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Exeter Advocate, 1906-05-31, Page 2Nalvors nui,DwN, • St. •Vii I)ie Nenyalgia arid altos Co Millen Arnon5 *Wall Wren. • St. Vitus ,elene diSeaso . is keboining more apt „. afore., frequent 44ncno,•,! 4chee1 children. '• Youriss people, .40411 the. nerkiess • With Study .4itta ieeeveeOU 1ZJC gie :trouble f•:tates. the: fo4.1 of ..nm1gia, •lieadavlie; ex4a*tiori,, '....caluaess 'of the InaS jid,museleS, :and , what •We„,011 °Ibeing 'run,dOwn...• •., In .other casee !St. .Yituse•danee• is the, result,. and the euf- • eferer frequently , loses.all control of. the ' • /limbs, whiCh keep up a onstant , Jerking -and twilehing, There. is only one., way: te eure this . trouble—threughe this biood which feeds and Strengthens the • nerves.. And Dr.' Williams' Pink Pills. pre the only. medicine that can ma1ij tbc new rich,. red. blood that feeds the nerves and •strengthons eVey part ::)„( t110 .body. The case of • Flossie Doan, of Crowland, Ont., proves the value of Dr. Williams' -Pink 'Pills. Mrs. Doan says: "A couple of, yearsago my daugh- ici: Flossie was dangei3otis1y afflicted . with ,St. Vitus dance. She became ,se nervous that Ober a tine, we could not let her see even her frieinds. ,,,She :Could not pick up a dish-, lace her , -Shoes, or snake, - any. movement to help herself.e She had • grown thin and very •. pale, and as ehe shad been treated by • several -doctors without benefit I feared she would not recover. A friend ad- ansed me to give • her Dr. Williams' Pink rills, and after she had used a couple of boxes I could See that- they were telping her. We gave her nine boxes in all, and by that time she was per- fectly. well, and every symptom .of trou- ble had passed away and she is now • a strong, Well developed 'girl." If your growing children are weak or ' nervous, if they are pale, ead thin., lack appetite. or complain of headaches or 'backaches give thein Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and see .how, :speedily the<rich, red bided th'ese pills make will, trans- form !them into bright, active, robust boys and giris.. You can get these pills nom any medicine dealer or by Mail at 50 tents. a. box or six boxes for $2.50 Ly writing' The •Dr. - Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. HOW HE BEAT TlIg STREET CARS. A Torontonian Keeps a Record of Fares He Never 'Paid. • A. small account book was picked ep ,in the street recently showing a sys- tematic record of the number of times ns owner got ahead of the street rail- way company. The blank pages of this Look are ruled off in ledger form and each account, headed with the name of a street car route in Toronto. For in: - stance there was "Church street,", With' a debit on the left hand side. and ---e, cre- dit on the right. "Bloor and McCaur :the setae, and so on over the entire SYstern, Evidently, when the owner cf this book paid c -fare he charged it up againit the car line he patronized, and 'whenever Ihe•sayed a fare he credited himeeff avith five cents. . At firstglance it might appear that - the owner of •-this account boo)( was rn the habit of dodging' the conductor's box' but this. wIls not the case. 'The fact is the fares *ere' saved' by riding •a bicycle inAtead of paying the street car company for., comings and goinga and „the fares were contributed on rainy days when the wheeling wee' unpleas- ant. On Augttst 6, 1905, he made an entry against "13loor and McCaul" follows: "One fare—last of quarter's worth or tickets bought June 2." Tlie total of fares unpaid • amounted to nearly , $30 in seven months. FAMOUS ABBEY IN DANGER. MILLIONS MAHE IN FURS .._ MOON 15 7IJRCENT= or TO mac, '11Pkettl Company .and; French 'Firm' nave,. Accumn, Wed, Vorpne.$. _ I had a that With one of ,the.-chtf fur • buyere of the North Aineritams Nunn - en!, writes. Vviiik, G.