone. has grown by leaps and bounds. It reaches the diseased spot. It sures speedily.. Almost the first use gives such relief in the worst cases that most people cannot understand its action.. • Don't experiment longer—Catarrh- ozone means sure -cure. Two months treatment (guaranteed),. price $1.00; smaller size,' 5Oc, at°all dealers, .ot the Catarrhozone Company, E'ingeben Ont. • "Time I reasoned that in denying my heart I risked not only my own 'ire's happiness, but yours as well, Fortune hunters would swarm like bees about you, and in your guileless- ' tress bow easily you might be deceived Into a wretched marriage! Why should 1 step aside for other's eves less worthy than myself? I wanted you now- now while that sweet, wild wood flavor was upon you! Perhaps .you would s never 'lose it if I took you - to Myself and kept you so close to me .forever that the world could not get near to you. Why should I leave it to others to enjoy the charming ()poling up of your young mind to the wonderful • panorama of life, for who could de- light. more than I in ;the unfolding of your. beautiful spirit? • Had I not dis- covered yon? Wily should I' not have my reward? :Why should I not woo. you, maw „yob, trayel with you alt ' over the world, teach and guide .you where I could and myself be taught and guided by your womanly 'loveli- ness? loveliness? Eunice, I was almost appalled when once I, gave rein. to :myself at the strength of my love for you, for I felt the 'hurt 'of "it Almost as much as the ecstasy. ' "I tried to persuade myself that your love for me was.as .fundamental, as In- evitable, as mine•foryou, but'the.very force of my own passion made me dis- trust the sophistries of my 'selfishness; I knew that If 71 would not degrade my great love forypu I must✓put your. best welfare above my own desires, I .must .leave You free -until yeti bed. taken your bearings' in the world and had -found yourself. And there' • if 'It. were not"'too late "That thought gripped my very soul! . "And. so, Eunice, as I am a man and not a god, my love and not my reason carried the day -and .I am here with you!>, IIe stopped in the solitary,. pltth into which they had strayed And opened.his arms to her. dsgP `ER XVII ''p will b'urhp'you to 1iear.it t; eorg! arta, and I'm aiffeliy', sorry for yeti, put I can't help'. it," said Daisy, •as one afternoon in Octo- ber the two girls . stroileti, • about the cam us: "I've •rsot to tell. von. You st tog Inc suddenly caught her hand. summer on the farm -yes, even those days before we had spoken together at. all -for at least 1 then could see you. every day face to face." ' "Eunice! It's no use., T♦ e can't be 'wise,' you and I -we can't struggle against the inevitable! The power, that draws you and me together is stronger than our wills—we must yield tail ,• he drew her hand away from his. "No, no! If you mean we must yield to it at the expense of another girl's happiness. 1 will not r' "Georgians. you mean?" • "You are betrothed to her." The devil I stn:" "Trot you are 'ns good as.'" "'!'hat's her idea. not mine. I never o igivalea it. .1n"l if i have any in- fineiu•e with myself" - "You told tee you loved her!" "I spoke titenrntive►y. I mean I loved youth., homily, grace." ."Oh!" - n .. "Don't yen see?" "Please to label your remarks to me, 'literal' err 'figurative.' " She WaS npeat,Y:at; "!;tile seriously. With a loon of I:et, iitrc1 r'a'pt : "or i may misutlder- sland tell peinfia;i'!„ 1:. Hive. cot and 1 will not mis- t unit" ,• :ell ,,.u "" r .t 'tor a ra i ,. � 11 t e ,shsil �;+'.,!t tt"" •"t,luuhuarc--•tht lar.•tna'�e t f our he'!riv:" "Isar If it ,V:u, list yiiss lalery, what w OH , enr ,„t from me when yon e e' ted to , rr1e: "1 ,:1a t.•.A you.” ire rirew• a lett. ,leen breath, then half inrne,i to her ne he wanted beside her nett twined. "1t was ;visite the days dragged by when .1 was waiting for n letter from you, and my heart grew sick witit hope deferred that ns great truth be- gan in dawn mum me. 1 came into the realization that my whole itoriaott was colored by the thought of Eunice; that in thinking of her 1 found my only„interest. !