The Brussels Post, 1904-10-27, Page 34t»lrk'i l lair' F t & delr+4eledeirk k i'et-
HEALTH
THE NT CIiSS1TY OP 121ST,
Nature's &mauds for rest aro
im-
1o at ve They aro often en ore
cd
through the initiation of Pain, and
persistent disregard of thein is pun-
ished at times with death. Tho un-
resisting infant spends much more
than hall its time in sleep, and it
should bo encouraged to do so, for
sleep is the typo W perfect rest, and
most essential to growth. In adult
life, energy can bo made a substitute
for rest to a remarkable extent. The
hours of sleep may bo reduced from
the normal eight to four, and the
week may bo robbed of its Sabbath;
yet not with Impunity. Such prac-
tics beget a predisposition to the
contagious and infectious diseases,
diminish the capability for efficient
work and often induce disorders of
the nervous system. The penalty
may be long deferred, but it frequent-
ly
requently becomes more severe with delay.
in all circunnstances, rest should be
commensurate with labor or exercise.
The apparent demand for rest varies
with the temperament and vigor of
;the person; sometimes it is governed
largely byhabit,and it is often in-
creased by an inability to obtain
complete repose. Ability to rost is,
with many people, a natural faculty,
while with others it is an art. The
first step toward acquiring it is gen-
erally the systematizing of one's du-
ties so that no unfinished tasks re-
main at night to occupy the mind.
Lassitude and drowsiness, on the
other hand, aro often induced by re-
tention of ptomains or other poison-
ous matters in tlie system, and rest
is of little benefit until the poisons
have been removed.
Benefit may often, be derived from
shortening of the intervals between
the periods of repose. A sound nap
of only a few minutes' duration in
t he middle of the clay, for example,
is more beneficial than several hours
of sleep made restless or broken by
']reams as a result of prolonged fa-
tigue. But the mind is more quick-
ly refresh'od than the body, and the.
apparent invigoration alter a sliort
sleep may prove to bo of almost as
short duration.
There are many ways, too, of ob-
taining botli mental and physical re-
cuperation withotft increasing the
hours of sloop; even without idleness.
Some persons can obtain it best in
reading, others in conversation, and
others, again, in solitude and thought,
with a couch, a Hammock or a rocking
chair for the sake of niusculat' relax-
ation.
In addition to all ordinary rest
every ono ought to take a vacation
of several weeks' duration once a
year or oftener, at such tunes and in
such manner as will give the most
complete relaxation and abstraction
from accustomed worry and care—
Youth's Companion.
HEALTH AND SUNSHINE.
It has for some years been known
that sunlight acts as a destroyer of
many of triose pathogenic organisms
which aro popularly known as germs.
Some time ago an ingenious experi-
mentalists demonstrated this fact in
a vory convincing manner by pre-
paring
reparing a "culture" of these germs on
a flat surface and exposing it to sun-
light beneath a stencil plate, with
the result that he obtained an image
of the cut-out part of the stencil in
dead germ life, the rest of the pre
pared plate being still alive. He call-
ed it a "living photograph," but the
same terra has since bean applied to
the popular cinematograph picture.
The Massachusetts Board of Health
have recently carried out a series of
experiments in order to ascertain how
far sunlight is able to cleanse water
affected with the undesirable germs
which result from sewage contamina-
tion. The two organisms dealt with
more particularly were the colon bac-
cilus and that associated with ty-
phoid, Thee, found that both species
there cluiclily destroyed by free access
to sunlight, thirty minutes to an
hour being sufficient to sterilize a
culture, when spread out in a thin
layer, as in the pgotographic experi-
ment already detailed. In the case
of typhoid bacillus fxom 95 to Ofl per
cent. were,,quickly killed by exposure
to direct sunlight, but there were al-
ways a few hardy individuals which
required for their destruction an ex=
tended time.
HOW TO KEEP WARM AND WELL.
Persons who habitually expose
themselves to an abundance of fresh
air rarely suffer from draughts. Some
there aro, however, on account of
apparently inexplicable reasons, who
are supersensitive to such conditions,
But those, above all other persons,
find their bust protection in liabite-
ating teTumselves to a plenary supply
of fresh ale uncle' all circumstances;
by woollen clothing and by particul-
arly avoiding small bedrooms ford all
such conditions as are engen'iitel by
them.