• ,(..rtepenter from Edmonton to the Chicago iteserd-Hertild. The wild lands recalling front her to the Arclic°• Ocean and from Alaska: to .11tidson Bay stiPply the most' and best fues of...the world. The Hudson • Bay Company has been engaged in the busi- ness for 200 years, and it has sent out millions upon millions of skins to the markets of London. It had until a gen- eration ago a' monopoly ,of the trade. By its charters from King Charles it controlled the whole country and gov- erned it as it pleased. Then Canada ought its political rights to British I North America and now fur trading- is -free to all: This town of Edmonton, which lies over 300 miles due north of the United States boundary, is the centre of the new fur trade. It has eight firms which buy skins, and their purchases aggre- gate hundreds of thousands of dollars a year. One of the most Important of the traders is the Hudson Bay Company, which has recently erected- a department store here, and its chief competitor is Ilevillion Freres, the great Paris furre, ers, who have establishments also in New York and leondon, and who skIPPIY ins and furs to -"every, market of the World. The Revillons are fit competitors of the Iludson Bay, Company. They have been engaged in wholesale and retail fur trading for 175 Years, and they are now carrying on their business . with a capital of 70,000,000 francs, or about 514,000,000. They have already estab- lished posts all over the Northwest, and they are gradually . building up a line of stations throughout the lands, which the Hudson Bay people have always con- •sidered their own. 131G TRADE IN FURS. • They have a central station here at Edmonton, • another-- at Prince Albert and a third in Labrador,' with two —Or theee hundred branch posts in active operation. They are buying furs all along the Mackenzie River, up and ts d, t- t- u- 0- e - down the shores of the Arctic Ocea along Hudson Bay,and in different par of Labrador; and they are, I am tol gating a fait shire of the' blest skin or the continent. - In addition to this they have, with ti opening tip of the wheat.' belt, establisl. ed a great wholesale and retail depar rnent store here, and are doing busines with the new settler. "'They are b far the largest wholesale dealers ou side of Winnipeg.' ee In talking with Mr.Secord of the im portant fur:buying company of McDo gall & Secord I was told that the fu business' IA now as good as it has eve Leon , and, that it. will be a long time b fore men will freeze for leek of fp coats and Wonferi become pillars of k because they have not fur sacquess Th skins may continue Costly, but User are plenty of animals left, and it wit be long before the supply gives out.. Mr. Secord tells me that furs are large ly affected by fashion, and also by Ur supply. In some years the Indian bring in many more of -certain kinds furs than in other years, •and, strange to say, the supply of ,soine pieces, rises and falls with the rabbit 'crop. Some varieties of the fur -bearing animals live - 1 'Rector Writes 17,410 Letters AskinAid to Protect It. The north evalroL_Crowland Abbey, in South ` Lincolnshire, England, has I f 'buckled. It will be necessary to under- pin it •immediately if further damage t ' this famous monastery is to be preven- ted. , " The buckling -Vas caused by the weakening �f the foundations, which are laid on a bed . of peat. The north window is so seriously damaged that it • have to he rebuilt. The rector, the ReV. T. H. I.eboeff, is inaking an appeal for funds: He states that since 1884, when he was appointed, he has written 17,410 letters asking for .- 'help- to restore the abbey. His labors • have broken down • his health. Mr. .Le - bereft .etrys his ,de,sire .is .simetly- to -pre- serve the remains of this once famous mitred monastry, the history ,of' which goes back to A.D, 672. , • . It was the Benedictine monks of Crow - land who founded Cambridge UniOr- sity, and the abbey had Pie first tunable • peal of bells in England. • Apart from ite historie interest, Crow- . land Abbey is Still a landmark in the Lincolnshire fens. DELICATZ BABIES. ' argely on rabbits, which, breed se ri/P idly that the 'anirrials cannot, keep them down. ,,At 'intervals '01 every four or five years a disease breaks Out which ills the ,rabbits off by the thousand, and &lowing such years come" the lean _fin years. This town of Edmonton is at tbe northwest corner Of the wheat belt. It •pi °irises, however, to be the centre of a new wheat and grain „region which shall extend hundreds of miles to the Leah and westward. This region is known as the Peace River Country. Civ- il engineers are now surveying it for railroads, and settlements will .soon be springing. up here and there in it. , • • IN PEACE RIVER REGION.