Loading...
Exeter Times, 1906-04-05, Page 3I. HEALTH filoo. }04,44b+ev4QNO•i••••i DRINKING, MILK. There is a right way and there is nls a wrung way to drink milk, and th great majority of people drink it in th lathe' way. This is the real reason why mills disagrees with so many people— at least, it is one of the chief reasons. -ThiMilk contains all the elements neces- ry for maintaining the physical health of those who know how to use it pru- I erly. Indeed, most people would 1 e l'i,,j tier off physically if milk and entire T t�hegqj�tu'�'nd formed their principal diet, LspiWily is this true of delicate per - Eons, talose powers of digestion have t eeome enfeebled. 1'ersous suffering from nervous prostration are not able to digest meat, and will flnd great bene- fit from a purely milk diet, but the milk roust not be imbibed like draughts c1 water; it must be sipped slowly, a mouthful at n lisle. There is a scientific reason for drink- ing milk very slowly, and in very small quantities; it is this: Milk curdles as soon as it comes In contact with the juices of the stomach. If n long draught of milk is taken into the stomach, the result is u lorge curd, through which the gastric juice cannot really penetrate and net with solvent power. A small sip of milk makes a tiny curd, so if a tumbler cf milk is taken sip by sip, it will readily he seen that the result will be a num- ber of little curds, each one of which can speedily be acted upon and digested by the gastric juices of the stomach. Where special nourishment is desir- able, as in the case of very weak per- sons, or convalescents from wasting dis- eases, beef and wheat peptones may Se added, or some one of the infant foods which are known to be absolutely free from starch. It Is unwise to ndd starchy foods like arrowroot or farinaceous foods to the milk for weak people or invalids, under the Impression that the foods are very delicate and easily digested, for they are, en the contrary, very difficult of diges- tion. Milk alone is far better for per- sons who have weak digestive powers; but the one great need which must Oe Imposed on every one is the need of drinking slowly and in very small sips, with intervals between the sips. In nine cases out of ten milk drunk in this man- ner will agree with people, unless there is sorne fault with the milk. The milk of a healthy cow. that has free range of Rood pasture and all the pure water she needs, is the only sort of milk that is whole.sonle. A SPICING TONIC. Dr. Mains' Pink Pills Make Itich, Red, health -Giving Blood. Cold wilder months, enforceng close Cl.nlhlemenl in over -heated, budly vett- Waled rooms—in the house, in the shop, and in the school — sap tlpp : t- tahty of even the strongest. '1'lie blood becomes clogged with impurities, the 0' liver sluggish, the kidneys weakened, o, sleep is not restful — you awake just e: es tire as when you went to bed; you are lot spirited, perhaps have headache and blotchy skin --that is the condition ct thousands of people every spring, it conies to all unless the blood is for - tilled by a good tonic—by D►'. Williams' Pink Pills. '!hese pills not only banish this feeling, but they guard against the i more serious ailments which usually fol- low — rheumatism, nervous debility, , anaemia, indigestion and kidney trou- j Ile. Dr. Williams' Pink ('ills are an local spring medicine. Every dose makes new, rich, red blood. Every drop of new blood helps to strengthen the overworked nerves. Overcornes weakness and drives the germs of dis- ease from the body. A thorough treatment gives you vim and energy to resist the torrid hent of the coating sum- mer. Mr. Mack A. Meuse, Sluice Point, N. S., says: "1 was so completely run sown that I could hardly work. 1 de- cided to fry, Dr. William's Pink Pills, ns 1 had heard then] highly spoken of, and a few boxes worked a great change in my condition . I am feeling as well nnd strong as ever 1 did and can re- commend the pills to all weak people." 11 is n mistake to take purgatives in the spring. Nature calls for a medi- cine to build up the wasted force—pur- gatives only weaken. it is a medicine to act on the blond. not one to act on the bowels, which is necessary. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are n blond medi- cine—they make pure, rich, red blood, and strengthen every organ of the body. Sold by all medicine dealers or by mall at 511 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from the Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. ANEMIA. Anemia means a condition in which the blood is deficient either in quality m' qua' 'ity. It is a question among physicians whether there is ever an ac- tual permanent reduction in the total amount of the blood. The quantity must vary, of course, from hour to hour, ac- cording to the amount of fluid that Is drunk, and the amount that is lost by perspiration and in other ways, but it is probable that the average remains about the same from day to clay, except in cases of actual starvation and depriva- tion of water. Anemia, then, Is mainly a question of the snake -up of the blood, that is, of the number of its red corpuscles, or cells, and the relative amount of hemoglobin —the coloring matter• --which these con- tain. The blood is a complex fluid, but In simple terms it may be said to be a salty solution, containing two kinds of cells—the red and the white corpuscles. The white ones are the scavengers of the body as well as the policeman and soldiers. They protect the body from the disease -germs which threaten ite ex- istence. The led corpuscles, on the other hand, are the commissnry depart- ment. They bring to the tissues the oxygen which they need and remove the gaseous waste products. If the red corpuscles and the substance cf which they are most largely compos- e 1 hemoglobin, J the b►n are reduced r diced in amount, the tissues suffer for lack et • coiner], and there is a lowering of all the vital processes. 'i'lle lessened pro- portion of hemoglobin accounts for the paleness which is the chief outward sign tf anemia. It Is common to speak of two forms el anemia — primary and secondary. Primary is tete term used when the ane- mia can be traced to no definite cause, but seems to be a disease In itself. Sec- ondary is the word used when the ane- mia Is evidently the result of some other Oonditlon, such as wasting diseases cr poor nourishment. 1l is then only one of the symptoms of such underlying slate. • Among the chief causes of secondary enernia nre drains upon the system by frequent losses of blood. or by diarrhoea or other wasteful discharges, chronic poisoning by lend or mercury, by the s- sentinl poisons of certain diseases. sueh ns rheumatism rind tuberculosis, and by poisons formed in the body nnd not rrornplly removed. which is called "au- tointoxication." nnd finally the (lestrlc- lion of the red corpuscles by n micro- orgnnisn). as in the CaO$in malaria.— Youth's Companion. \VllEItI: klAN'S INFLUENCE IS FATAL Man is the only animal which is nl- ways nccompanitxl by disease, except those creatures Chet are his companions and share his patronage. There is rea- son to believe dint the denizens of the it i ests, trio veld, the rivers and the (-sena, so for es they escape mans influence, live, with hardly an exeeplton, healthy lives. Chronic ailments begin with nlnn's protection in the dairy, stable und kennel. Man has created artificial conditions with which the "Thousand 'Its that fl.'h is heir to" are nssocinted. It is nnw his supreme task In bring these conditions into harmony with the laws of his tieing. Sickness and debility nre not to be regarded as natural and inevit- r.ble party of our lee—doge, but ns the fruits of rebellion against nature's Inws, end therefore to led got rid nf. If the 1 urnnn fnmll' dwelt in ventilated housee, breathed puce air, lived temperately, with little or no olenitol, and lurk daily vsereise in the open, it would perhaps tnow little more of gout. rheumatis►n, enneer. fever. lumbago, dy'spepsfn. with• ran, and the hnst of infectious troubles thee, d., t.:, 1c; cr animals. KuFeelik r•veeirnl�ftf00~for itis tear through Bessie reeentiy. NATIVE RISING IN NATAL. Trouble Feared on the Borderland el the Zulus Country. There Is much Irritation and impati- ence at Durban, Natal, at the disposi- tion of certain home politicians, as shown by the cablegrams, to intervene in regard to the preventive measures against a possible spread of native di - (diction in the colony. The press is voicing strenuous com- plaints against hone interference, and a grave crisis unquestionably confronts Natal, and, with Natal, South Africa, generally, unless these symptoms of re- bellion are checked with a strong hand. The whites aro outnumbered by ten to