�t'.P„„otll'i t1'pinesa that At this season, scores of ?eo Dle, girls and women especially, find their faces marked ..with pimples. dark- spots, 'eruptions, etc. The skin needs attention, needs 'renev- ating after the trying winter•season. Just think what it has had to go through! You have been out in rain and gleet and snow. You have been perspiring from skating, or same other exertion. Then you have stood to "cool off,” You have spent hours of the day indoors at a temperature equal to summer heat. Then you.have covered up your skin, except your face, and gone out into a temperature away below zero le No wonder their the skin of the face and neck shows signs of needing attention. Zam-Bnk is a akin food. Smear it lightly over the spots, the eruptions, the sallow patches, at night, and notice how quickly your -appearance. improves. As the rich, refined, herbal essences sink deep into the tissue, the hard scurvy -like pateheb are removed. The cuticle is softened. The cells be- neath are stimulated to healthy 'opera- tion. Tho pores resume their work properly. Better color results. The cells of the skin being purified by Zain- Buk's stimulating balm, become trans - p trent ; the blood beneath is able to impart its proper coloring to the tissue, and the delieato bloom of health replaces ttd altar of disease. the sallowness a tiallap .d•le* days of Tan -Buk treatmeet e.nt , Will transform a "" muddy," speckled, spotty complexion into one of attrae- ttveness and prettine'_s. Use Zam-13nk for more serious skin freebies, such ns sestina, pustules, bells, ulcers, fosterint-t sores, ringworm, scalp sores, sores en the body dnotob'ood•poi on - it g, etc. Mothers will find lam -Bok uric/Malted for1•ahv! 50c box all stores.* 1 • The Ilton New "mit i.unlee. It stands to mason'' "She Watt duplex or complex enough to .land her fish!" Daley vulgarly tie- •lared. "And to think, Georgiana, bow •au missed your chance when you had. lila all to yourself for a whole month -for, of course. I 'wasn't in the way:"' "No doubt Dr, Kinross found w rue self more quic'elysbecause of my luconselousnese of 'hie presence Uwe It we had come togetber )r the orbs nary way and been 'hampered by eon- ventional forms and reserves." "And maybe that's why he feu in love with Eunice instead ,pf you." "I don't follow your reasoning." "Clear as mud! He foetid you too superior. Prefersrural simplicity. I ask you," she demanded, with a the- atrical wave of her hand, "why he is. now, at the very beginning of the term,. away from college -in New York or 'Newport or some place? • Eeho an- swers, ale's gone to see his girl; Here comes your venerable young fa- there' President E11ery > whiteite haired and wrinkled, but vigorous, came, toward them in the path, a Cane in, One hand, au open letter in the other. "I` have a letter from Dr. Kinross," he announced, waving it before them. "Bad news! He's resigned. But we shall not accept his resignation. We'11 give him a year oft and get his promise to return next fall -with . his bride. He's about to be married and intends, to spend a year in traveling'witt his wife In Europe and Asia." •"The unfortunate lady's name?" in- quired Daisy, for Georgiana could not speak. They waited breathless while. Pres!- dent Ellery slowly took out his eye- glasses, adjusted them and examined the °letter. ""Miss Eunlee . Wolcott." "Stung again!" cried Daisy, totter- ing. The two girls walked on, while Pres- ident Ellery" proceeded inthe opposite direction. "Please, Georgie, don't let it rattle you," Daisy. coaxed her, slipping her arm through her cousin's. "As I said in the beginning of my remarks to you this afternoon,of your none feelings is, as yet engaged except , your pride. Tell me," she demanded, with an air of conceit, "can I rend men? Am I observant? Am I cute and clever? Are my perceptions keen? My parting advice to you is, be kind, to Gateshead (before it is yet too late. and he saith in his heart, "I have no pleasure in her: " Georgiana withdrew her arm from Daisy's. "I was mistaken in Dr.. Kin- ross," she