- . The Peace River may some day ne COC of the most important stiteams' on our -continent risee 1nthnTou7rtaiffs of -British Columbia and flows into Slave 'liver, just ,above whereit issues from Athabasca Lake. It is a broad, deep stream, comparing in size with the Mis- sissippi, and it is navigable for several hundred miles by boats drawing '• ten kel, of water. There are now two steam - beats upon it, and one of them .is 120 feet long and is lighted by electricity. 'Of/ the upper parte of this river there are practically • no settlements " except, those of the fur traders, and missionari- es, At 'Vermillion about sixty. farmers are raising wheat for a flour mill • es- tablished'there by .the Hudson Bay C01/1- pany. They get $1.50 a basher for their wheat, and the' wheat is said, to Be sortie of the best grown on the contin- ent. These ' tanners are chiefly half- breeds and traders. They have but small patches and till their land in a rude waY. At Peace River,: Landing, which is. probably, 300 milt"s Aouthwest of Verinillion, there IS another.' flour mill, which is grinding only for local consumption. Vermillion t is in about the latitude of St, Petersburg. • It is a question in the minds •of many whethee a „great ally may not •grow eto in the, Peace River country. A-t•pee- eent Edmonton would seen •to Ise• the best site for the trading centre -of' great Northwest. lint. with. the wishing r I railroads to the north another eentre relay grow np at the head of mavigation, Utilizing the vast Mackeneie system es a• meano of distribution. DEVELOPING THE CO6NTRY. ' 1 The Grand Trunk PadiflQ flailroa whielt is now being built west from P Monfen, will strike aero ere the southelit „rut of the, Peace River country. It will' not reach the beet lafld, *Malt are far. firer north., although a branch road may, tse• *built iliFotigh to' the head of naviga. • hon. Thia country is 'not far from the lIcOdes, and if! is affected climatical y by the winds from the Pacific, whktth Leated le the Mack cUrrent of 3a. pan. For this' ,reaon the Peace Itiv'T el:mato is &It'd to bo Ear Liotter than'tha of Manitoba. Ednionten has Q, muda udJdsi elimato' than Winnipeg. There is Ilittio snow hem and no intense -cold to svos%. of. Ile, cam° is, frac of ea1. gory and ei most "ok this State of 127/13ddition iti the laming possibilities, of the Peace Myer region; it is ,,s'old that Icarts oZ it will support 'vast numbQrs 'of Mort% The natural ercISS grows flont two to live feet ha height, 6nd,the cattle and harp, rancher's who are now lung crowded out or Alberta aiNeplan- ning to send their herds to Grande Prair- ie and Peace River. The'cattle will Le able to run out all winter and they Ran feed out' of doors all ttee year round: if this is' so, ,the region will be of great alue to the new Canatia;• The lower part of this State of Alberta and a part of Saskatchewan, which, owing .W the slight rainfall, have been used for ranch- ing, are now found to produce winter wheat, and the ranching business -may Le driven out by grain farming. There are in Manitoba and the Northwest al- most a million cattle, 0. quarter of -**9 millicin horses and more than that num- ber of sheep and hogs.. The Peace Pav- er country, with its grain- and grass, would seem to be a good stock -raising reoposition, and the time may conic when the most and ,best cattle of this country will be raised there. As for Alberta, it is now going into mixed Jams:ling,. and its cattle eventually will be kept on the farms instead ef on great ranges. A large number of dairies have been established, and but- ter