ono in Natal, and there is no Geneva Convention among the natives, who would yield to the first savage impluse for rape, murder and wholesale destruc- tion. There Is evidence that sedition is still active, and trouble is hourly expected et Mapomuto, on the Zululand border, where a strong column of cavalry and artillery, with Maxims and searchlights has token up a position. The Zulus show every appearance of loyalty, and possi- bly recourse will be had to their assist- ance. Native levies are beating the for- est haunts of the refractory tribes there. All Is quiet in mid -Natal, where the shooting of two natives recently had a profound effect upon the natives of the district. it is believed that it the com- mandunt of the column there acted with more firmness, the lack of which Is core lectured to be the result of comments in England, the natives would be pacified permanently. Action should be taken on the principal that by grasping the nettle tightly injury is avoided. "LIVING ON AN EARTiIQUAKF w An Alarming Stale of Affairs in South Wales. The Rhymney Volley is not the only part of South Wales where enrth move- ments ovo-mems are creating serious alarm. Al Maesteg, In the heart of the colliery dis- trict, subsidences nre going on which cause Increasing alarms, and which seem to threaten the destruction of a con •i- derablo portion of this populous town. Crevices have suddenly appeared in the earth, and whole rows of houses have suffered almost irreparable damage. Dwellings have been suddenly vacated because their occupants could hear the walls gronning in the night. The street pavements are showing signs of the earth's labor, in some spots by sunken patches. nnd in other's by buckling up. Gaping cavities suddenly nppenr In people's gardens, nnd not long ago it horse grazing in a field was swal- lowed up and lost. The unfortunate feature of this nlnrm- Ing state of things is that many work- ing men who have, at much self-sacri- fice, acquired their own houses, nr' hay- ing the experience of seeing their prop- erty slowly but surely crumbling to pieces. Whether the mischief arises from the extensive colliery workings below rrrnains to be proved. TIIE CARE OF CHILDREN. Now -a -days wise mothers do not dose (heir children with harsh, griping ens - tor oil or purgatives, nor do they give then) poisonous opiates in the fern r;f so-called soothing medicines. 11aby's Own Tablets lake the place of these hnr.sh and dangerous medicines, and the runnier has fire sword of a Govern. Will analyst that Ilht Tnllels are abso- lutely safe. Baby's Own Tablets euro indigestion. constipation, coli; teething (roubles. diarrhoea. simple fevers, nnd other little ills of childhood. An oecns- ional dose Will keep children well. ;11re. 11. E. Long. l'enrhlnnd, 11. C , says: "1 have found Baby's Own 'Tablets 'metre. passed for teething troubles, breaking up colde. reducing fevers. and other ills, and they make n child sleep na- lurnlly. I nnw nhvnvs keep them in the hneee." Ask for the l'ablets al your druggist or you can get them by mail from The I)r. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville. Ont., at 25 cents a t•ox. • Iter--"\ly rally ubje tion to Mr' I'rvr,r is Mot she's a bnSincss woman." ilius \\'hat businrse is she en- gaged int" I ler--"E% ery body'arl SOME "SPOOK" VISIONS TUE REMARKABLE STORY OF ARCH- DEACON C(' J -E1'. His Experiences With His Famous I1ela- tive, Sir George Pulley, in the First Boer War. Archdeacon Colley, rector of Stockton, Warwic'kshir'e, England, Who bus (exits - mealy uncasted putdtc attention to los views and statements on the subject ut einrltuuhsm, which lie uusuccessluttty deeired to expound before the last Church Congressy, sends to the Loudon Laity Mail u letter on "lite psyclucal (•teats teat preceded; happened uu, und fclluee l the death of his Excellency General Sir George Colley, ut Mapueu, en ibis date, 1'cbruar'y 27, fail. Thebe circumstances, the Archdeacon writes, are of the 111051 weird und wuu- derful sort. At the time of the tragedy be himself was in Nulnl and chaplain Ic, Sir George Colley, who was the Gov- ernor of the Cohny. In conversation with Sir George, be- fore he started to meet the Boer invas- ion, the Archdeacon mentioned souse fears he ltd reason to entertain for his safety. Sir George, however, making 11ght of the matter, pinyfully took up a Inn mese curio—a