said, with dignity. "So It would seem." "He is, after all, commonplace. He was ':unworthy . of. the high friendship I gave. him:' " `If you want that, you must climb' Re wasn't husky enough to do it." "Ihad fancied him a : man," said. Georgiana, "to -whomthe low plane of the average .marriagewould. be im- possible, m possible, one, whom the universe would call only to the highest union. ; But he wets giiite• incapable of meeting: me. S country' girl's pink and white pret-'' tiness"-- She shrugged' her shoulders, leaving her remark unfinished. ' • "It only goes .to show," said Daisy, "that•there isn't the 'least use sporting up for a mere man, nor yet in making an effort. .I don't. really believe En - nice tried for Pete. After this I'm go. ing to live up tie my favorite motto, 'Let'Things.Slide.' You come out bet- ter in the end:" ` Tutt >D. uire" lahoring winder the delusion._ that hinross. Is .in love with you -we can't of 'course, understand.liow he' can help, being; when he had the .chance pf •watching us for fotir weeks -without our knowing it. But," she' added In the tone of an oracle, "be .is not!' Bet- ter you should kadn' if now while 'none .of yourfeelings c.iept your pride are inked up d. before you 'hurt poor Gateshead to the point o.f driving him ' mto my arins," "IIow' can you, possibly ,know • any-:_ thing of Di Kinross' feelingeeeDa.isy?" Georgiana •asked. "Ile le not titan 'to ileuut them ltefore thole -Mile, . And I den',l stiplitiso. Int; Iris.• taken you into his nonfid"t r co'." - . • "Oh; but be has!" • Georgiaita'turnedl and looked at her quickly. "What do, you mean;' Daisy?" "Ile not a man, to •flaunt his. feelings! Gracious, ifs can't repress himself! Ile` just has to let out to.every passerby!" "And -hats he confided to you that he is not 'In • love with me?" Georgiana smilingly inquired • 'lie made nee Bear the whole story of • 1unice-tier turning. but- to be an heiress and the 'daughter of one of the oldest and best families in the Coun- try. .Well, .Georgiana, .no man looks as he looked while speaking of that girl unless he hesatone. the way of all flesh and become,inacl with love. Yon would have seen it for yourself, but for your prepossession that he loved'. you. What a .chanci:' I missed myself, or. if I'd dreamed that•Pete waS-.him- I mean he -I 'might have liad a. try at, bila mydelf, for I' do -like -the creature. rather. 'It isn't. his 'fault that all the girls s get• silly about hin. Yea,"s, she said thoughtfully, "If I'd ever dreained of his being himself 1 certainly would have given my attention to his Caen, for l know the man is rather fond of ape --you mayn't .have noticed it: --and my own private opinion is •that we were made for each other. No •bops for any of us now, though, not even for you,. Georgie. IIe's shelved! The long lost heiress has him. Whether he has her I don't know. I'd love to see him refused. I'd like to have a chance.to refuse him myself. Though in such a contingency, if he continued Co want mo,•i'd think about it. As for you, Georgiana, you'll have to content yourself with •Gateshead." • • Georgiana laughed. "Your gratui- tous surmises, my dear, are all wrong. Ilow could 'a man like Dr. Iiinrosls (ttle for a mere Country girl like Flu - Mee, a SOrt of servant to the farmer's tie less Illiterate tittle family? Site was a t than the rest, bat a simple, uneducat= ed country girl nevertheless, Why, I never saw br. Kinross speak to her." "Ile spoke to her whether we saw him or not" ""Ile Is too clever a man and too fas- tidious to become enamored of tin nii- sophisticated country girl," Georgiana repeatedsated confidently. w Cie ids IS ab- eU rd." "Iie loves, adores, worships her!" Daisy affirmed. "IIe's mad about her. What, I ask, is more alluring to a world weary cynic than rural simile. ity'r" "Rural 'simplicity;'' reasoned Geor- giana,• "is very well in its way. I think I don't 'underrate" its value and its charm. But it highly complex Men- tal and spiritual organism like that of Dr. IilnroSS could not be at one with a simple orcanism like that of the girl Toilet