and cheese are now produced away out here in the Northwest. - e, A WELL-KNOWN aee, BANDA MAN SPEAKS A Well -Known J. P. is Cured of Kidney Trouble of Long Standing by Dodd's Kidney Pills., Banda, Ont, tlay 21— (Special.) — There is no one more widely known and highly respected in this section of HIE country than 'Wm. Dell, Esq., J. P., and the statement he makes below con- ceining his cure by Dodd's Kidney Pills bears weight and carries conviction with it "For more than a year I was. a 'suffer- er. from kidney trouble," Mr, Bell 'says. "Always in pain at time.S the ag, ony would become unendurable and 1 a as practically unable to attend to any ef my duties. 1 doctored with several iocalephysiciains and tried every means Lo get cured, but without success i At last I was induced to give Dodd's Kid- ney Pills a trial. 1 .have the greatest pleasure in stating that they drove away. the • pains entirel,y. and restored me to my old time health and strength. .arre sure I owe this entirely tee Dodd's Kidney Pills." • WINNING THE 'W. C.". How Sir Willfarn Beresford Won thel Trophy in the Zulu War. The recent jubilee in .4hOnor orthe founding of the Victoria, cross brings to mind many InstaaceS of bravery which won' that token of courage. Among the baroic • exploits which., gained the cross is', that of Sir William 136resicirdr, who won the trophy for • a - deed performed during the Zulu •War.• During an encounter the Zulus pre- tended to- flee -'-a well -calculated -snare, as it brought the pursuing British into a carefully prepared ambush. A long line of over twa thousand warriors sud- denly sprang up, flanking the, horsemen. Then the whole plain flashed into life. - Hades had been -hiding in the grass.. , I3uller's alert eye caught, the danger instantly, and his voice rang out, with, "Retire!" There was a! quick volley et, Zulu, bullets, and three •Eteglishmen went. down. Beresford, looking back, saw .one 'move into a • sitting- posture. .He who Would extend succor at 'such a crisis must be brave and prompt, quick to decide and quick to act. The Zulus were perileuslyl near the fat - sol 'er., Beresford • measured the, vith his eye, and thought, be do it. e galloped back to motinted, and or - horse.. 1 and 11111 as -rif„1 spirit of sacrifice. Ile bade fleresford Mount, and go—why should two die? Then Beresford, in his desperation, declared that he -would• punch the man's -head- if Ire did not get on and be s,aved! The droll argument prevailed. The wounded Soldier allowed ,himself to be hustled en the horse, his ?rescuer scrambled on in front, and set the good little beast going at. his best pace. As it was. the two would have he.en spear,ed had not Sergeant O'Toole turned back and wilh his rifle held the close - pressing Zulus at bay. , When Sir Winker] received' the noti- ,fleation that the Victoria cross had been 6awerded to 'him. he returned the an- swer that lie could not receive any reeog- nition of servien unless it •evas shared by Sergeant O'Toole. Immediately an- other award was made. Both heroes received the 'badge of diStinetion that marks England's • highest approval of "conspicnetts bravery.' • A CLEAN •SWEEP. • The Friend; `Therell be. something in the case, for -you. 1 suppose ?" • The Lawyer: "This isn't exactly pro- fessional, but I'm free- to observe that' therell nothing in it for anybody else." Every delicate baby starts life witle a, e serious handicap. Even a trivial ill - MSS is apt to 'end fatally, and the mo - tiler is kept in a state of constant dread, TeabY'S Own Tablets have dorte mbre' than any other medicine to make weak sickly children well and strong. They give the mother a• ,feeling of security, os through their use she SeeS her delt. tate child developing healthily -.Mrs. S. M. LeBlanc, Eeetern Harbor, N. S., eays:---"Up to the age of fif4een Months my baby was -weak and sickly and at that age could not walk. It was then I began using 'Baby's. Own Tablets, and the change, they svrolight in her condi- tion was surprising. She began to get etrong at once, and has ever since been a