praying wheel—und purposely turned it the wrong way, so that in Burmese and Chinese supersti- tion the prayer, actuated. backwards, might work a curse instead of suppli- cating a blessing. "Early on the then fatal Sunday morning of February 27, 1881, 1, nt the Deanery, Pietermaritzburg, awoke with a feeling of something dreadful about 10 happen, which feeling increased as the day wore on, to culminate In the sorrowful confirmation of my fears later when, leaving the cathedral pulpit et the close of evening service to dismiss the congregation with the Benediction, a hurried message came to me from Government House saying Sir George Colley had that morning been killed at Mn juba "The youth shot the Governor of Na- tal from close behind, the bullet smash- ing out through the forehead, causing Sir George Colley to leap high in the air with hands outstretched und arms uplifted, and fall the mangled corpse ef what a moment before was a cour- teous, brave, chivalrous gentleman, truly religious and righteous. SCOTCH \VOM4\NS "SECOND SIGIIT," "At what was probably the very mo- ment of his upleap and death spasm Sir George In psychic materialised, tn- slantancous form, was physically, er with her Scotch gift of 'second sight,' subjectively, seen by a domestic, a na- tive of Aberdeen, whose outcry thrilled with disrnay and fear the h(usehold run- ning to her help, foreboding the sad news which the evening of that sante day was brought down from the front. a'I'he testimony, however, of this Scotchwoman of Aberdeen Is so utterly impossible of putting into words with - cut explanations recondite and of Yogi. philosophic teaching, that I must sup- press it. "But Sir George Colley's various ap- pearances to me, and my son, and others are less perplexing, ns they have 'rr the most part been on the lines of wnnl is usual in spiritualism relative to chic. eoyance, and subjective with those who are gifted with the 'discerning of spirits' and have what the Scotch call 'second sight.' "it Is, therefore, ahnost always in the way of 'a military roan in high com- mand having a hole in his forehead' that Sir George Colley comes thus to give (roof of his .Identity, "When this was the experience of my son he did not nt first know who 'the military man with a hole in his fore- head' was until 1 told hien In detail e�f the far-reaching effects physical and psychical of the circumstances that con- crete to history with the bare mention nnw of Majuha. "ile, however, nnw knows who It Is that comes and gives proof of his identi- ty 'Vet to others, until 1 say who it is that comes to them Sir George Colley (though nn utter stranger to them at first) Is still the 'military- man. evidently killed In battle—having a hole in his forehead.' "Hence last September, In a shop nt Birmingham, into which 1 hod casually gone to buy something that eitfrnct.sl env attention in the shop window, n stranger diffidently aeensted me and whispered that there was Mending with me at the enunter 'a military man hnv- ing n hole In his forehead, appearing to have been killed In battle. A "SEER" OF BIRMiNCl1AM, "in haste to catch train to Leaming- ton i could not then stay to question my informant, evidently a 'seer,' but found when next in Birmingham that ho was a working spectacle [tinker and a poor relation of the people of the shop. "Moreover. only last Tuesday, Febru• ary 20, while nt brcakfnst Willa two friends at Leamington — both clairvoy- ants and knowing nothing of what I have written — one of them Was sudden- ly 'controlled' by the late Governor of Natal, who sent n most Important mes• sago to my son. now quartered nt Jab- lulpore, the truth of which, when I have answer from India, I may some time speak. "But before this given, which is 'more 0: n fancily nature, the sudden and un- looked-for seizure of one of my blends :was n dramatic nnd most thrilling, painful, and terribly Intense setting of the events of this day's disaster at Ma. Juba. "There were the ardunus elrcnmstnnees of the climb to the hill -lop of Minutia, the boulder's to be surmounted. the wild. (irsperntl effnrt to reneh the brow of th,' hill nil Its rugged crest, the futons:diet. ily of gelling the field guns and rockets up 1110 precipilnu; steps in time In fend oil the Hoer allnck, the terrific energy of the few troops surrounded by the ever growing host of the enemy, nnd the 'tip. t'p. up. Dry