and Medicinal Preparations Are Compounded by Expert Chemists wito Compounds Your Medicines? NA -DRU -CO' Formulae, Ingredients and When your physician gives you a prescription Compounding Are Best you would scarcely risk having itcompounded by a , ; , not be more careful grocer or a baker, even if you were sure they had the Your own druggist could or right drugs, You insist on your druggist's skilful inore accurate in compounding one of your physician's dispensing. prescriptions than are our chemists in compounding If you did not protect ydurself in this way the every NA-DRU•CO preparation. Add to this he facts laws of the country would protect you, for they that only the best and purest materials thatmoney demand that physicialis' prescriptionsbe dispensed can buy are used in NA -DRU -CO articles, and that by physicians orualified druggists only, each NA -DRU -CO formula has been thoroughly tested ~s Is it not equally important to know that the house. inactual use, and you have the•solicl grounds for the hold remedies, such as laxatives, cough syrups and implicit confidence we want you to feel In NA-DRIJ-CO tonics, and the toilet preparations such as tooth paste, preparations, which you use so frequently, are also compounded by We are prepared to furnish to any physician or expert chemists? druggist in Canada, ana da- , on request , a full l li st of f th e preparations you have thepositive guarantee ofone ingredients inanyNA•DRU-COarticleBsk these men, who are men of standing in your community,Wheu you use NA -D U- it medicinal or toilet • of the largest wholesale drug firms in the world, the and best qualified to tell you, all about NA -DRO -CO National Drug and Chemical Company of Canada, preparations. I,iniittd, that each one has been compounded by If any NA-DRIT-CO article you buy does not • expert chemists only. prove entirely satisfactory retain it to your druggist. This is justwh NA -DRU -00 •CO Cascpra Laxatives. He has our authority to refund the full purchase price NA -DRU -CO Liquorice, Linseed, and Chlorodyne and charge it to us. Cough Syrup, NA -DRU -CO Tasteless Cod Liver Oil Compound and everything else on the NA -DRU -CO You can get any NA-DRU-COpreparation any - list are pre-eminently better than mixtures at present wherein Canada, for if your druggist should not have • gThey compoundedby nearest wholesale brnch, days from our flooding the market. are men it in stock he can get it within two who know. - Some NA -DRU -CO 'co Preparations Capapfaor Ice D Dyspepsia Tablets Greaseless Toilet Cream Headache wafers Talcum Powder' Herb Tablets Tooth Paste t/ .1 ,. . Nervozone Tooth Powder _ Pile Ointment Baby's Tablets Rheumatism Cure Carbolic waive Sugar of Milk Cascara Laxatives (Tableb) Stainle,s Iodine Ointment Cod Livor Oil Compound, THIS TRADE MARK APPEARS ONLY Toothache Gum Tasteless (2 Sizgs) ON otlR coons White Liniment e Canada Limited National Drugand Chemical Company of C , Wholesale Branches at:• ' Halifax, St. John, Montreal, Ottawa, Kingston, Toronto, London, Hamilton, ,Winnipeg, Regina, Calgary, Nelson, Vancouver, Victoria. 8 KILLED THE BILL De Cosmos .Talked It to. • Death In Twenty -Six Hours.., • Mr. De Cosmos, a member of the Legislature of British Columbia, cer- tainly deserved the medal kr lung power, and he won it seemingly in • a good cause arid at' grave risk to him- self, The ellumber was considering a bill that would drive many 'settlors front their homes, arid' there was 'a sufficient majority tb pass it. The. fact of tliu session was only. a day and ttvo hours distant. At noon oil the morrow the House must close its•busi- !less, De Cosmos' was desperate He. ,11ust stop the hill, and' there was oill'y one way to do it. He would. have to ::petik' right on till.• the . end of the. 'session and prevent a' division being • 'Lardy Ernestine' Hunt, who has. start ed a :c.'owgi.rls', school near .:Parise mouth for the training of young: wo" `ma•n for ;Canada. .bna• :li:a( an advert :,. -,:Devout; career. 'Co a -roving ' dispoi3l tion stir, unites a `pasionttte 'foridiiess.