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The Brussels Post, 1913-12-25, Page 3leaeeastee,,selvas `++.s•;s eseaseesaasereaseesesetemet Why Should You Take Cold? Many people resign themselves to the idea that 4eeeauae the winter is here they must perforce suffer more or less from the truublesomo cold in the head, Bet there is no need for it at all, and hundreds of men and women can go through a win- ter without a Bingle cold, How do they do it 1 Simply by not shuttin themselves up in rooms that ar overheated and under ventilated by taking exorcise regularly every day, by wearing clothes suited to the weather, and by eating sensible food. In the winter most of us aro obliged to spend more time indoors than we do in the summer, but we need no try tt y to make our rooms like a hothouse by shutting all the win- dows and keeping a fire going that brings the temperature up to over 70 degrees, Our lungs want oxygen in cold weather just es much no in warm, but too often we deprive them of it by neglecting exercise in the open air, with the • result that we are soon below our normal standard of health. Our clothing ought to be thicker and warmer at this season of the year, but.we need not muffle up so much as to make walking an effort that throws us into a perspiration. Many peo- ple err in not taking to their warm WE GREATEST MACHINE SEA.ROIILIGTIT OF StelkI'7CE DEEM BY THE BRAIN. ilany Theories aro Advanced to Explain Its Secret Workings. In this age it would scam to be a difficult task to pick out whiob one of the mechanical woudora would be the most marvelous. From g gigantio steam shovel diggingtb e Panama Canal, down to the con pact adding machine, of inostimab use to accountamt•s, we find mien ingenious devices, any one of whirh might claim the honor of being th most wonderful machine. t he 0 le y 0 underclothing or wearing an over- coat soon enough, and so they get a chill which leaves them an easy prey to successive colds, Our food should be rather more substantial during cold weather, and espeoial- ly should it be richer in fats. Oat- meal porridge, sometimes given up during the summer, should now be resumed, as it ie a heat -producing food. Be generous with the butter, eat fat bacon, and suet puddings which have been well boiled. Deli- oate people will often find benefit from taking daily a small quantity of cod liver oil, but where this can- not be tolerated the best plan is to decide what particular form of fst best agrees with the individual, and to use that in larger quantities than usual. These are simple pre- cautionary measures which can be taken by everyone, and surely they are worth while when you consider that they ensure ilzmtfinity from a most disagreeable silent.—A Phy- sician. ,• s Uro Ae Urio acid is a chemical substance that is found in the body as a re - :suit of the disintegration of worn- oub cells, or of animal food. In the former case, it is called endogen- ous, and in the latter case exogen- ous. The production of endogenous uric acid we cannot easily regulate, but that of exogenous uric acid we can control by diet. In perfect health there is very little of either kind in the body, unless meat is eaten to excess, for its presence is a sign of imperfect oxidation or combustion of the food. The body is like a stove, in which food is the fuel. In a stove, if the coal is of good quality and there is a good draft, the fuel is en- tirely consumed, and there is nos ,f thing left but fine asld, which we can easily clear out; but if either coal or draft is poor, clinkers form, clog the grate, and make the draft still worse. But there is onei mash ne whit surpasses them all. Indeed, it cr ated them all, and in the fubur will undoubtedly create ,many fa more wonderful machines. Its in vention is not recorded in the pa Ent offices, for it existed long be fore these. No one can do more than guns nt the beginning of this wondcrfu machine. Its origin is shrouded i the dim past, long before the pr historic era. The early arts of al ' the earliest people bear its marks It is recorded in the Pyramids, an even the Sphinx speaks plainly o fit. Tho beautiful soulptures and the deep philosophy of the Greek h e e r t- will be understood if one will reeve the eyes quickly from one view to a another, Immediately the one view 1 vanishes and the image of another n is imprinted on the bzain In the e" most minute fraction of a second 1 conceivable the nerve has carried this mea age to the brain, by the f' chemicals faithfully performing 1 their funetione, and the nerve is immedistely ready for the next im- Dr. Maria Montessori.She is now on this side of the Atlantic