Exeter Times, 1906-03-29, Page 3t-s�l-ri-t••t•'�' •i-Nt•�t
HEALTH
TIGHT -LACING.
Mnst wi4nen will declare, and with rea-
son, beat they are mere comfortable to
some form of corset thun without any;
and although it may be argued ugainbt
this by the corset -hater that.this is be-
cause they have accustomedthemselves
to a constriction and support that is un-
natural, the fact u iii is, and It is pro -
!mole that this garment, in some form
tr another, will always be in the fashion.
11 run -Innis, therefore, for the would-be
reformers to devote their energies to then
proper construction and the correct use
of corsets.
As to construction, it may be claime'i
siNa that any corset which snakes preesurc
-- or the diaphragm is harming the wearer,
for the revolt that it then becomes iul-
(.osiL•le tri breathe properly. Singers in -
Variably wear their clothing loose here
Huse they c°n1a net get enough
el euth to sing if they did not, and they
ore generally Healthy and splendidly
deve!oped worsen.
It is probably not an extreme state-
ment to make that nine -tenths ot cor-
eekel women never Lreathe as they
should. because they stave entirely lost
the habit. The result is that the blood is
never suflicicntly ne,nterl, and the can•
dation is all the time rendered more or
less anemic and below par. For this
rellson, the so-called straight -front"
corset is a great advance on the old-
tushioned shape, because it gives more
room to Use breathing apparatus, and
exerts the pressure where it can be bet-
ter borne.
But whatever may he conceded in the
direction of loose. well -made corsets, no-
thing but 111 can be said of any form et
eorsrt that is worn tight; and by tight
b. meant the application of any pressure
that is sufficient to contract the figure.
There are few Indeed, who do not
come under this condemnation. What-
ever women say to the contrary, the
principal use of the corset Is not 1n rive
Accessory support, but produce the shape
prescribed by fashion; and as this shape
changes from season to season, the cor-
set tines change with it, and women
submit to the tyranny of one sort of
waist and hip line one season and an-
other the next. to the great advantage
m the dresmnkers and the corsetieres,
tut to the inevitable detriment of titter
con health.
11 stands to renson that any pr•e •sure
senleienl to chnnee the lines of n figure
TUE ROAD TO MIALT11, 1 LORD f;TRATIICONA'S
IIle Was Anxious to be Styled Lord
LiesUb the Melt .Red Stood Dr. Gleucae, But Protest Was (Wised.
%%intenininsts' fink fills Actually Matte.
When
Alexander
Common pills purge the bowels. Dr. t w,iscmated ,, peer he as istssa 1tlo
iitiar
bliss'.
hovel
\\' ui' Ihnk tills make new rich essuuie ttie title of Lord Glencoe, in the
Purging pills gallop through the reign of lima
William ill. But no 8)011-
s—tcar+ng the tis$uers irrituling er hod he lntirnuled los intention than
the organs and weakening the whole not only all the ialacdunalds, but even
sisters). Dr. \\iliialu5' filth flits do not the very l..tllinglL•e1lS,
and, irldced, all
urge ut all. They re tours pills, booth- Scotland, raised up their vatees in such
lnii pills, stretttttheui,tg pills, blood= angry protest at tete idea of u man of
building pills. Dr. Williams fink Pills
aetually make new blood. That is why
they are the only scientific cure for all
Mood diseases. That is why they cure
headaches and backaches, kidney trou-
nce, indigestion, weurulgia, rheumatism,
heart troubles, and the special ail-
n;ents of growing girls turd mature wo-
men. Parsing 1,4115 act only on the
symptoms of disease; Dr. \\illiarn$' 1'irik
Pills go Mtalght to the root of the trou-
i.le in the blood and cure. Mi. John
Punka, Ehlidale r'.I:.4., 51115: "I think
Dr. Williams' ('ink Pills the best medi-
cine in the world. 1 had an attack sf
pneumonia which was followed by ex-
treme nervousness and rheumatism. 1
tried some of our best doctors but got
nothing to help ale until I began taking
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Atter taking
the pills some weeks I could actually
feel the new blood they were malting
coursing through my veins, end in the
course of 11 few weeks more 1 was corn-
rletely restonal to health." Remember
that 1t is only Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
that can make this new, rich. henith-
giving blood. Imitations gnat the so -
(Idled "Inst ns gond" medicines never
cured anyone. Insist on the genuine
with the full name. "Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills for Pale Pennle." on the wrapper
or, each hos. Gold by all medicine dea-
lers or by moil at 50 cents a box or six
t.nves for $?.50. by writinI The TSr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, O» t.
mus' he strong enough to compress the. (nether from the trill. '1'o ask a She4
h breathing
organs, with the result tt"'t limiter if he is an Englishman is to he
breathing 1s impeded, natural muscular answered with a smilin affirmative. 1'i
development is weakened and digestion g
impairedMnny n woman by submit ask hint it he is n Scotsman is to rouse
even his gentle and long-suffering na-
ture to a state bordering on frenzy. A
Shetlander so "insulted" will never for-
give. The Shetlander hates and defile les
the Scotch.