People gonornlly rely altogether too
much upon Us house to exclude cold
aft, instead of warm, clothing, by
which they exclude fresh air. By
habituating themselves to close rnouns
and impure air they create end M.
• their liability y to disease which
they exert the 'elves in the wrong
direction to avoid.
HOW TO WALK,
There is no virtue in a dwadlhng
saunter. Theslowand languid drag-
ging oto foot eller the other, which
some people call walking, would tire
an athlete; it utterly exhausts a weak
person, tied that is the reason who
so marry delicate persons think they
cannot Walk. To derive day benefit
from the exorcise it is necessary to
walk with. a light; elastic step, which
swings the weight of the body se
easily froin ono leg to the other that
its, weight is not felt, and which pro-
eittces a healthy gloW, slide/Mg that
the sluggish blood is stirred to ac -
Igoe in the most remote veins,,
JOY SHEEN DESPAIR
IN THE HOME OF MR, ,IOSEP)3
HILTON, THORODD, ONT.
His Daughter, Florence, Was All
ButDropsy—Her
Dead From Dr psy
Doctor Had Given Her Up—Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills Were Then
Used and To -day She is Well
and Strong.
From the Post, Thorold, Ont.
Everybody believes in a dreamy
sort of way of the efficacy nl a well
and wisely advertised medicine, when
the recorded cases of metered health
arc at a distance; but when a case
comes up in the home town, when
the patient is known to everyone,
and when the c1u•e is not only posi-
tive but mat venous, the efficacy. of
the medicine becomes a fact—a de-
cided thing, For many. year's the
Post has advertised Dr, Williams'
Pink Pills for Pale People; lat'ge
civautities of them have been sold by
the local drug stores, and many re-
markable curds have been effected.
One of these attracted the attention
of our reporter and h'e investigated.
Miss Florence Hilton, the eighteen
year old daughter of Joseph and
Mr's. Hilton, living in the west part
of the town, was taken ill early last
summer with dropsy, coupled with
heart trouble. She was compelled
to give up ono duty after another,
and finally became unable to walk or
to lie down. Her suffering was in-
tense and medical skill did all that
could be done. Florence, however,
grew worse, sitting in her chair day
andnightfor five long months to
get her breath, and the parents des -
Paired. At last the doctor gave her
up, and said further visits were futile.
The poor girl's limbs were pitifully
swollen and finally burst below the
knees. She sat helpless and weak,
gasping for breath and at times
could breathe at all only with the
greatest difficulty. Ono night the
neighbors came in and said she could
not live till morning. But to -day
she is alive and well, moving about
among her young companions a re-
markable and miraculous contrast to
what she then was. Tho reporter
called one evening at tho Hilton
home, but Miss Florence was out vis-
iting. The father and mother eeer'a
in, however, and freely told him of
the cure, which they attribute entire-
ty to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. The
first box was brought to her by her
,grandmother, who urged their use.
Then Mr's, Hilton herself remembered
that she had!the previous winter been
cured by Dr, Williams' Pink Pills of
a slight attack of dropsy, and also
remembered the many cures Advertis-
ed in the Post. She bought two
boxes and Florence took them, three
pills ata dose. In two weeks she
felt a slight decrease in the pain in
her limbs, and more pills wore pro-
cured. For five months—five long
pain -laden months—the weary girl
had sat day and night in her chair,
but now she began to feel the pain
leaving her and to see her limbs re-
sume their natural size. Fourteen
boxes of the pills were taken and at
last her perseverance was rewarded.
She rose from her chair; her former
strength gradually came back; one by,
ono her household duties were taken
up again, and when The Post repre-
sentative called ho was mot by
beaming faces and thankful hearts
and a grateful -readiness to give to
the world the facts that had saved
a bright young life and had brought
joy instead of grief to a Thorold
home."
In thousands of other homes,
scattered over the length and breadth
of Canada, Dr. Williams' Pink rills
have brought health and joy and
gladness and in every y home in the
land where sickness and suffering en-
ters new health and strength can bo
had through a fair use of this medi-
cine. Remember that substitutes
can't cure—they make the patient
worse, and when you ask for this
medicine see that the full name "Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills for Pale
People" is printed on the wrapper
around the box—then you are sure
you ave t e genuine pills. Sold 1 y
medicine dealer's or by mail post
paid at 50 cents a box or six boxes
for, $2.50 by writing Tho Dr. Wil-
liams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Once on a time two youths wore
suitors for the hand of a good,l,enu-
tiful, sensible, bright, tactful, can-
did, soulful, womanly girl One
youth made love. The other made
money. Puzele : Which youth mar-
ried the good, beautiful, sensible,
bright, tactful, candid, soulful, wom-
anly girl? -
A THOUGHTFUL PRIEST.