lecturing on her famous method of school teaching. ' show its high development, and the marvels of aur own clay tell us that the most wonderful machine of all is that which created them the human brain. Spirit in Control. True, it is far more than a mere machine, for there is a spirit which controls it and directs its workings, but h is only of the mechanical part that we would speak at present. To learn more of the inner work- ings of that organ, which thinks and carries out ideas, has long at- tracted the earnest study of scien- tists. It is, however, so intricate, so diffioult •to approach, and so closely tangled with spirit, that it has eluded the searchlights of science, and still remains a mys- tery unsolved. Many ingenious and wonderful guesses have been made, and some things found out about the brain. It has been found that the brain is divided into many departments, all under the control of the spirit. From their respective centres go forth the nerves to the eyes, ears, fingers, eto., and these nerves keep the brain informed of what is going on in the world. Just coasider for a moment that everything that any one knows, or ever will know, on this earth has come, and will come, to them through the medium of their senses. For example, let its consider the eye. We have learned in our stud- ies of physiology,that the eye is like a camera; that the lens in front focuses the image on the retina, whioh is a dense network of tiny nerves, gathered together so as to form the optic nerve, and this nerve goes back to the optical taction of the brain, But how does the image, Doused on the retina, go back to the brain 7 • MoreWonderfulStill, how does the •brain interpret this nerve stimulation into an impres- ion of the image, perfect in every stall, and glowing with every olor 7 That is the great puzzle. Attempts have been made to liken the optic nerve to an electric wire, nd to consider an electric current a being the carrier of the sensa- tions. For many reasons this view seems improbable.Another theory, : which leat least interesting, and may prove to be correct, is that the nerves are com- posed d chemicals of such a consti- tution that they may bid easily changed. A familiar example of a similar 'change is gunpowder. This is an unstable chemical mixture,and the application of a little heat ie suf tient to cause an explosion, reael'ting in a now condition of chemicals, In the same way, our theory sup- poses the nerves to contain,ehemi- rrala, which are fax more unstable than gunpowder, so much so that, in the example given, the nerves of the eye, a ray of light is sufficient to change the chemical nature of the compound at the end of the erve instantly. This compound is so to Sensitive that notwo things ake thesame change. The vice enee with which each particle of s chemicals of the nerve changes muses the next' one to also "ox - ode," or amigo, and so on,. hronghout the length of the nerve, to that the impression travels From the Retina to tbo Brain. To oounterhalanee this breaking own nature has provided a pre- ss of instantaneously rebuilding, high restores each part of the arse to its original state, Some - met the shocks of the breaking wn Comb in such quiek oucoeseien at the rebuilding promise fails to enterbalanoe, and then there le a mporery paralysis offline nerve. al exempla of tiffs le Ir b g So with the body; if the food is 6 too. rich and not too largely com- d posed of flesh, and if all the diger- 0 tbvo processes work well the waste material will give no trouble; but if we eat too much animal food, or a if something is wrong with the final a stages of digestion and assimila- tion, the food is not perfectly con- sumed; instead of ash we get Olin- kers—that ig, urio acid. The substance sometimes does harm by its mere presence, and sometimes is only an evidence that the pro'oesses of assimilation are not going forward smoothly. In gout,lrere is t . ' a very y evident excess of uric acid in the blood, but there is doubtless some faith of nutrition behind both the gout and .,the uric Reid, and we cannot say that the gout is actually owing to the trio acid, So ales with eczema and other akin disorders that frequent- ly occur with an excess of uric acid. it probable that both result from a common cause. In the case of gzave!, of kidney colic, and of some forms of stone in the bladder, it is, however, the uric. acid and nothing else that makes the trouble. It is the duty of the liver to form, al uric acid. and to oxidize it into m harmless urea, but we do not yeb l know exactly how it performs this th function, We.do know, however, e that endogenous uric acid