ISLAND WAS PAWNED.
Of course the Shetlander Is not rdt
Englishman at all. Ile is a Norseman.
IN
SHETLAND AND ORKNEY
the minae. of Smith, in no way connected
with either of the clans eou•elved in
the massacre, assuming the name of the
Glen of Weeping (which Is the meaning
of Glencoe) (haat Sir Donald was Coln:
pelted to withdraw his application to
the Crowe, and to e;nlcnt himself in-
stead with the title of Lord St•ltthcon".
Apropos ot the massacre of Glence,
on ancient practice is still invogue to
this day in Scotland. Whenever a Mae-
mio lald most• a cantpbell at table in -he
(►1d Country, he is in the habit of either
passing, a knife, blade foremost, that 's
to say, pointing the blade at him, by wiry
of iudi,•aling Mutt (1u' treacherous Inas-
'are by the Campbells of 11,0 2llacdon-
aids, whose hospitality they were en-
joying end by whom they had been most
kindly received, at Glencoe in 1905, has
never twe'n forgotten or forgiven. On
solider side of the Atlantic every Camp-
bell and every 1111acslonold nrderstands
the customs and emaciates its weanling.
Lord Strntheona, by tete way. indig-
nantly denies the story so constantly
printed to the effect that he begun life
PS an errand boy in a village dry gods
store In Seotlanl, that he came to Am-
erica in the steerage and thut atter a
short stay in Ncw• York he wandered
on to Canada, where he made his way
un, step by step. in the service of the
Hudson Bay Company from the lowest
rung of the ladder until he, beeunle its
president.- He wishes it to be known
that his origin was far from Leine as
bumble as Intimated by his biographers.
ale deelnres that his people were among
the county ftnniles of Morayshire. end
that his mother SVCS a daughter of the
snime hlvc-blontled house to which the
trite Field Mnrshal Cir Dnnnld Stewart
belonged. He further claims kinsman -
shin with the Grnnte of Manchester.
who were the originals of the "1'heer-
eSle Brothers" in Charles Dickens'
"Nicholas NJeklehy."
Instead of misting his living In his
youth as an errand bay in n village
store. he shelled law at Edinburgh, and,
worst of rill. he never crime over in the
steerage, but nn the contrary, as n first-
class passenger. with n commission ns
an oMeer of the powerful Hudson Bay
Company.
SOME CHARACTERISTICS OF THE IS-
LANDERS.
SLANDERS.
Shetlander Scorns to be Called a
man — Dislike the Orkney
People.
Even among educated people in Eng-
land there is a delusion that the people
el Shetland are Scotch, and that (incite
Is their tongue, writes W. Holt White in
the London Express. Nothing could lie
Scots -
lo an inch or Iwo more in the waist,
could Improve her complexion, bright-
en her eves and renew her youth.—
Youth's Companion.
ME HABIT 01' NOT FEELING WELL.
Few people realize that their ailments
are largely self-induced, They get into
the habit of not feeling well. 11 they ir. this respect his blue eyes and bus ye. -
gel up in the morning with a slight low hair betray Mtn. It is net,• it .w--
headache, or some other trilling indis-1 ever, everyone who knows Shetland',
{•osilion, instead of trying to rise above. tragic history, but Shetlarulsrs know it
this condition, tney take a positive peen- and grumble «bout it 10 this day
sure in expatiating upon their feelings When the famous Maid if No.•wey
r'' k, any one who will listen. Instead l f; was to be wedded to James of ScoUnn•i
combining lite tendency to illness Sy. the King of Norway was required to
filling the lungs with pure, fresh airS furnish the lady with a certain doAny,
they dose themselves with headache hut the Norwegian exchequer ons at the
Mblets," or some other patent specs time in an impoverished condition. The
tis• warranted to cure whatever ill they, money was not forthcoming, and to
Shetland, then a Norwegian possessi••n,
was placed in temporary pawn.
NEVER REDEEMED.
Unfortunately. the pledge was never
redeemed. as the cornpound interest on
the loan now runs into the thousands
o! millions. Naturally, however, the
Shetlnnders hese never forgiven the
Scotch, and they still hate thein.