Points Out to Mothers the Way
to Keep Their Children Well and,
Happy'
Rev. K. L. Pranccour, Cassolman,
Ont., is a kind-hearted priest who
has is
much to alleviate sulfuring
among the little ones in the homes
of his parishioners, Writing under
a recent date he says: "1 must say
tliot Dr, Williams' Baby's Own Tab-
lets are deserving of the high praise
they Have lied as a cure .fon the ail-
ments of children. For the past
eight months I have been intr'ocluc-
ing thorn in many families, and al-
ways, the mothers tell me, with per-
fect results. Their action is always,
effective, without any sickly reaction,
and they are especially valuable in
allaying pains in the head, fever in
teething, nervousness, • sleeplessness,
spasms, cramps In the stomach and
bowels, colic and other troubles.
Their regulating action gives almost
instant relief, ancl gives speedy aura,
Titis is the comforting expet'ionco
that hes come to my knowledge out
of their julicionts use, I am glad to
give you my sincere testimony, and
I will recomncud the Tablets to all
mothers anti nurses of sick children
ns I Have done heretofore,"
The Tablets aro sold by all 'medi-
cine zl ekes, or mothers can obtain
thoth by mail at 25 cents a box by
writing to Tlie Dr. Williams' Medi -
eine Co., Brockville, 0n 1.
MANY CONVICTS LARRY
WOMEN TAKE THEN FOR BET-
TER OR WORSE.
Girl Married a Dying Prisoner —
New Caledonia Convicts
Intermarry.
Though marriages aro practically
unknown u:
no vt in Brill prisons, in r
r British H 9
countries they are sometimes allowed,
especially before ilio accused is con-
victed of his crime, says Pearson's
Weoldy,
Not long ago all New York was
talking of a romantic marriage that
hail been qu,ielly celebrated in one of
its prisons, A lawyer uanied Pat-
rick was found guilty of the murder
of an old man ancl the forgery of his
will, and lay awaiting the death sera
team° in the Tombs Prison. He
protested MS innocence, which was be-
lieved in by a firs. Francis, a wid-
ow, wiic loved him.
To show her faith in her lover she
made application to the prison of-
ficials for permission to see Niru.
This was granted and under the very
noses of the authorities, who were
ignorant of the ceremony thus being
enacted, she married tlie lawyer.
Accompanied by Patrick's father
and sister and her lawyer, Mrs, Fran-
cis was told to wait in the ma-
tron's room. here the prisoner was
brought to Her. The widow had in
her• pocket a marriage contract, re-
quiring only the signatures of the
parties and witnesses. While the
matron was busy with her duties at
one end of the room the prisoner and
UM widow were legally joined to-
gether as man and wife at the other,
A. few days after the bride again
became a widow.
A marriage that was not only cele-
brated in prison, but with a dying
bridegroom, was that of a young
clerk and his employer's daughter in
a Berlin prison about a couple of
years ago.
MARRIED TO A DYING MAN.
The young man was engaged to bo
married when his master discovered
that ho had been systematically
swindled. Being found guilty, the
clerk was sentenced to two years'
imprisonment; and, of course, the em-
rloyer forbade his daughter any fur-
ther intercourse with the worthless
scamp. His hope that the gl:l's love
would be shattered by the pronounce-
ment of her lover as a thief was in
vain. News reached the girl that her
fiance was seriously i1]. On visiting
th'o prisoner she foilnd that he was
'dying, and', at -tine risk of for ever
displeasing her family, determined to
show her devotion by marrying him.
Permission was obtained, and the
e'haplain stood by the dying nian's
bedside to read the marriage service.
Within an Hour he had to perform a
more solemn duty, and the wife of a
few minutes became a widow.
So great was the love of a young
Russian woman for a convict sen-
tenced to ten year's' labor in the salt
mines of Siberia that, after marrying
him, slio followed him to that ter-
rible country in order to be near
him and to await the expiration of
his sentence. Their marriage took
place at Witebelc, a town on the
Davina.
CONVICTS INTERMARRY.
A local watchmaker, engaged to
be married to the daughter of a
priest of his native town, was con-
victed of coining, and was about to
bo transported when tho girl made
application to the authorities for
permission to marry him. Her fa-
ther and friends tried to persuade her
to desist, but she was bravely ob-
durate.