perfectly well ehild." P•',very mo th- er v.,*he ssilues .the health of her little one sheeld keep a hog of Baby's OWn. Tablets the, !Mee, Soldsby all mai- /eine dealers oy by mail at 25 centa It box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine .13rocliville; Ont. ay - &whine "1 do net Supose that' there Is a man living who could successfully m forge y name to a cheque and get it raelied." Moehine "fs your signature • tueli a ,pccullar on ,Torlcins "No, Int hawift monet7 In the Pchooltniatrois ; who}, was It that prompted you then? t hoard torochody whisper that date to 27ou." lohnnie: "Pharr,. ma'am, eq,eet it Wiis hilory repeating itself again." le distance' might ;jUs the Woundel an, dered him to get on t The poor fellow, daze he was, was not less fu ra , ilieneenerdneononalliencomeconooleememsecieenimeenk ee Gifts of ToiletSoa 117sta SU144.11,401111r ..SOAP eirid,.GVir THE piRE*trums The Coupons are the satiric as cash because they can be exchanged for Toilet Soaps for which you have to pay Out raone-Y everY 'kook, " • Users of SUNLIGHTand CHEERFUL' SOAPS can get 'their ,TOILE,T SOA4'S. for pothing. Read circular in every package, or write us for Prerniturt List A gift is of little value if it consists of something you have no ,use for. em.s.sems....enestmea In exchange for Sunlight Soap Coupons you can get something you need and use .• everyday SAVE SUNLIGHT SOAP COUPONS !.,erer Brothers ILlinittodi, Toronto, Cemegil, nciw LUXURY RELIEVES FATIGUE. When travelling long distances no- l• thing is More essential to comfort than exquisite decorations, elegant -woodwork ? and pleasing color effects in tapestries. 411 such detail, electric lights, periodie cats, papers' and the latest books make the trip to .California via the Union Pa- cific a rare pleasure instead of a tire - seine journey. For illustrated book- lets about California, rates or any. 'in- fatuation, address J. 0. Goodsell, T. P. A., 14 Janes Building, -Toronto, Can- ada; • or F, B. Choate, G. A., .11 Fort SL, Detroit, Mich. et— 'There can be a difference of opinion on most subjects, but there is only one opinion as to the reliability of Mother Graves' Worm Exterminator. It is safe, sure and' effectual. When Captain Cook first visited Tahiti the natives were using nails of wood, bone, shell and. stone. When they saw ir.on nails they fancied them to be shoots of. some very hard wood, and, desirous of securing such a valuable commodity, they planted them in the earth. A Small Pill, but PowerfuL—They that judge of the powers of a pill by its size, would consider Parmelee's Vege, •table Pills lei be lackine.It is a little wonder among pills. What it lacks* in size it _makes up in potency. The re- medies which it, carries are put up In these smell doses,, because they are So powerful that only small dopes are re- qtire.d. ,The full strength of the ex- tracts is ecured in this form and do. their ,vork thoroughly. • The first book ever printed sires. the book of Psalms, by Fust and Schoeffer, •AD. 1457. It was printed, on one side only of the leaves; which were, in the binding, pasted„leack to back. - Yes, It is •humillating to have a skin coveted with foul eruptions. It A painful, too. Why not end the trouble and restore your skin to its nat. ural fairness with Weaver'e Cerate2 Caller : "Won't you walk with me as far as the train, Reggie?" Reggie: "I'm ' afraid I can't." Calker "Why not ?" Reggie "'Cos we're goin' to have lunch as soon as ye* go." " e A Requisite for the Rancher. ----- On the cattle ranges of the West, .where men and stock are far from doctors and apothecaries, Dr. Thomas' Eclectric .0ii-fs kept on hand by the intelligent as a ready made medicine, not only for' many htiman ills, but as .a horse and &Me medicine of surpassing merit. A horseand cattle rancher will find mate tem greatly simplified by using this Oil, "Did your employer give you anything when. you got married ?" "Yes, bother him." "'What did. he serid, you ?" "An alarm clock," • Very many persons die annually from cholera and kindred summer ,cOrn- p:airits, who