When the English began to open up
think they nre suffering from. they
begin to pity themselves, and try to at-
tract pity and sympathy from others.
Unconsciously, by detailing and dwelling
t:pon their symptoms, they reinforce the
best simple suggestion of illness by a
whole army et thoughts and fears and
Images of disease, until they are unfit-
kd to do a day's work In their homes
of offices.
1l is said that man Is a lazy animal.
We sire all more or less prone to indo-
lence. and it is the easiest told most an inconvenient language, they adopted
natural thing in the world for young English, and English they speak to -day,
145)ple to nceustom themselves to lying though many old little Scandinavian
down or lounging on a sofa because: words cling to their dialect
they think they are tined, or not well` Gaelic lhey never knew. Gaelic they
Much so-callmt "invalidism" is simply . despise; in fact. practksilly the only
kazines,ls, fostered and great dnag from
er that grievance that Shetiond has Is that it
sblldhixl. Tess, is n is ',racketed with Orkney as a conHi-
swirls who are delicate while growing up, : tuenry.
and lounge around the house and 11e What kind of people they of Orkney
town whenever they feel die least bits mnv he 1 have yet to learn. To hear
trot of sorts. will forma hatdt ill inwa' ` them s)ooken of in Lerwick Is to Imagine
Gdtsnl when they reach rlslurity. How tthetn the greatest ot,kasts on the face
often do we see such girls "Dntec up"i of the earth.
N ones whenever anything happens) •Ilse Shetlander is a large, Thud. slow
which interests or excites there! An in -1 titan, loving truth and honesty. and hav-
♦!'ntten to a reception. or nay other• ing a great capacity for personal anew,
once.
GiVES TWO REAL
GOOD REASONS
1011 BELIEVING DODD'S KIDNEY
1'ILIS CURE ALL KIDNEY AIL-
MEATS.
ILMEATS.
Cured Ms Backache of Twenty -Five
Years Standing and Satisfied Every-
one Be Recommended Them to.
Economy Point, N.S., March 10 —
lSpecial)--George S. McLaughlin, of this
place, gives two splendid reasons for
Itis belief that Dodd's Kidney Pills ere
the one remedy for Kidney athnents.
Hero are the two reasons in his own
words:
"1 was troubled with lame back for
25 years or more, sometimes so severe
)rat I could not turn myself in bed. One
box of Dodd's Kidney fills cunei me,
end I have had no return of the trouble
since.
"I have recommended Dodtl's Kidney
(ills to a number of persons who hnd
Sidney Trouble. All who have used
them have been benefited or cured."
Dotld's Kidney Pills not only relieve
alt Kidney Diseases, from Backache to
})right's Disease. but they absolutely
cure them. But sometimes where one
or two boxes relieve it takes more to
make a complete cure.
PARSON WILL NOT QUIT.
Will Run B» Saloon and Resign
Chaplaincy.
UNLIGHT
Wash alcbths
arid lutoleums with
warm water and
Sunlight Soap, rinse clean and wipe
OAPdry. The cobrs will be preserved
and the surface unharmed.
Common soaps fade the colors and
injure the surface. Sunlight Soap deans, freshens and preserves
oilcloths .'nd hr;oleums.
Sunlight Soap washes clothes white without injury to the most
delicate fabrics, or to the hands, for it contains nothing that can
injure either clothes or hands.
Sunlight Soap is better
than other soaps, but is best
when used in the Sunlight
way (fo'.+ow directions).
Equally good with hard
or sort water.
52
4fltR BitOIntlitS UMLItD, Tereato
w
f.REWLESS TORPEDO BOA'R'S.
Boat Is Worked From Shore By Mys-
terious Invention.
An engine of death, the' wireless tor-
r.edo twat, which will In all probability
revolutionize the navies of the world
and make the extended coast line of the
United States impregnable from attack
by a foreign foe In time of war is the
invention of Mr. Charles E. Alden, the
well-known New York sculptor, but who
1- now experimenting at his summer
home at Cottage City, on the island of
Martha's Vineyard. N. J.
A bout without a crew, handled from
WENT BY '1'1tF. BOOK.
hba maratus,
thethe wsorkore ofy Uie fncentorysteriouti, and doingappcv- Mr. Newwed—This soup that you made
erything tint the tntest improved type titstes awful.
of torpedo boat Is capable of as far las Mrs. Newwed--That's strange. The
the eye can see from shore, has been cook book says that it tastes delicious.
successfully operated by Mr. Alden. �•tlt BALD. - JUST ARR1vKD ANT!