of Ile Agonized lender that come in my stnrtle'd. terrible drown six• teen }'oars ago nt the Deanery. I' ieter- ►nnrltzburg. and Was heart with the !eagle vision nt Government Ifouse that fatal Stm•hev morning. Then the last scene of all. with force tremendous, alarming. and intense, set forth, dram- atized and described ns n pleee of rent. ism Incapable nn the port nf any other than the rontrolling power, 85 Sir George (volley! and 1 pledge my soul for leis Identity) with a moan, ; .tiful, nnd o dreadful cry, leaps up with a crash to fall, even as on Ibis day hell the corpse of the martyr of MejuWW' CURE THE MOST EXTREME GASES STONi: IN TM: KIDNEYS CANNOT STAND DECODE DOIDDS KILNI V PILLS. fir. S. A. Cassidy, of Ottawa, Perman- ently Cured After Veers of Suffering by the Great Canadian Kidney Remedy Ottawa, Ont., March 20.—(Special).— \\'bile all Canada knows that I)odd's Kidney Pills are the standard remedy for an Kidney Contp;suints, it may surprise some people to know they cure such ex- treme cases as Slone in the Kidney's. Yet this is what they have done right here in Ottawa. Mr. A. S. Cassidy. the man cured, is the well-known proprietor of the Bijou Hotel on Metcalf Street, and itt an inter- view he says : "My friends all know that 1 have been a martyr to Stone in Use Kidneys for years. They know tltut besides consulting the best doctors in the city and trying every medicine 1 could think of, 1 was unable to get bet- ter. "Some time ago o friend told me Dodd's Kidney Pills would cure me. As n eee resort I tried them, and they have cured me. " 1 could not imagine more severe suf- fering than one endures who has Stone in the Kidneys, and 1 feel the greatest gratitude to Dodd's Kidney Pills." If the disease is of the Kidneys or from the Kidney's, Dodd's Kidney Pills will cure it. -r— Lord Lansdowne, the Duke of Aber - corn, and Lord Verulam, aro the only persons who hold at once English, Scottish, and Irish peerages. "FI:RROVTM" IS A GENTLE ST111 UI.A N'l' to the stomach, thereby aiding digestion. As a tonic for patients recovering from fevers and All diseases lowering the vitality. it is without a rival. At all drug and gen- eral atures. Mr. Andrew Lang once wrote to Israel Znngwill to ask him if he would take port in a certain function. lie received the following reply: "1f A. Lang will, I. Zangwill." Get Instant Meitef from Piles: This most irritating disease relieved in ten minutes by using Dr. Agnew's Ointment, rind n cure in from three to six nights. Thousands testify of its goodness. Good for Eczema, Salt Rheum and all skin diseases. If you are without fnith, one aplication will convince. 35 cents -127 BRITISiI HOUSE OF COMMONS. The Idea of Building a New One Is Be- ing Revived. There is an unprecedented demand This session of the British Parliament for seats in the strangers gallery. This is an indication of the political awaken- ing in the country, and the hopes and interest which have aroused. ,,Never be- fore was it needful for the Speaker's secretary to hang outside his ofike pla- cards which warn members that all orders for the gallery have been already Issued, and that further application will be in vain. Neither for the public nor for the members is the House of Commons large enough, and the idea of building a new one, on the space now ocupied by the Commons court, is being revived. Tile full and regular attendance of members makes the rooms which they occupy in common, outside the House proper, crowded and uncomfortable to a most unpleasant degree. and the First Com- missioner of Works is continually being buttonholed by complaining members. He is understood to contemplate plac- ing rooms In the library one of at the the many members who want disposal of ) a place 1n which to write and smoke in silence, and cannot at present lind one. MANY WOMEN SAILORS. Wooten sailors are employed In Den- mark, Norway and Finland, and are often found to be excellent Mariners. In Denniark several women are employ- e) as Stole ofllcinls at s( -a, and particu- larly in the pilot service. They go out to meet the incoming ships; they climb nimbly out of their boats; they show their ollicial diplomas, nnd, they sheer the newcomer safely Into the harbor. 