The convict, shackled with heavy
chains on his hands and feet, was
brought to the prison chapel, where
trio bride was waiting, dressed in
deep mourning. Under these gloomy
conditions, with warder's all round
them, the couple became man and
wife. Tlie bridegroom was taken
back to His cell, whence he started on
his honeymoon to Siberia, while the
bride returned to her home to make
preparations to follow him into
exile.
Marriages among certain classes of
convicts in the French penal settle-
ment in New Caledonia are very
common, being encouraged by the au-
thorities. The convict, who answers
to our ticket -of -leave man, save that
he is not allowed to leave the is-
land, may send for his wife if mar-
ried; .but, if a bachelor,
MAY SELECT EIIS BRIDE
from among the convicts of the other
sex around him.
Moro often then not the couple es-
tablish themselves in business, and
frequently become well-to-do. If after
a period of probation the selected
wife does not come up to the anti-
cipations of her spouse, he can, with
the permission of the authorities,
make another selection.
A marriage that teas dramatic in
its sadness was celebrated a few years
ago in Cuba. ' The wedding was fix-
ed and all arrangements were made
when the bridegroom, a Cuban, was
arrested on a charge of conspiring
against Spanish role. iBeing found
guilty, ho was -sentenced to be shot;
but his bride, a voting Trish girl, de-
termined to show her faith: in the in-
nocence of tier lover by marrying him
in spite of his own protest, Begging
a grudgingly -given permission from
the authorities, she was actually
married to lier love' on the Very day
bf execution,
Before a guard of soldiers the pri-
son chaplain performed the ceremony
bridegroom
i s conclusi n the
and at t n
WES led away and biindfoldad. Within
thirty minutes the bride fell fainting
to the ground as the report of villa
shots reached her ears, for she knew
Hien that slio wee a widow.
t HAPPY PRISON MARRIAGE,
A Wedding with a Happier termina-
tion, however, took piece it few
months ago in a Paris prison. Tlie
Clever and notorious French swindler,
Goitand, inunedlntely after nerest,
finding that he had tin loophole of
escape from n, Heavy sentence, de-
termined to reteard lily aocotmplico,
itc:tfhe Daguenearu, with the right to
call hint Husband.
As t'oh'and was not convicted, the
magistrate who was fudging Min
hadno option' but to give his con-
sent. Ile sent for Bertha Daguenenu
and asked her if she were willing to
merry tloirund. She replied that she
loved him very much, and that the
wedding day would be the happiest In
her 1110.
A tow days afterwards, in .the ]o -
cul mayor's office, with four stalwart
policemen ns witnesses, the couple
were joined together in ntatrinrony.
After . a loving farewell the bride-
groom was led away to his coli,
while the bride went out to await
the release of her husband.
THIBETAN SUPERSTITIOE.
Strange Beliefs About the Sun,
Moon and Stars,
The Thibetans have numberless
strange myths, one, the most curious
pertaining to the sun, moon and
stars. The sun is believed to be an
Immense ball of yak --meat and fat,
whereon the spirits of departed an-
cestors are supposed to feast, the
light being caused by its heated con-
dition. The stars are portions of
t"is immense feast, which, dropping
to earth, give birth to animals for
the sustenance of suffering humanity.
The moon is a lesser ball of similar
texture as the sun. T use 1
t m e whi o the
larger one is being replenished for
the morrow. When sun and moon
fails to appear in cloudy, days and
nights, it means that the deities are
undergoing a period of religious ab-
negatlou. And the parched and ster-
ile condition of bleak regions is as-
cribed 10 the fact that many
thou-
sand years ago the sun bell slipned
from the hands of its keepers, de-
fended too near the earth and, be.
fore being re -captured, scorched those
parts with wbich it came in contact.
These illustrations out of hundreds
that might be cited, at least give a
hint of the ignorance, superstition
and brutality, of the Thibetans, as
well as of their heterogeneous tribal
relations 'their lack of any real na-
tional union and their inability to
resist aggression; a hint also of the
greatness of England's task.
--'—+
THEY MADE THIS
COUPLE HAPPY
DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS DOING
GOOD WORK AROUND PORT
ARTHUR.