Ohcilierd to the HeMzittn waves used Retrain Year stealth hytaking' Forro•fm' Western Granada Land CO I1 '
in the different systems of wireless tele- les see best ryas rase asssesisd. in:7 h� -
sale — imported Clyde Mal .m. ckneys: lerni St mites ism] end of 'treat —
graplly, this boat weighs its Owtl an- and strenethe+1•+ tee whale 'swop.. MaA• OrrisS, 34 KIM STMT. die.—O. BUlUtY, ruapb, Ont.
• flow's its whistle, starts its pen-
EDUCATED INSECTS.
The Foolish One—Did you know that
bees could count?
The Wise One—No, but I've heard of
cq elling bees.
Bail Heart — Could Not Lie Down for
Eighteen Months.—"1 was unnt.le to lie
down in my bed for eighteen months,
coving lin smothering spells caused Ely
heart Disease. One bottle of Dr. Ag-
new's Cure for the Meati removed the
trouble, and to -day i am as well as ever
1 was."—L. W. Law, Toronto Junction.
—123.
PEDLAR'S"
STEEL OEILINC17
Designs sultalth for all classes et work such s Churches.
Schools,
Stores,
s,
dulls. Also special t -rias for (louses, Kitchens,
lhinf' has ever been devised ; gqulltPedlar's
e ra 's Sktoreel
ail np s tor tarlu boosts.
(hru)e as lath and plaster an
Avoid Accidents by Using
Pedlar's Steel Ceilings.
land• to fit any size room and con Le milled on Ly any meellatDM. Ship-
pcti true, our tvui houses painted all acedy to upply.
Our ('analogue. too. air describes many designs. Writs for 11. tl tads
you nothing. Write to -day.
THE PEDLAR PEOPLE
Yt 7o0 Oris St 42.4 t3�uie,aitJt. t$ oacolpnavita is s. Manias iG 7Yt 00t�� O.
W AVM Seca Nast's*? orrice. UEitaw•r Dwt•+ Canada
ttaad Utsice and Works.
p Farms and Blocks of Land
x'OR 8J .ZsZI
In Itis+ to a'tt Murohnsers. from 12 some •aaatr Htuat otsd
on er near ra.:ways W tits famous wheat growing
MANITOBA, SASKATCHEWAN and ALBERTA
TERM
i► se oawce r„7 and to .tM . tarot seers twdwtrte.e was ass oft •
J
rearmost and s.YimiTAisa Peso Mew
The •M►netar ant Pertness •' $*'y • L eh to •Bard s wee
A11ap ass 0i 78, issseiNtlE11T Imes sr p•taat'ta•, way be iesaiMed me SUMS.
nfUAltl Mal►ra ., PAT*IGTI0.
Mer Iutornatton and Prises sppl7 to
F. W. HODSON,
MAKau151 LAND D>s►•at,s,rn,
ARWWTS The Union Trust Company, Limited,
WAKTID
E iii *lith. TEMPLE BUILDING. TORONTO -
When Writing Mention This Paper
set
chore
feller, turns In starboard or port or Henry returned ha triumph from an p •. BOX es.
keeps on a straight course ahead, turns examination. "How did you get along,
on its searchlight, fires a cannon in its my son?" his dotting arent'in�iuired. • wheat .roved ad ranch stand nd unimpeovrei l
bow, drops and hoists an anchor, stops, First -late,' answered Y
tacks and goes ahead again, lights sig- sw•ered all the questions." "Good! flow tents, and tr t in tiitlna, Sa katche r nt,OAa-
l-
nals, and discharges a torpedo from its did you answer then)?' I Wagon Valley, B. C.,
tubes. know." Wheat
Speaking of his greatinvention,
Brandon, Man.
plensnnl social occasien, acts like a
Ionic. For the line being an Instant-
sn'ie's cure is affected. They are rs
well as anybody—until after the enk'r-
italnment.
VALUABLE iI1NTS TOR ACCIDENTS.
WON'T TALK rOI.1Tlc$.
flu' Shetlander Is Bae rarest type e,l
elector there is. Ile Is the rsnn who
f.robahly thinks more stout polities than
tiny mnn tiling. but has never sass any.