1t is the same in Finland. • FOOD HEI.PS. In Management of a R. R. Speaking of food a railroad man says: "My work puts Inc out In all kinds of weather, subject to irregular hours for meals and compelled to eat all kinds o1 food. "For 7 years 1 was constantly trou- bled with indigestion. caused by eating heavy, fatty, starchy, greasy, poorly cooked food, such us are most acces- sible to men :.. my business. General- ly each meal or lunch was followed by distressing pains and burning sensations in my stomnch, %thick destroyed my sleep and almost unfilled Inc for work, !Pity brain was so Muddy and foggy that it was hard for me to discharge my duties properly, "'Phis Inch el 1111 shout a year ago, when my attention Was called to Grape - Nuts fond by a newspnper ad. and 1 concluded In try it. Since then 1 hove urcd Grape -Nuts at nearly every meal i,nd sometimes between tncnls. We railroad men have little chance to pre - f are our !nod In our cabooses and I find Grape -Nuts mighty handy for it Is is ady' cooker, "1'0 make a long story. short, Grape- Nuls has made it new rnnn of roe. 1 hnve no mors' burningnih"r df.iress in my stomach, nor em• symptom of Indigestion. 1 can digest any'Ihing en tong ne 1 eat (.rape -Nuts. and my brain wort;- ns clearly und eretrrntely ns An engineer's widish, nnd my old nervttt s trouhl.'$ have di.appeared !ninety." Nculn given by Poston! Co,, Balch' ('ree•k. Mich, There's n reason. Bead the little book "'Itle Bond to \Velltille" Un pkgs. f One Tablet er World of distress would be saved. Dr. Satin's Pineapple Tablets cure hour stomach, di -dress niter eating, weight in the stomach, wind on the stomach, toes 01 appetite, dizziness, nausea, and 0 dozen other troubles traceable to bad digestion. One Tablet gives instant fe- Lef. A positive and pleasant cure that nature has provided. 35 cents. -128. HIS ADDRESS, PLEASE. "My husband is an Inventor, you know." "So:s mine." "Indeed. What ha! he invented?" "More excuses for staying out late at night Clan any one ever dreamed of." W1: ARE AL.l, FAMILIAR with the deep, bourse bark. grimly called "a grave -yard cough." 'Take Allen's Lung lialsurn, a remedy for pulmonary trou- ble, highly r •-o:,mended even in the earlier stages of Consumption. NAUGIITY WILLIE. \VillIe (aged live)—"I guess they think up in heaven that I'm dead." Mamma—"Why sol" \Villit•—"Cos 1 ain't said lay prayers for a week." RHEUMATISM AND PARALYSIS. Their complete home cure. Post free to readers of this paper. For limited period only. A handsome illustrated t',•use, glv- Ing full .Ie:.er ptiun c: Nhewnutuw and Yaralysls, with instruct furta cumt- plett lune ewe, deacrrbn.g the most suece"aful treatment in the world. re- commended by too Ministry 5041 endors- ed by medical men. rims highly In- ttructivo book w•as written by `V. 11. ea", a gcutlenIan who has made a d P' study of these diseases. 'Ilia preface in by a grnduato of the University of Wurtzburg. $end postal to -day and you will re••rrve the book free by re- turn.—Addrena. free Veno Drug Co., 24 Hang St , ,vest, Toronto Six -Year -Old: "1 say, granny, 1 think you'd better stop snaking my trousers! Lot's of times to -day 1 wasn't sure whe- ther 1 was going to school or corning holnel" One Peet IS Metter than Ten rea s.— Ask Dr. Rurress, Supt. Hospital for insane, Idiom-, $real, for his opinion of The it & L" Menthol Plaster. Yard rolls 01, alee,Sc. tins. Stranger (at the door) --"I am trying so find a lady whose married name I have forgotten, but i know she lives in this neighborhood. She is a woman easily described, and perhaps you know her— e singularly beautiful creature, with pink and white complexion, sea -shell cars, lovely eyes, and heir such as a goddess might envy." Servant—"Really, sir, 1 don't know—" Voice (from head el stairs) --"Jane, tell the gentleman I'll be dowli in a minute." iI There's a flint of Catarrh Taint np. ply 1)r. Agnew's Catarrhal Powder with- out delay. It will stove you suffering, heal you quickly whether you have been s slave one month or fifty years. It relieves cotd In the head and catarrhal headaches in ten rninntes. The Hon. David Mills, Minister of Justice for the Dominion of Canada endorses 1t. 50 cents. -129 ENOUGH. Grnyce — "What's the matter dear?" Gladys—"Oh, my home life is not hap- PY." Grnyce—"Rut your husband seems to think you are an angel." Gladys—"Yes, but he also seems to think that 1 ought to be satisfied with an angel's wardrobe." PLJ•'AVp; Pr:All iN Wren that what 1s called a ekln disenae may be but a symptom of had