might have been saved if proper remedies had been -used, If at - le eked do not delay in getting a bottle of Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery Cordial, the medicine that never fails to effectla .e. Those w o • hove used it say it nc proMptly. and thoroughly subdues the p nd,j1isease. PRECIOUS STONES IN HIDING. ° Pow Gems of Great Value are Kept Concealed in the Orient. The turquoise' like the "opal, is found in the desolateand waterless parts of thi, world. The principal deposits so far known are in the Persian desert and on the barren plateaus of New Mexico and Arizona. . Usually the best specimens are taken from disintegrated neck, and.the inining of turquoise is not only accompanied with much harclahip, on account of the -location, but can only be Performed 'with great difficulty. The quantity corn- bined with- other stones as well as qvith gold, and by itself, is so extensive in the cities of eastern Europe that more of it is believed to be bought by gem' rner• cbants in this way than is at present secured from the principal This is not strange, however, for not only turquoise but other precious stones are knOwn,to exist in remarkably large collections in Constantinople, tee as in the cities in Turkestan, Persia. and • eorriMunities of sotitheastern Europe. . They are hidden away In ginger jars, rugs, old boxes and other receptacles of the household, where the owner be- lieves there Is little prospect "of seareh being made l'Or thein. Gem collectors Who have searched for tone.; In this part of the world say that no one ,can teli how many and what valuable speci- mons are thus hiddeint away, only to be brought to light vvhen thb ,iowner is ab- solutely forced to part svith thern through dire necessity. Undoubtedly niany a, gem brought from the famons mines of' ndia, Egypt and' Persia in the past has WE thAIS An. creted. Prof.' Flinders Petrie 'says the Egyptian Vitiate at, Sinai, 'worked from the first to Mc ,tvientietit dynasty, mo.y have yielded turquoise and topper. 't A titian teldom 1'4115 booation he it too honett 10 tuceeed. Oshawa " Steel Shingles Water,. Storni, and. Firn Pr. oat Locked on Ail Four Skies Made from Painted or Galvanized Steel, at 'prices varying from $2.85 to $.5.10 per hundred square feet covering measure, This is the most desirable cov- ering on the market, and is an ideal covering for Houses, Barns, Stores, Ele- vators, Churches, etc. Anyehandy man can lay the "OSHAWA" shingles. A hammer and ships are the only tools required. We are the largest, and oldest company of the kind under the British flag, andhave covered thousands of the best buildings throughout Clailadts, making them • te FIRE, WATER AND. LIGHTNING -PROOF We nisei maunfacture Corrugated Iron in long sheets, Conductor Pipe an EAV s TROUGH Etc. . . MI IAL SIDING, in imitation of brick or stone. METAL CEILINGS; in 2000,designs. , • Write for Catalogue No. 1411 and free samples of "0,SliAWA" Shingles. Write to -day. IMIIEICE, 3E03331:03CiakiEt, DE,113407.43. b. 34.1.14; !Mont767 Craig St. 423 Susses at. ii Colborne st: 09 Dundas et. 70 Lombard at. 6/5 Pendet at. I real; Om. i Olion, Onl Toronto, Oil I WA (1111I wifillin lot 1 vsaaveme., •••mommooll.... 41TE Head Office ,and * , orkswYot ,at eiRaitzsT OFFICE. . " " . . Oshawa, Ont. Canada In Western Canada ritir, select. ' TWo cornett'," ands in - Siskatehewan, only 8 mile S from tWo railways, 0 P R k G.T.P. Strong soil, 90 per cent. plough land, "'piingcrook, no sloughs About 40 miles N.E. of Indian Head. Price ;10.50 per acre. Write for map and full partictlars. R.:PARSONS. 91 Wellestei, Siteet, Toronto, Caned*. TO AVOID DELA'Y. • . He; "I --I am. afraid I ,haven't the courage to say what I want to say to you. 1 guess 1,0 write it." -She: "Well,. here's pens, ink, paper and a stamp." .• • Are you a sufferer with corns? 