Never wash n wound that bleeds murk thing. Two `;Iletinnelers will sit down
with waren water, which only increases and solemnly read their newspnper3
the flow. If the wound is in the hand and ponder torn long while afterwards.
tr non and is serious. raise it and fat• 'then they will get up and exchange a
11 it across the chest, if in the leg put few word• about tete weather. tut they
the limb on a chair. Bleeding from Use will never may anything about politics'
N ose Is not nn unusual thing, and is ,),tetter!. h is not their way.
generally not alnrrning. If it continuer; You may talk 10 them by the hour ..n
for n very long time and resists all tariff reform or Chinese labor or Tiorne
remedies, do not delay in sending for 1tile. l At thalheti the f It weather 4mispay
e doctor. Never allow the Puff rer to f Y
hit
hong his head neer a I -rain, tut li,y hint neigh,
sown (tat and apply cold-wotrr cloths; Against this sae of thing canvassing
t+' hts nose and forehead. is. of course. Impoaihle. 'there is not
such a thing as n cr.nvns.'-4'r In the whole
of i totleml. You might just 08 well
try to cnnwnss n tnountalf.
CALM IN T11E Iii:AD.
A ehit t 61101•x1041 from a cold in the
bead shows ester be atlowe,1 In lie on
its Seek to best, L•tit n)ways en the side.
The appttcntion of a little 'nseline to th
MOTUE11 ANI) BA11Y.
'' Furry thither who has used Raby's
ones.) lacc1gcs will les found a tenet. ,s (n' it Tuts, to wilt Irl) you that They are
little' wane rnnnphsraistI a1 wc11 rubbed the lest tne•hcine in the world for the
on the heck and chest Ls n capitol run• cure, of emisbgaation, colic, sour stone
only'.
ommore
TAK1, l:Anr or YOt'R EYES.
' 11 Mr lands on Saskatchewan Plains
Alden said: "The !den came to me while Thomas Hoskin's Nerves.—Mr. Hos- 1st tot make per secreta asy the terms
ll June
standing on a pier at Cottage City dor- leans, a resident of Durham, Ont., fora lands in the world.
t
ing the, summer of 1900, and 1 tumeoli- n c r to stomach
stets went to work to put this idea into
reality. with what success the pnbiic
can determine.'
The inventor was born in Boston on
Sent. 14. 1864. Since finishing school he
has lived the. lite of an art student. trav-
eller. and student of science. He be-
came a resident of New York city. which
for years he made his henduunrters.
At the time when the invention was
n remote possibility. naval experts had
the utmost confidence and pave their
opinion as to the success of the boat.
scorn of yedis, was
Ills
a m r y Homesteads located. Selections made.
d 1 1 rs 5l•huolnf to preju
The feu. Dr. Samuel W. Thhackeray.
who recently acquired a publle.horse
license in London. has been asked by (he
Camberwell board of Guardians to st-
slgn the chaplaincy of the Corton Bond
Workhouse on the ground that "the oc-
cupation of a publican is lncompaUhle
with the proper performance of his du -
lies in ministering 10 the spiritual 40-
qulrements of the lmmater."
A letter officially conveying this re -
Wiest was fvrw•arded to Dr. Thackeray
under date of Febnlnry 15. with the fur-
ther request that he submit his Icsignu•
hon w•Ithin seven dayn.
Dr. Thnckeray, In hie reply. says: "1
have only to say That 1 decline to te-
mpi my ante of chapluin of the Gordon
tioad Workhouse."
There the molter rests. officially. et
present, lata'. meantime Dr. Tbarkeray
has written a letter to 'the newspapers,
is which he defines snit defends )tis al-
titude. Ile speaks o1 his high esteem
for the members of the hoard of Guoi.1-
inna. but regent, thein as having so
k'ctis stanch in the case.
Ile believes that he will accomplish
more for true temperance In a few
fllonlhs then they In fitly pets of n
leant atatInence crusade, and in n rather
long parable he likens himself to •
polleernan who wernit Ihoughtlese per.
eons from the edge of a precipice, while
often persons. nt the tome of the pre-
cipice. who have gathered (here to com-
fort those who (all over. bellow nt hint
In go away lest they have no victims to
lake earn of.
The parable conchides fibs: 'They
shout vocdfhrously for my resignnUnn.
1 wave my red flag vignreutly at them
in mockery and deftness. end tell thetn
that in king as the heed aeiperint'nAMt
t+t pollen ie ssti"fled (hal 1 nm doing my
duty 1 care nota jot for their opinion
ENGLISH AND DANES.