blond. In that cane, (jeer's ('crate, externally applied, s t7Lld be supplemented with Weaver's syrup, taken daily. T1 15 SHYEST PEOPLE ALIVE. There is a very singular race of peo- )•le in Sumatra—the Kobus, who are too timorous and shy to mix with the other races of the Island, and dwell in the recesses of the forests. They are looked on us inferiors by the Malays, and thought to be little better than beasts. Such Is their shyness that they will never willingly face a stranger. Their trade with the Malayans is consequently ear- ned on In a strange manner. The tinder announces his arrival by beating a gong, and he Then retires. The Kubus npproach, put their forest treasures on the ground, beat a gong, and retreat. The trader returns, and inys his corn. Motlittes down 111 quantities suflieient, as he thinks. for the purchase of the goods on sale. Then he retires, and the Kobus reappear and consider the bargain. And so, after more withdrawals rind np• proaches and gong beatings, the respec- tive parties crone to an understanding, and carry off Independently their M11' - gains. The Kuhns in their wild stale do not bury their dead. 'I'Ib'y live r n snnkcs. grult4, fruits. and Ilse fleets .,f any deer or pigs they can slay. They are skilful spearrnen, nnd Ilu'uw stones will► inar'vellous accuracy. Western Canada Land Co NBA/ 4ii101, 34 MINTN STMT. P.1. SOX ie, Brandon, Man. IImproved farms and unimproved wheat nnd ranch lands, wholesale and retail, in Manitnba. Saskatchewan, Al- berta and fruit lands in Southern OAa- nagon Valley, B. C., . Wheat lands on Saskair•hewnn Plains at $7.10 per acre, easy terms ell June 1st to make s leetions, the finest wr {ands In the world. Homesteads located. Selections made_ Write or call for any Information de - Sired. PEDLAR'S 1 TEEL CEILINGS Designs suitable for all classes of work such as Churches, Schools, Stores, Halls. Also rpecial designs for Houses, Kitchens, Dining-Itnoms, eta. No- thing has ever been devised to equal l'edlur's Steel Ceilings for farm houses. Cheap as lath und plaster and will never crack or fuse elf. Avoid Accidents by Using Pedlar's Steel Ceilings. Made to flt any size room and can to nailed on by any mechanic. Ship - pal hunt our warehouses painted all ready to apply. Our Catalotpue, No. Ile describes many designs. %rite for it. 1t costs you nothing. \\'rile 10 -day. THE PEDLAR PEOPLE MCNTSEAL, QUE. OTTAWA, ONT. TORONTO. OMT. LSNOON, CNT, wmsu.t0, vAM00uvga, a e. 747 Craig St 423 Sus/ma tit. 11 0ollearne 41 en D:11aat et, 70 Lsnbard M. 815 Pander 11. W It1rC 101ft Nltla.i2 OYYI('1:. Head Office and Works, - - - Oshawa, Ont., Canada ear- s& . � We Owe The Larval Sleek Teed factory fo The World. It covets over a city block, contains over 18 acres of floor space, eos� $300,000. Site of oar office 160x1:0, 300 cacti people, 150 typewriters and we use fifty million letter beads and envelopes even yes r. ♦ load every 30 days. Our chernicnt laboratory is one of the beet. Our office is one of the great sights of the business world, litany very small concerns advertise large buildings. We invite you to visit stir factory and see that we have everything we claim. Manufactured and Guaranteed by Iaternatiesal Stack lied Cs. 'International Stack Teed". "leteraalienat Packe"ry rov "lalsraatNDa1 tlsen Can"IateraatMaal Lease [Wm" "talsnatloaal Worm Powderie ' "lakraatleaal Distemper Care "Iaternatisoal Gall Can" "1siernatlsul Peet ItemedJ" "Saver Pia Reeling Oil" 'lai.esetiesal Celle Can "taterastimeal Comp:mad AMserbese ''leteraatloaal heee Dir" "Intsrnatisul Iberia Clime" 'International Berl Calmest" "Du Patch Stable Disinfectant" "lateraattaaal Carnets Seas" Alps "Jewel lacsbalore" sad Breeders, aad Jewel Clock and flea Teed. DAN PATCH MAILED FREE. We have a Beautiful 6 Color Picture of our Champion Pacer, Dao Patch 1:SS`.i, size 16i24. Free of advertiring, fine picture for training, gives alt the records made by our pacing wonder. We will Rail you one free, postage prepaid, i1 you will write us horn much stock iron own and name this paper. Write at once to INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD CO., Minneapolis, Minn., U.1.11. tei'l i" Softly—"Love makes the world go round." Shortly—"Yes; there's no crank equal to a lover." '100 People Badly Rent" have in effect used these words in speaking of the curative qualities of South Americnn llheumnlic Cure—"My