Mr. Dick Souvey and Wife Both
Rad Kidney Troubles and the
Great Canadian Kidney Remedy
Cured Theni,
Port Arthur, Ont„ Oct. 24. —
(Special).—Tliat Dodd's Kidney Pills
cure the Kidney ills of men and wo-
men alike has been proved time and
again in this neighborhood, but it
is only occasionally they get a chance
to do double work in the same house.
This has Happened in the case of Mr.
and Mrs. Dick Souvey, a farmer and
his wife, living about seven miles
from liere. in an interview Mr.
Souvey said:
"My wife and myself Have used
Dodd's Kidney P1115 and have found
them a big benefit to our health. We
had La Grippe two winters and were
exposed to much frost and cold. Our
sleep was broken on account of urin-
ary troubles and pain in tate kid-
neys. We each took six boxes of
Pills n w enjoy
Kidney P s a d no jY
good health,"
WORLD'S MANUFACTURES.
Tile value of manufactures enter-
ing the international markets of the
world amounts to about $1,000,000,-
000 annually, of which about See 000,-
000,000
00;000,000 is supplied by the Cnited
Kingdom, Germany, Pranee and the
United States. The four countries
could easily form a commercial trust
and dictate prices to the rest bf the
universe.
Strong words by a New York Specialist
—"Alter years of testing and compar-
son T have no hesitation in saying that
Pr. Agnew's Cure for tho Mart is the
quickest, safest, and surest known to
medical science. I use it in my own
formsicof heart ailment insidmost thirty
minutes and never fails." -85,
Fattier—"That cat made en awful
noise in the back garden last night,"
Arnold—"Yes, father; I think that
since lie ate the canary lie thinks he
can sing!''
Use Lever's Dry Soap (a powder)
to wash woolens and flannels, you'll
like ite —
Tramp-e"hones" sir, 1 don't
know where my next mealis cornin'
front—'• Citizen (gl'ufliy)—"Neither
do It It is certainly not coming
froin ate!"
Salt Rheum, Totter, Eczema— ISiose
distrossing skin 'diseases relieved by one
application, Dr. Agnew's Ointment is a
potent dire for all eruptions of the
nein. Ins. Claston, Wilkcsbarre, snvs:
Icor nine years 1 was disfigured with
Tetter on my hands, Th', Agnew's
Ointment cured it," 35 cents, --81
SMOKERS AND MADNESS,
An Egyptimt =cilia. of httsliee8it ]e
even a more helpless slave than the
Chinese 01>iunn fiend. - ]Te knowns
that in the end ho will become a
madman, yet he rushes tawai':1e tine
awful goal with unrelaxed sr ted.
With the strange exultation eblch
flied comes to the smoker, ne feels
himself fleeting from cloud to t),nd
or alighting in the gardens to' pale
MPS all his own, Most of the hos-
heesh which Egypt consumes tt'bx's
from Greece, From. the husks , f <he
hemp seeds and the tender hops of
the hemp Plant the (,rooks itdner:te-
time a greenish powder, whose metes
brhtg the ecstasy its victims desire.
A little Sunlight Soap will clean
cut glass and other articles until
they shine and sparkle. Sunlight
Soap will wash other things than
clothes.
CORK CURTAIN S.
A curiosity to lie seen at Berlin Is
a pair of curtains made of cham-
pagne corks, each cork being still
covered by the gilt paper associated
with the premier blends. The corks
hong in lengths of sixty each, the
rows being separated by strings of
Chinese turquoises. The curtain ties
are also of blue silk. The value of
these unique curtains is estimated at
25,000 francs. ^�
Deafness of 12 Tears' Standing.
Protracted Catarrh produces deafness in
many cases. Capt, Iron. Connor, : of
Toronto, Canada, was deal for 12
years from Catarrh. All treatments
failed to relieve Dr. Agnew's Catarrh-
al Powder gave him relief in ono day,
and in a very short while the deafness
left Trim entirely, It will do as much
for you. 50 cents. -88
The festive hobo toils not, neither
does he spin; yet Solomon in all his
glory, was not arrayed like one of
these.
laard's Llalroent Relieves Neural
Mrs, Olden—"There was a time,
irhomas, when you used to chuck me
under the chin sometimes. But you
don't do it now," Mr. Oldun—
"Yes, my love, but you didn't have
so many chins then."
MOOSE HUNTING.
The finest region in Canada for the
' nter who wishes to seem' Moose
is the Temageini region in New On-
tario, and now easy of access by the
Grand Trunk Railway System and
North Bay. All information regard-
ing guides, routes, rates etc., can
be had on application to agents ,or
by, addressing G. T. Beal, G P. 8i T.