John Ackworth, an English dialect
novelist who hes trade a special study
of the dialects of l.nncushire, Yorkshire,
the east coasts and also of the Danes,
shows that the Danes Dy their early
landings and sojountings In Englairt
have influenced the language of the cast
coats of Britain to en extraordinary de-
gree, and lint the Danes end the Bri-
tish, in spite of apparent differences,
are one practically In speech and Ian-
gllage SA well as in the relationship of
blood. "So strong 18 the English of rho
east coasts of England impregnated
with Danish." John Ackworth once said,
that 1 am sure that if n fisherman from
the east serifs of Englnnd were to be
wrecked op the shores of Denmark, and
he would only speak in his live native
dialect, that fishermen would be aloe to
make himself understood."
i,cfis indigestion d,rrr►hoe., sletplev,Mss,
k'rfl.,ng tre'utres, 84)41 other allrnents s•1
children. Yon can give ilteeet Tabkts
Ie a new -t• .rn bell with absolute bate-
ikn'I to -e the light when rending or Iv --(hey niwnse do good' they cannot
'hewing. N's matter if your ryes are', pnsslbly do Kann. Their use means
nhd.41. the reflex rays strike from your. breath for the rhlld and comft'rt for the
look or from your renting tit° your Mother. Mrs. C. F. Kerr. (:IRM, Ont.,
rv,;• When your beck is to the light says.--"Bohy's Own Tablets ere the best
the my s rebound ml ay floor you, rot for
ti.tr•(1 you.
\tr. O'Rourke ash() tae been e,'uirrcl•
tag ash a t.si41'n : "Row. remeu,trr.
Ross the lrsxt nine you Int that leen in
J 1 rc to shut the door in his facet"
medicine 1 ever owed for stomach
and sous] *misses, and diedroying
warns. No mother ehnnld ds! without
a 4ux of Tnhk't', in the Io. t c." GM
(hens at your drulteisls or ay mail from
1 he Dr. Williams Ws4*lne Co., Rn'ck-
'Je, Ont.. at ISS taints $ tons.
•
GRAND TO IJVE
thee nerve . h pal a .. . Write or call for any information de -
dice rtgninsa "patent medicines:' he start-
ed u: ing South American Nervine ss, wed -
ale says, "a last resort," but six bottles
et this greet remedy proved to be his
Salvation physically. 1t can be yours.
—124.
And the Inst Laugh Is Always the welt
"Six tnonths ogo I would have laughed
et the idea that there could be anything
tetter for a table Leverage than coffee,"
vvritt•1. nn Ohio woman—"now 1 laugh
10 hnow there. is."
"since childhood 1 drank coffee as
freely as any other member of the
comity. The result was a puny, rstcitly
1 and as 1 Frew Into womanhood I
SO DO WE.
"1 think," said little Eliznheth, w'fio
was studying her geography lesson,
"that it 'W'orcester' must be called 'Woo-
gler; then 'Rochester' should be Called
'Rooster."'
t . hon1m stcr: "Come ts my room M
ter school end 1'11 give you the soundest
thrashing you ever had!" Roy (who sut-
fere from a wink memory): "Yee, Mr.
1'11 tie a knot 01 my harelkrrchlefr
A Pleasant Peeling of relief from pals V ea-
p•rielreed the minute yon pmt •' The D R 1;' Idea-
siss Maralgit, refatiq or pain in tb side. • tic joint,
HEI.EN WAS NOT KiND.
Hazel—"Young flanker seemed to be
greatly token with me at the boll Iasi
night. Ile danced with me four times."
Helen—"Ohl Well, that doesn't prove
anything. 1t was a charity ball, you
mora remember."
The Demon of all Disease.—Kidney di; -
eases nre rightly so-called—they're ;11 -
explainable, unaccountable and InsidI.
otic. It Is the fraction of the kidneys
lo tiller out all impurities. If they're
clogged South American Kidney Cure
will put them to rights and defy the
ravages of to grim a vtsitunt as diabetes
or other kidney complications. It 1e -
heves In six hours. -118
•
"'there's 110 danger;" said the doctor.
"It's only a carbuncle coining on the
back of your neck. But gnu must keep
your eye on it!"
RheunlatI$m Cured.
Why do Jon suffer- Stare's Magic ltbetaaoattsn+
Cure will relieve do wort crows of neuter,
chronic, or In0ammat .ry rheumatism 1a 14
h.,ure. Eve.' bottle ha. a psitive guarantee
to euro. linndro Is of marvelous cures have
been taade lu nil parts of Canada. 11 your
druggist cannot sive you Stara s, lake no crier,
send direct t, us. el.00 per bottle.
Osborn* DS 'IMP It .T•rteks, ase
OH.ENILail�LE te Oof atom URT,
LIOl CURTLINS "VI Vitra.
~
The Happiness of Health. — Exhilara-
tion is the ripple and laughter of pure
t+lood as it courses through the veins.
South American Kidney Cure drives oul
all impurities and insures the richness
and purity that is essential to perfect
Health—successful because it merits 11—
popular because it fulfils every promise
—e Kidney me'ilieine solely and purely.