legs were crip- pled"—"My hands were distorted"—"My joints were swollen" --"My back was tent double"—"Aly pain was excrucint- ing"—"Iledridden for years," This great remedy has been the heaven-sent agent that worked a permanent cure. --13U NEEDLESS SA(:HIFiCE. "I would wade through blood for you, Lucy." "'that's no reason you should step on my gore." Free Catarrh Remedy gives Instant Relief No More Bad Breath "My Secret Remedy Quickly (Acres Caturll." C. L. Gauss. ('..Curb la and only dsornruu., but II rw.es bs,1 breath, ulceration. dnth and dere} .1 hone... hill ef thinking and reasoning power, Mile ambition and energy, often r nivel loll* nl app.ttte. Indlget• don, .pep,fa, re w throat and re,v-be. L. general l ioc acrd lunacy. /ability, yIt needs attention it once. Cure it w ith (lanes' Catarrh ('nre. It t. t Quirk, radial, permanent cure, hosause, It ►ids I5..ystevnof the p.deongerm* that eaTee catarrh. 1n osier to prove 10 all Sibs ate ,eaering frore Ihle danvernu. irel Iosth.ora,, (Humor that (tau.. I'atarrh Cure will art nail) elite any esoe of .'avant, airily, no ratter how lone.lan.11n, or how bad. 1 will .seed a triarpaekage by mail free of all Sand ea nur name and *Adrian to.lay sot the rent on by retrnn mall Try FOR ESA I...10. Moores in the banner county of Elgin, sbont miles from Rodney; has dwelling. barn as stables, hos pen, `nod orchard, frult garden, or ■amental shrubbery; price COX; sag Lerma: Apply "AGENT," SOI 100, West Lorne, Ont. ��1 sale HALE 4 imported Clydesdales talllsland s Hackneys: fano yye miles from end of skeet Ras line -0. 801MI1, Guetpb, Ont. OreIng ! Cleaning! Pp the very eon seed leer wool se the "W M* AMILNICAN DTMIMO MM! ll sea kw seems r peer sews, es mad arms. Meatreal,Toronto, Ottawa. Qualms, RHEUMATISM a any form aad cold perspiring bet positively aired within 80 day., by our newly patent. Ilaonetio Discs or moos promptly refunded. waned sa when filo. Write for descriptive soollet. Agents wanted. MAGNETIC 11111iU- liATLSM CURE CO., Sberbrouke, gushes, Canada APPLE TREES. Before buying write us, Or see out agent near you, for prices. We hauls the largest etoek ef fruit trees to be Lound in Canada. We pay the freight. Brown Brothers Company, Nurserymen, limited, Drowns !Surrerka, Oat. MAN WANTED. \Vo want n roan In all small towns in Canada, to show end sell ferns and other properties to our customers, who turd send ; good salary, good position. Honesty more necessary than experi- ence. if you want a good position end are willing to learn the real-estate busi- ness and work faithfulle for us, we con offer you a fine position. Write Immediately. Address:— NORTII AMERICAN LAND CO„ Andrus illdg.. Minneapolis, Minn. COBALT The directors of the coNoo Cobalt sheer tom Co., tfmiteo are "firing` to the public fur the I'URPIIRR ('F fKVEIMPMEN1' if the Company's pru- pertiev, a halted number of ,hater of tl•s rrsa•ury HiOCK Al 11 Or PEW BHAItS, PA Y - A in.( AT TIME OP Nt' NH(Ttt PTiO!4. THE GORDON CORA LT MINK conrints of err arrae in the heart of the FORA I.T MINING fn''rKICr, and ONK MILE PROM 'rill. TOWN of (•01111,1, and in the laza ear r'.,1e• man tnwn.hip, (nr title ha, been granted by the Present government. Toe prop.rty hoe been opened and a hale ,•f fonr feet is depth made and the noisy show. from 'v to leu eunoea of silver hi the ton. The ..vsay may be sen at the comps ny'v oaleo 7117 CAi'11`1, OV '11111 ((t.IPANI 1-I ONLY f1t0 OCA The c .mpany has no bnndrl debt, and n., preferred eta* "the owner of the mine ar. Ppk1 atuek In full poi.isat fur bis properties. xtpleerte oonnder the GORDON ('0841,1' b'RR11Kte one of the bad preepvrte in the , and many have Invastal In the (;)m' !bares. The propertyU wlthln 10 of the lancer Hodson ..y Mules aad Ise. omppaao will ro,e wort at e Aprilmneath 1st Thu Neer will shortly to w from the market Pur prnrpeslas Mallen. fey steels address 0+10•0+0+0.0+0•0•0•00)+ 0 STARN'S MACI3 RHEUMATIC Celt olumsteed to et TE, RHst'M.%T1 tki Amite, inflammatory, or Chronic ; Man Neurstsie, nclakra 1,umbago and all )(M- aty troubles, Rem, we, tide said from the wrgives loon t Rer, 1 utsen d for a bottle at lief HUD- dried. hay. beets cared. The Osborne Yy kame•dy1•,.,Tr•rnntn.Oat Ii (riper beltle ♦0+0♦0N0M01+4)+0E 0+0+0 roan co' sayer ittmp CON0111 I.1ra8.4, VICTORIA STRP.rr, TORONTO. Nolte 4N1 ARAN. 150 P. LKSsOt Presider., • • _, 14911: NO. 13-N