A., 'Montreal.
Children soon learn that it is fath-
er who has the money, and mother
who has the generous disposition.
bard's Liniment for sale everywhere
Wife—T hope you talked Plately to
him. Husband—I did, indeed. I told
lrirn he was a fool, a perfect fool.
Wife (approvingly)—Dear John, how
exactly like you.
Sciatica put him on Crutches.— Jas.
Smith, dairyman, of Grimsby, Ont.,
writes: "My limbs were almost useless
from sciatica and rheumatism, and, not-
withstanding my esteem for physicians,
I must give credit where it belongs.
I am a cured num to -clay, and South
American Rheumatic Cure must have all
the credit. It's a marvel. -34.
"This year, dearie, you can wish
anything you want for your birthday
present—" "Oh, how charming!"
Because I haven't the money, to buy
anything at all for you."
Piles
To prove 'CO you Grab 'Vs
Chase'' Ointment ie a certain
and absolute cure for cook
and every form of itching.
bleavingand protruding
piles,
Ste othe p
guaranteed it. See tee. a
tmonia1 inthe daily pries and ask your neigh.
lore what they think
ofYou can use it and
it e money back H no eat cured. floc a box, al
Beal
ill dealers or lonreansoR,Barse & Co.Toronontq
Dr. Chase's Ointment
It is 'easier to secure a unanimous
decision that a bad thing is bad than
that .a good thing is good.
For Over Sixty Years
Mits. wnier.ow'e SOOTIITNs STRUT hes been wed'rg
millions of mothers for their Milano while teething.
Itsootbes the child, softens the Rum,. all aye pain cures
wIudoono, regulates thoatomnch and bowels, an.lte the
bestramody for Diarrhea. Twenty-gve Cents n botde
Hold bldraggiete throughout the world. Be sure and
LLrfor^Outs. Watabow'eSoocsIlQSrn or... 111_40
"Tlie 'dog you sold me yesterday
would Have eaten my little girl up
this morning if she had not seen
rescued." "But you insisted an
]laving a dog that was fond of chil-
dren.'
Pear Sirs,—This is to certify that
I liave been troubled with a lanae
back for fifteen years.
I have used three bottles of your
MINARD'S LINIMENT and am com-
pletely cured.
It gives me great pleasure to re-
commend it and you are at liberty
to use this in any way to further
the use of your v i^nhlo medicine,
Two Rivers. 1•' .. .. ROSS.
A lady wits looking for her husband
and inquired noxiously of a house-
maid, "Do you happen to know any-
thing of your nnaster"s whereabouts?"
"I'rn not sure, ma'am," replied the
careful dolnestic,; "but I think they
are 111 the wash."
comma
Coughing is an outward sign of
inward disease.
Curet disease with
he e i h
Shill h.g
h
cureTheniG Lung
t- G
and the cough will stop;
Try it to -Dight. 11 it doesn't
benefit yeti, we'll give your
money back,
Pi ince S. C. White & Co, 807.
250, 50'.13.1- bailey, N, Y.,'foer mite Cati.
crairl,&/4e4L440/,/
1%'(,c ' (f (i(_ftrj4r f/
�f oceai def
TRADt MARH
PA UNITS
':t'fA(Wp Will Dry in 8 Hours.
' on Sale at all Hardware Dealers
P. D. DODS & CO., Montreal, Toronto, Vancouver.
o ra
POULTRY
ONSISCONSIOSIIM
Wo can handle your poultry either,
alive or dressed toest advantage.
b a g
Also your butter, eggs, honey and
other produce.
THE DAWSON OOMMISSIO'" CO,q Limited
Cor, Wcat Market and Colborne Sts„ TORONTO,
STAMMERERS
orliEs ARNOTT INSTITUTE, BERLIN, ONT.
For the treatment of all forms of SPEECH
DEFECTS. We treat the cause, not simply the
habit, and therefore produce natural speech.
Write for particulars.
Pauline—"I married in haste."
Penelope—"Well, I suppose you
thought it would be better than not
marrying at all!"
1Ninardfs Liniment Cures Dandruff,
Kind Lady—Here is a glass of wa-
ter. Certainly you can drink that.
Tramp --No, mum. I've got an iron
constitution, and de water would
rust it
Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablets.