11 never falls. -126
"Miss Phyllis," said the young man
who had been calling pretty regularly
during the last few weeks, with eager-
ness in his tone and lite love -light In
his eye, "tray 1- -tray l ask you a ques-
tion?" Mr. Srnifkins,' she replied, blush-
ing furiously and tracing a heart in the
carpet with her satin shoo—small twos
- "take courage; you may."- "Then,"
said the youth. "can you tell me whether
it's correct M ray, 'The public are invit-
ed, or The public is invited'?" She
ieoked volumes, nut spoke not.
Pat out toe ilre 1n a bot, itching, unhealthy
skin with Weaver's r1t or *enemas
motile rms. setter and ash rheum.
f
THE NEW SILKS.
The colors of the new talks and other
gown mnterinls are delightful. The
coral shades, for example, are exquis-
tee. There is a red without a augers. -
lion of brilliancy, yet rich and satisfy -
'ng. Other beautiful shades are lilac,
mauve, mignonette. •oft gray. and
flower-like pinks and yellowf
s. Rainbow tote of the sufferer en indigcsUon,
Mks are e'r pe ctrl'y entwine. as are also . dyspepsia and chronic stomach all -
the silks and chiffons with no
. menti? Watch thus sunshine break in
borders. The latter come In sixty -Inch end the lines vanish when 1)r. Von
widths, and the finest ore $8 a yard, din's Pineapple Tablets are given a
'I hev make the loveliest of ie., Ise rind chance to skew their power. (Inc lady,
in writing of their efliencv in her care,
calls them "A 1leaven•tOfII healer." E.5
sante: --1110
JUST TO BEGIN.
"I reckon John'li make his mark
the world one o' these days."
"Hebb.' he will,". nattiest the father,
"hut 1 wish he'd take the hoe and put
a few tints Into it by way of practice.."
Stomach "Scowls." -- Ever notice the
seams rind furrows Dint steal Into the
Write ted alms pw
MUSS minium 111211/111110., Ns 1114. tseatrt•s
in
RHEUMATISM
Is any tuna end sold perspiring lees positive}
lured within tV, days, by our newly p.teute4
Maaigsano Diets or money promptly ,.funded.
Mai.ed an caber* MMAO r.
rite ,r doar,ipt,re
woktet. agents wasted. MAUSISTIC Ki76U-
ttA7TaY C Kb: CO., Sherbrooke, Quebec, Ue•ad•
APPLE TREES.
Before buying write us, or see my
agent near you, for prices. We bn'.
the Wrest stock of fruit trees 10 be
hound in Canasta. We pay the height.
Brown Brothers Company.
Nurserymen, Umiled.
Brown's Nurseries.
did not groin in health, but W88 11,111"411,1844(41141 gowns. A thin flattened known
with hrnrt trouble, n week and disorder- ns goy manquilit, is another eery fnbrte
rd raotr,ach, w•t•(cked nerves and es gen- which delights the eye. Memssellne de
enol Llmktn41 down. 1411 last winter nl vole and tulle chiffon In shafted rffrte
e of 311 I scemexl In he ou the verge with flower larders nre also hrvc)v.
'these ranterinls combine excellently with
lase. and are the tester for yirlleg and
decoration. of the gold and sllvcr gnus,•
ribbon so popular lust now.
iiir ores
of consumption. My friends greeted me
with 'How brad You look! What n W-
itte(' color!' and this wss not very com-
forting.
The doetnes end patent tnedieinea did
me alwvlutely no goad. 1 was thorough-
ly discnur8Etd,
"'Then 1 gave a coffee
merged Fcrstinn nod Coffee. At first
1 didn't like 11, but sifter a few ir,a;; nod
loltowing the direr:tions cxnctly it teas
end corn-
•ron'1. It was refreshing err matir.f N Y-
n n o cnuple of week. 1 noticed n
great change. 1 t+rarrie stre,nl.'rr, my
Maim gTew clearer, 1 won 1101 (nodded
with forgetfulness as hi c(+ffee times,
my Prover of enduretnce was !noes than
f(,uhteel. The h*nst tr,utle and tndige .
tion dis.'lp1 eared and 1ny neves 1 nerve
Mindy and stri'ng.
"1 te'ttnil to lake on interest to thtngs
(4.4 (1t me. ilr,uarn'ork and hottreenaktng
lectotle n pleasure. My friends rinse
mer•. elect et the cleanse anti whin they
10quiee 14:1:0? tseeet,l it et„•tit, 1 Sawa CS
'Portant F,x.l 1s flee, rin.1 nr•lhing efsc
its the •eves lit.' " Name. F!v en by 1'u8taun
( n., pottkt taw's. M1eh.