is seldom P1 in sufficient quantity to do harm, t and that we can reduce the exo- genous ttrio acid by abstaining from. Meat,• and by using certain alkalis land other drugs that help the kid- neys bo accrete the acid in lese troublesome form, --Youth's Com. potion, oe w n ti Site (ecyly)--"Yon may mill me do Sky. my filet name," life—"That's Liz awfully sweet of you ; hut i I'll only 00 de b1 en one, eoudition. She— to what is that?" Ii;e—"That you A promise fie allow the whole world hi Co call yew leg too last name," pression. Whether this theory is correct or not, one cannot help but be most deeply impressed with the work- ings of this moat wonderful of all machines—the human brain. CHILDIHOOD AILMENTS. Ailments such as constipation, oolic, colds, vomiting, etc., seize children of all ages, and the mother shoo d be on her guard against these troubles by keeping a box of Baby's Own Tablets in the house. If any of these troubles come on suddenly the Tablets will sure them, or if the little one is given an occasional dose of the Tablets ha wi.l escape these troubles. The Tablets are so.d by medicine deal- ers or by mail at 25o a box from The Dr. Will'aans' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. WINDS AND. PLANT GROWTH. Experienonts of Prof. Bernbeck Show Interesting Farts. A rather surprising degree of in- fluence of the wind upon plant growth and crops has been shown by the experiments of Dr. Oscar Bernbeck, a German professor of agriculture. Severe gales tended to produce deformity, giving a twisted and knotty shape to twigs, and ordinary winds diminished the energy of growth of sprouts through the increase of transpire-, tions and alteration of circulatory conditions, and had a drying effect that in some oases caused serious injury to both soil and plants. Under awind of thirty-three feet per second, the ground lost three or T four times as much water as on pro- 1 teo'ed la^d. On ground sufficiently moist, strong sprouts were but s little affected, but on some soils the growth with no wind was three . An Agreeable Cure For Catarrh & Bronchitis Prevents Return of These Tr:sublets. Every sufferer from coughs, Bolds bronchitis and all throat and cheat ailments needs a soothing, healing medicine which goes direct to the breathing .organs in the ekest and lungs, attacks the trouble at the source, disperses the germs of dis- ease, and cures the ailment thorough- ly. And this medicine is "Catarrh - ozone." "I have been o chronlo sufferer from Catarrh in the noso and throat for over eight years. I think I have spent four hundred dollars trying to gat relief. 1 have spent but six dol- lars on Catarrhozone, and have been completely cured, and, In fact, have been well for soma time. Ca- tarrhozone Is the only medicine l have been able to find that would not only give temporary relief, but will always cure permanently. Yours sin- cerely 1 - cerely (Signed), WILLIIAM RAGAN, Brockville, Ont," For absolute, permanent cure use Catarrhozone. Two months' outfit costs $1.00; smaller size, 50c., at all dealers, or the Catarrhozone Co„ Buf- falo, N. Y., and Kingston, Canada. + Her Discovery. • "Oh, George, I've got splendid news for you." "That so 1" "Yes something that will save you a lot of money," "What is it 1" "I've ve discovered that your last winter's overcoat'will do again this year." of, Liquid Sulphur is proving its value as a home rem- edy every day. Mothers • who have children going to school in the con- gested districts of Toronto gargle their throats every morning with LIQUID SULPHUR. Prevention of disease is butter than a cure. Price 50 Oents a bottle. All drug- gists . or SULPHUR PRODUCTS LIMITED, 159 Bay Street, Toronto. Night was approaching and it was raining hard.' The traveller dis- mounted from his horse and rapped at the door of the one farmhouse he had struck in a five miles stretch of travelling. No one came to the door. .As he stood on the doorstep the water from the eaves trickled down his collar. He rapped again. Still no answer. He could feel the stream of water coursing down his back, Another spell of pounds, and finally the head of a lad of twelve was stuck out of the second -story window. "Watcher want?" it ask- ed. "I want to know if I can stay here over -night,"' the traveller an- swered testily, The red-headed lad watched the man for a minute or two before answering: "Ye kin fer all of me," he finally answered, and then closed the window. A WARM WINTER COMING, June weather will prevail in California, the land of eternal flowers, the ideal Win. tering place, reached oomfortably and conveniently bytheChicago Union Pacific, A North Western