11 you are .get a bottle of Hollway's Corn Curt. It has never bean known to fail. CuStomer : "So you sell these watches at $2.50. It must cost that to make them ?" Watchmaker: "It does." Customer: "Then how do you make any money:?" Watchmaker : "Repairing them," The heat of the Tropics fades ro,.3, cheeks, It takes away the energy. "Ferrovim" is the •Ilest tonic to brace you up. It stimulates the system: It makes the weak Strong. It IS pleas- ant to take. All druggists sell it. "Can you support my daughter in the style to which she is accustomed ?" in- quired the father of the old school, "I will, if you insist," courteously replied the young man, "hut.I had planned to make her happy, if I could." sunlight Soap le Dater than etnetseaps, but is best when used in the Sunlight way,. Buy Stmlight Soap and fellow directions. A species of mullet fish, found among the coral islands of the Pacific, Swims about in armies, with officers and_ a van and rearguard., Each army is also provided with scouts above and below, which give the army warning When danger appears. , ASTONISHED THE DOCTOR,. Mrs, Eaton Recovering, Althottgl lier PhySician. said SheMight Drop Dead ' at any time. , Th4,. Deetor told me X had heart ditease ' and 'Was liable to drop on the street at any time," oars Mrs.Robort Eaton, of Dnfferin, ' Ont. "My trouble &watt four years ago with a weak heart. I was often afraid to draw my breath, it pained' me so. X was bothered with nervousness ItouraT EATON* shortness of breath: dizzineet, les; of appetite, smothering and sinking spells, and I could not sleep. "Sometimes a great weakness would 1110 and 'I woulthlavo to lie down to 'kttp from failing. Mir hands and feet would 'Went to go to sleep and a sort of numbraessi would come all over mo and per- haps immediately after tho blood would rush to my head and a series of hot ilaidies would envelop inc. "I took all kinds of medicines, but kept .gradually growing worso until about eight vreeka ago when I began Using Dr. Leon. harden 1):0121 the, start 1 int. proved until now my appetite has Iretlitritilo I Oen sleep well, and have no nervousness', dizziness, palpitation, faintness or arT,ot my other trouble*. They have all entirely dieeppeared. I feet muth stronger„ look better, and altogithar Anti.rili has inivio now woman of tie. I am 'entirely anted and epnnot my too mueh for this wonderful remedy. I would moot heartily recommend Anti -kill to litnyo 004 suffering as I aid." - All Drstoosta or the Wilson-ryle Itit1tite4, Wager* Valls, Ont. A man with Chronic rheumatism isn't - eligible to membership in a "don't worry club." They are Carefully Prepared. — Pills which -dissipate , themselves in the stomach calmot be expected „to have much effect upon the intestines, and go overcome costiveness the medicine ad- ministered nsust influence' the action of these canale,. Partnelee's Vegetable Pills are somade, under the supervis- ion of experts, that the • substance 'n them. Intended to operate on the 'intes- tines is retarded in action until they pass thrciugh the stomach to the bow- els. , The purest air in most cities is found about twenty-five feet- above the street surface. The healthiest apartments are those- of the second or third floor. ONE PACKET HAS A.OTUALLY KILLED A BUSHEL OF -FLIES. /Bold by all Druggists and General Storest - and by mail. TEN CENTS PER PACKET PROM ARCHDALE WILSON, AGENTS WANTED. MOO per week and commis§ion. Mire& . INliolesale Tea Importer an Spice Grinder, London, Ont. -CP CO 2E3 3r:al tta Send for pa,rtiettlars. We eau otter at apecial prloea ,Foster Ned gook Crown Silver Learoro*, Dar Kerr Lakok GREviLLME et. Gm,. United ,xambow Standard Stock and Mining Unelyvngo. 60 YONflE ST.. S. rosettrea TOL 2181 200 Men Wanted atOnce In various parts of the Dominion, at whole or spare r time agents, to sell high grade stock' of hardy and: weD 'grown trees and plants Go-ahead and energetic mon can make a very profit; able btisiness of selling' this stock, which Is well qmown. Liberal terms and 4 complete outfit. ',Commission paid week, jy. Apply 'at once to 11. D. SMITI1,4,- IleiderlOgh Nurseries, Winona, Ontario Established over n qua ter of a centur —4, r - IF jaltAlci4"4"vdt°4mtfir BAN OE Cajp, 7.0 "kf C -Steamakt Jib (1.1iV,o con 6tAT— N 1U ISSUE NO. 2i--,---