'1bereft n tyoann. Recd the 11(11• bon4,
'The' (load to \\'ellviite,' in I kis.
VERY PLAIN BLOUSES.
Clime of the exquisite Swatted nn•l
emhrnidcred silks seen in the best phots
have been made Into very penin blouses
le w•t-ar under tattered jackets. They
are nernssnrily Sin)4140, nA 1hn patterns at
the brocades utnow of no fucks or other
r•intor•ations. A heavy erenm satin bro-
caded in lnrwc geld flowers made a
very handsfine waist. There were a few
fine Voiles on the, sl.oulden to give the
requisite fillneee. telt otherwise the
w nut was perfectly plain. At the col-
lar and coffe a little Durhvase lace show-
ed ae n finish. The gown was severe
1an1'le nreedeleth, made with a long
feat.
IIAD LAST Wont).
"Very well, lir" snit{ Dr. Qun.,k, atter
its qua: n rl with the undtr•tai;.:•, "1'11
irrake- ) uu sorry• for Blair
"‘‘).ht atr7us going to do?' te.1(d the
uudert+ik• t; "neuro' horn prnc•ticci"
St1E COUNTED.
"Bridget r
No answer.
"Bridget 11'
Again no answer.
"Bridget 1 1 1"
"Orin Cotnin', 1111)144."
"Well, why didn't you COMM wben 1
first calltst you?"
"Shure, an' Oi only hold ye Noll the
thurd tonne."
Common Hence and Modem Medical
Science have ieversed the almost univeri
rail belief that Rheunrntlsm cannot fie
cured. Tt.e great South American {the*.
matte Curr has turned the tables and
fins given to sufferers a tried, safe, altn-
ple and permanent cure. 1Tuuwantl8
nave testified that it has Silted thorn UI
three days. --112.
UNPA11(1()NARI-E PRESUMPTION.
"The tmpurlenre of that wontnn ice.
hirer astounded tae," Indignantly •
claimed Mrs. Strnrkoyle. )e rutted
u> 'tellOw•W01k11•S, and she Mal in our
eet el alit"
'fllE SII LINT TWAIN.
"Mies Moonier 88'418 10 keep tier
youth 81111," r'mnrked Miss :1eUd "she
e.
"Well,." replied SUSS
keeps her age quirt."
Stnlitrlit trap ie Bettis Pias ether se•S.
test Is last w). ea se. is%Le I*51igr bl way.
Bay esslillt asap and
tteas
11F.A1:rHY i'LA(:E 'f0 LIVE IN.
No fewer than fifteen urians in the
village of ThsrneonIbc, neer Sherborne,
f:nl;lnrsd--four per cent. of the psputn-
hon--1'nve re:whist the ut'' '.t ttlnely.
t,due matyt 8rc nd birthday gran 1 flv egen-
bcr ninety•.
eintions of fpr family are living In the
village. Of We fourteen octogenarians,
cue 1s eightysievcn years of age, one
e;ghty-sfx, Bine eighty-five.
eighty-one.e-
tour, three eighty•twuse
Orel two eighty; while there are twenty
•epliisgenarinns, two of whom are only
a few months short of eighty years el
cgs.
Philanthr.,phy to said to retk've men
oceassionally who are troubled with
dyspepsia of the cen'tlrfCe.
•• A
IMO, G.N. You Keen." win tannin
s greet Seeger Nit he .'lewe.l t. roach the lunate.
blip tysr peril intim tn.i with dn•a'" Isms nal•
sum. a+wr• *4(0447 eoataiala• ■, opiate*
Mrs. Pe Rlnnk d r,dc of a year} "1
ft0111 set' What )urs chimers] you en,
(e, rge." t;ee.rgc -"1 base not eesegIs"
"Son have. You trent me now as cn
c.rdinary man Treats bis wife. 'limo
was o time when 1 ons not a triers tom -
!minion. I was a pet." "Yes, dear; bat
then you never got In pet."
h or Cure
N BMWs Cwt• Corr ihib M sem
put Cold of Gough you ties 6.rA all yes
pail iii. Yee ass sow toel • Cws w
lir i wa•t s are aster Ili de well
a/S be seine.
Cr mime be iii. )
• yes tine s Cela. Cwsg w wry Nous
•i ensThos. LogiwIli Pessisesb
SHILOIIp .ss-rnds. AS Asks as4
ISSUE NO. ItAS
ij
A
1