Line, via the tartest and most direct routes, amidst the luxurious surroundings of the compartment, club and observation parlor, or the more mo. crate nr:eed and homelike Tourist oar, fires splendid trains daily -The Over- and Limited, fastest twin to ted Fran- ieco—Tho Los Angeles Limited. three aye to the Magic City of the Land of unehine, via Salt Lake City—and tl'e San Francisco Limited Double track, olootrio block (fent] p"-teetion, rock bal. leeting. finest dining oar service. Rates.' tisnss as great as with a wind of o thirty-three feet per second. It was evident that the usual 'moderate wind of Germany—ten to twenty-five feet per second—ntay c lessen the yield of exposed land t more than half. 0 Protection is to be sought by vari- 0 ous kinds of wind shields, such as m walls and hedges, and especially by planting forests on neighboring d hills. lnluetedatmaBefnunlletrnueae Agent, 46Yonge Street, Toronto, Ont, Mr. Lloyd George, British Chan - eller of the Exchequer, has been ening some stories bearing on his wn unpopularity with his political pponents. One of them is about a an who was presented with a fes- timonial for saving someone from rowning, The hero modestly de- recated the praises showered upon _r. Deal, Nearly Claimed New Brunswick Lady Was Restored to Her Anxious Fam- ily When Hope Had Gone. Bt. John, N.B., Deo. 15th,—At ono time it was feared that Mrs. J. Grant, of 23 White St., would succumb to the deadly ravages of advanced kidney trouble, "My first attacks of back- ache and kidney trouble began years ago, For six years that dull gnawing pain has been present. When I ex- rted myself it was terribly intensified. f I caught cold the pain was e,nen- urable. 1 used most everything, but othing gave that certain grateful re- ief that came from Dr. Hamilton's ills of Mandrake and Butternut. In - teal of being bowed down with pain, o -day 1 am strong, enjoy splendid appetite, sleep soundly. Lost proper - les have been instilled into my blood cheeks aro rosy with color, and 1 hank the day that I heard of so grand medicine AM Dr..I•iamilton't Pills." Plvery woman should use these pills rsgulariy because good health pays, nd it's good, vigorous health that omesto ail who use Dr, Hamilton's Mandrake and Butternut Pine. _--'r bm. "Really I have done very the to deserve this reward." he aid. "I saw the man struggling in the water, and as no one else yeas v I knew he would be drowned if didn't save him. So.I iumned in, 1 wamout to him, turnetf him over make sure that he wasn't Lloyd eorge, and then pulled him out l" if b I 0 to G PIMPLES NEAAY COYERED FACE Especially on Forehead and Chin. Ashamed to Go Out. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured la Month and a Half McMillian St., ou Clay, Ont.—"Myfactt was nearly covered with pimples, especially on my forehead mud chin. Tito trouble be- gan with pimples and blaekheada and there were times I felt ashamed to go out, They were tittle red lumps and then festered and I squeezed the matter out, "I rubbed ou different remedlee, ---� Savo and Cream hut they didno good,. ',thee I saw the advortleoment of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a sample. I gob it and began uetng them and In a week's tiros I noticed a change. I used the sample ofOUticura Soapand 1 Ointment and one box of Cuticura Ointment from the drug store with the Oullcura Soap. In a month and a half the pimples and blades beads were gone and/ am completely cured." (Slimed) M Sae Lydia MoIlwaln, May 23, '13. A generation of mothers has found no soap so well suited for cleansing and purifying the skin and hair of infants and children as Cancan. Soap, Iia absolute purity and re - Positing fragrance alone aro enough to recommend Ib above ordinary elan soaps, but there are added to thesetluatitles delicate yob effective emollient propertied, derived from Oedema Ointment, which render 15 moat valuable In overcoming a tendency to dietreseing eruptions aad promoting a nor. mal condition of akin and hair health. A single cake of Cuticula Soap and box of Cuticura Ointment are often aumdent when all else has failed. Sold by druggists apd dealers everywhere. Liberal sample at each mailed free. with 132-p. Skin Book. Address poet -card Potter Drug & Chen. Corp.. Dept. D. Boston, U. S. A. WASPS Axes '1'xxxtee A. Division of Leber Clearly Seen In Their Operations. It is declared by those who have made a careful study of the habits of weeps that these insects are ful- ly as industrious as ants or bees. Division of labor is clearly seen in the wasps' nest. Some of the workers, states a writer in The New York Press, seem to be specially employed