—Medical science by accident discovered
the potency of the pineapple as a pan-
acea for stomach troubles. The im-
mense percentage of vegetable pepsin
contained in the fruit makes it an al-
most indispensable remedy in cases of
dyspepsia and indigestion. One tablet
after each meal will cum most chromic
cases. e0 Ina box, 85 Beats. -82
"I wonder why this gun kicks so?"
remarked the amateur sportsman, af-
ter missing another easy shot. "Pro-
bably it's kicking at your Hard
luck!" replied the guide sarcastical-
ly.
iiinard's Liniment Cures Burns, etct
WISH THOUGHTS.
Be nobody else but you.
When in doubt, don't even whisper.
A word to the unwise is superflu-
ous.
1t is always safe to suspect the
suspicious.
Be generous in thought but miserly
in words.
n
Successful men are not ofnecessity
Y
good men.
Vanity is often mistaken for pride
in this world.
Get the prize. Let others explain
how they lost.
Every man is compelled to pay His
debt to nature.
Courage is simply knowing when
it is wise to bo afraid.
Most of our earthly pleasures are
due to our ignorance.
The less some people Have to say
tlie more talking they do:
Tlie duties we owe ourselves are.
generally performed first.
The sermon that earns most flat-
tery may win fewest souls.
A man loses force as soon as He
begins to worry over his feelings.
The bust way to educate a bright
young man is to put him to work.
Often you can sell a worthless thing
easier than yet can give it away.
Useful education is a gradual eli-
mination of knowing everything.
The nren who aro satisfied to take
things as they come never got much.
The man who says he only Wants
justice is often sorry when ho gets
it.
I11 luck is sometimes better than
good luck, as it may cause a refor-
mation.
Boys make their own way better if
they do not always have their own
way,
When a man is working for Himself
he doesn't have to employ a time-
keeper•.
Those who borrow trouble multiply
it and then lend it to their friends.
Larceny, outbezzlomeurt, and defalca-
tion are merely misapplied business
acumen.
iifany people think they are living
for character who are only fighting
for reputation,
If your enthusiasm lasts only forty
minutes, yott can't expect it to do
nnything for you.
Thorn is nothing makes a woman
feel so proud and a man so foolish as
to road old love letters,
"Do you know," remarked the pes-
simist, "I think that I have experi-
enced every kind oi' misfortune except
banging?" `Well, you sttouldn't be
diseot1
r 'aired," Tejotrod the p i 'e O timist.
"It is always 'desirable, you know,
to remember the old adage, 'While
there's life there's
hope,' "
"]'hey any, she spends twice as
much money as any other wpnnnn
for complexion powder." "Of courac
she does. She is two-faced: t
Dominion Line Steamships
h4OHTREAL TO LIVERPOOL.
army' Moderate Rate Service. 101
Second cabin passengers berthed In best mamma
dation on the steamer et the low rate of 510 to
Liverpool, or S'r2.10 to Loodoa 1'1ird. Stas 10
LFer all particulars
or Quage t,wa'S15.lt.
For all partiablare apply to local agent.,. or
DOMINION LINE OEFIOE5,
41 xfogSt. E., Toronto, 17 St. Sacrament Ht., Montreal
Dyeing 1 Cleaning I
loathe vary hart road rour work to ilia
"BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING CO."
Look for *goat In yew Town, or tend alma.
Montreol.,Toropto, Ottawa, Quoble.
WAPIT TO LEARN
I
Then write at once for our new
Book on
TELEGRAPHY
It will certainly Interest you Address
Central School of Telegraphy
TORONTO, ONT.
In affiliation with Central. England College,
W. 11. SHAW, - Principal
BIG
SHIRT
Made big enough for a big
man to work in with comfort
Has more material in it than
any other brand of shirt in
Canada. Made on the
H.B.K. scale it requires 39%
to 42 yards per dozen, whereas
common shirts have only 32
to 33 yards.
That's the reason why the
H.B.K. " Big" Shirt never
chafes the armpits, is never
tight at the neck or wrist-
bands, is always loose, full
and comfortable and wears
well.
Each shirt bears a tiny book
that tells the whole history
of the "Big" Shirt, and
also containsa notarial
declaration that the .H.B,K.
"Big" Shirt contains 39x4
to 42 yards of material per
dozen,
Sold at all dealers but only
with this brand: --
HUDSON BAY KNITTING CO.
Montreal - 'Winnipeg llnivs011
I:sTI''
0, 43-04.