• for two things -horse and the sea. A% twenty she took a trip round Cape. Horn in a small sailing boat. 'Then she tried a, voltage to Atistralia in a, sailing ship, and :by'the',time she re- turned could "hand, reef, or steer" .s well as any .sailorman. She then •itt for a master mariner's cer;ficate, wile it a hard-hearted authority, how- ,•vl.1, tits not ‘ gallant enough to ex ' hl to Iter: ORTII MOUNTAINS OF LD During Change of , Life, says Mrs. Chas. Barclay Graniteville, Vt. -" I was passing through the Ohaifge of Life and suffered front nervousness andother annoying symptoms, and I can truly say that Lydi.aE.Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound has proved worth mountains of gold to me, a'sit restored my health and strength. I never forget to tell my- friends what LydiaE,Pinkham'ti Vegetable Compound has done for inc during this trying period. Complete iu h 1 C to health means a 0 stn restoration to me that for the sake of other suffer- ing women I am willing to make ray publish so On may P trouble Iiyou >, yy BABCJ,'.A:'Y --- Ii5. f,ilAf3, i er M est this l<l.F.D.,Graniteville, Vt., No other medicine for womanr a ills has received such widespread and un- qualified endorsement. No other Med- icine rte WO know 0 c rd hare0 of has such of cures of female ills as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. For inore than 30 years It has been curing female 'complaints such as inflammation ulceration, local weak; nesses, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, indigestion it ad nervous prostration, andis unequalled for carrying women safely through the period of change of life. It costs but little to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and, Mrs.liarelaysas,it is "worth T taints of gold" to duttering womenatu>" ritroritsurrIOV Paintthat will cover better —look .:bright longer.—arid last nearly twice as long as ordinary paints, Paint that 'will not chalk, check, nor crav,'1—i£ cozninon sense guides the use of it. Paint it .tcck- 17 years to perfect by adding just enough of. one special ingredient: Money's -worth' •paint -that's the ideal. • I't's in every can of M -L Pure lm Paints. Made in 40 colors for all paint aint "users by Iinperial Varnish & Color Co,, Limited, of - Toronto. sox,n BY •'it was 10 O'clock in the Morning *hell he rose to "make a few retnarks in regard to the measure. before the House ."• Eleven .o'olocic ctuee,noon, i (Schick, lett k, anti still De Cosmos .talked:. Members in a spirit of jeilt' omitted to niljOurn for lunch in ordler to act! how: long_. Ile • would keep going. • The 'afternoon waned, the sun went -town and Itiuip•, were . lit, but De. Cosmos ',never faits re cl, ' situation'wan-bLcaming ,eelibl1S, 11. t ertoinly held the floor 'and seem- ed likely to .keep it. All sorts 'of plans. were tried to get hint to stop, but elixiuenee poured from him as water from a mountain spring. He was not allowed: to .halt fur food, though he was, l,erntittetl to drink. ' 1'lle ep1'ticer. inshstecl un keeping to' the 111icI stlon. ,t•fort?': the Hous( ait,1 ciblectotI I'd .]lino ri+peatiit ' :.111nlltif. Through the. wet(h;td 'of the "night 1)t' C.`Osinos,.toiled 0n and sucecssfuily es -either all 118,l t:14 tri "order,';" -1 w 1"tit 1i1nnfu'll'itla• 11h,.:'pnt' 1...1 lite,_ 1111,V11 heal 1:.jxt up it ,]4w Mice as •. the br•akfast'hour arrived and wale SOU sl,coki,tg an the clod. iipwly azp- prc aehel the four. of ie. . On the last : troke of that hour .he ' •etolpped' iii the middle.. of a st rhtt lace . and foil to the floor. 1'or,twentc 'i3 mortal hours;. he Marl stood on 111e floor land width" reed the Howe > U]. had nearly killed ltinl tlf. he doing it. The excitement hall kept hint up till the mid. but when the tlesirell letult was echieved his facilities gave way, and it was several days before he rt,- covered. -lint the . bill was bleeped, and the settlers kept their homes. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S GASTORIA • Chesterfield Superficiality.. Chesterfield's idea of excellence waS J• essentially superficial, for his _praise of solid acquirement and .genuine .princi- ple is always coupled with the riser. tion of their entire inutility if unac- conlpanied by grace, external polish and an agreeable manifestation. Ile omits all consideration of their in- trinsic worth and absolute dignity. Their value to the individual, accord ing to him, is wholly proportioned to his skill. In using them in a' 'social form. InOneof his earlier letters to Philip Stanhope lie writes: "What an advan' tags has a graceful speaker with gen- teel motions, tt handsome figure, over one who shall speak full as •mitch good sense, but who is destitute of ' these ornaments! In business how prevalent are the graces, how detrimental is the want of theist! If you should not ate quire manners, all the ret will be of little'use to you. By manners I mean engaging, .insinuating, shining man- Hers, a dimtinguished politeness, an al- most irresistible address, a superior gracefulness in all you say and do." He Would have manners overlay indi- viduality and goes ssof far as to declare re that a soldier is a brute, it scholar a pedant and a philosopher a cynic With- out good breeding.- London Standard ded. Abandonment Sn arta A ban The .age of farm abandonment is practically at an end, for the farnef has solved the problem of how to maim a living for himself and family hand at the same time aecumulnte a guo(1 bank account from the products of a small tract of land. New eon. 'ditious require new methods, and this applies With greater force to farming then to anysother form It prodbctiye Industry. tr ADAMS, Londesboto` o. n A Clingy R. ROWLAND, PL.d`dll E 1UN (MAPLE LEAF LASEL) If -cocoa is your favorite beverage by a, 1 Nmeans enjoy it at its best 's Perfection rfection s h:,Co'�'an, a . macl .' w►t 'Oocoa, :• The acme -of . purity, richness ` '. and flavor. THE COWAN CO limited, TORONTO 10 .i 17r'04%41 6vidat.r.• One of the most fetching tisk; t xautplrs, of the long- sweater icon t' is Of 10111.1)01 colored s•afli maul," with t'nf!s •and. n turned down' 'cul!;t r of rich green and ornahnented with brass buttons. • 'the ,c dernitle Coles S shield. appeal to the knitti't' whole desire At • is to make a gement not so perishable as 'the delkcati' white awe te,'- Wood.'s Pnosphod.iae; -' .The' Great English .Remedy,. Tones and invigoratesthe whoa nervous system, makes now Blood in old Veins. Cured. ours Debilit (, .,trental and Brain Worry, pon(lenti/, Sexual Weakness, Emissions, Sper�- matorrhrea, and Effects of Abuse or Excesses. Price S1 per box, sixfor$5. One wing will ix euro. Sold by all druggists or nlanea in plain pkg. on receipt of price. .Neto pamphlet mailed free, " The Wood nlodion° co, Oti4 Ifo).n1erll/.l iWaadsor1 WE REPAIR WEAK"MEN .ennal: ONE SECRET OP OUR SUCCESS. Every Casa submitted its us receives the pse attention of ourriiedicad :stare, who consider the symptoms, complications and chronicity, curability. 5 ecifko remedies are then prescribed and then decide l r, the disease nodp for the ease"and are compounded by our own chemist in our cava laboratory. Such appropriatep treatment cannot fail to camas spt'cif 1' medicines are selected to euro tho symptoms that troublefonts you. Wel-lave P1 ,Ccure-all l m e1 3rinrq like most t s eeialts ts use se who send the some rreall patients alike And mire none. wono a treatedpatients throughout Canada for err r twenty years and c,nn refer to any bank an to our responsibility. We Guarantee Cures or No Pay. We Treat all Diseases of Men and Women. 110- CONSULTATION PREF If Unable to Call, Write for a Question List for Homo Treatment. • DRS.KENNEDY KENN ED - Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich. All letters from Canada must be addressed ��' L to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- siemiliveseimmies inent in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute iif Detroit as we see and treat are forCdrres ttdence and Windsor offices which po two patients in our �'Vt Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows : D125. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. 1144in�Nne n,,,.,u-tvra+hvArldrnsa.