as foragers and soldiers; others appear to he told off as nurses and guardians, while yet others are engaged as paperhang- ers and masons. Wasps are at all times particular- ly fond of honey. Toward the end of the summer, as all beekeepers know, they will force their way into beehives and carry off by force as mucid as they can gorge of their winged neighbors' honey. The drones of the weep world, in- stead of being idle and luxurious, aro sober, industrious and well- behaved members of the commun- ity. They clean the streets of their town with exemplary diligence, aot- i-g as public scavengers or sanitary officers. And they have their re- ward, for, unlike the bee drones, they live their allotted life in peace and quietness until winter involves both them and their maiden sisters in ere common cataclysm of death and destruction. Ni Is Britain Tired of Canida? We don't think so. but we twee sure no man has any chance of curing corns un- less he uses Putnam's -Corn Extrnator. It takes out root, stem. and branch, omen Painlessly in 24 hours. Use only Put- man's. ubtam's. 11o. at all dealers. Paw 'Knows Everything. Willie—Paw, are all men born free and equal? Paw—Yes, my son. But SOW of them get married. Mlnard'a Liniment Cures Distemper. Laid or Lied. Son—Dad when you put a' ben on eggs to hatch them, do you say she is "sitting" or "setting"? A hen can't really sit, can she ? Dad—Don't bother about little. things like that.. What concerns me most is to know when she mak- es whether she has laid or lied 1 Mlnard'e Liniment Cures Colds, ®a Minard's LlnImont Cures Corset 1n Cows, Just One Point. "Nora, me darlin', will yez marry mo whin I come back from Ire- land 7" "It's •meself that's not prepared to give me answer now, but I'll ]zavo it ready when you're oomin' back. Mike." "Well,' that's not quite so bad, but jest tell me th' ono thief; now, darlin'—will it bo yis or no?'' Tho average man needs all the patience he has and then some. No Wonder t—'14tistress (to now ervant)—"Why did you leave your est place?" 'Mary Ano --"Wil, nm, when n bniioek died we got coif till it was finished. When a heep died. we got mutton till it was niched, and when the eat died--$ eft," ED. 7r, luded by the light of the n. fi The' rapt—+y ail theta 0hangee 1 ISSUE Did You Know That your father's uncle's bro- ther's rather's (wife is your great-aunt? That your ` aunt's mother's father's wife is your great-grand- mother 7 That ;your another's nephew's daughter's son is your third cou- sin? That your brother'a son's sister's mother is; your sister-in-law1 That your sister-in-law's father- in-law's grandson is your nepbow 1 That your ,sister's father's step- son's mother is your stepmother? • That your uno10's father's only granddaughter is yourself? That your brother-in-law's wife's grandmother's husband is your. grandie, tiler 7 That your father's father's daughter's daughter is your first cousin 7 That the granddaughter of the only son of your mother's mother- in-law is your Mete? n Jason•--� Olt, yes...- i kilos elft iSimson. Ho, was a good sort. no did a very kind nation once for me when the olouda were dark and threateningand the whole World looked to r funk." Piinson-•--"What did he do 1"Jimson; He tent the an umbrella." ri VI EARLIER DAYS AT OXFORD. Student Life of Fifteenth Century Rad Many Odd Sides. The undergraduate at Oxford University in 1410 in order to ob- tain his B.A. degree studied the !Sigh logia of Porphyry and Beeth- bus, aoinethizig of Aristotle and enough of arithmetio to enable him to find muster, says a writer in Harper's Weekly, Three years mora were usually spent in study- ing geometry, astronomy and me- trology. • lie lived in college. His allow - awe of money was a shilling a week. His breakfast was a piece of bread and a pot of beer et dawn. His dinner was eaten at ten in the morning. He was given one suit of clothes yearly, Three times a year each student was required secretly to tell the ems stere a f the mush a eh - v fori of his fellows who then received "competent castigation," The rules of the university pro- hibited visits to taverns or epecta- cles," the keeping of dogs, the playing of chess and other "noxious and illicit sports, shooting with ar- rows or other missiles, dancing, running, wrestling, or other in- cautious and inordinate amuse- ments." The only recreation permitted was the assembling round the fire on winter nights to indulge in "singing or the reading of poeme and chronicles of the realm and of the wonders of the world." The college was summoned to dinner ,by two poor scholars, who ran rond the quadrangles shout- ing in bad Latin and French: "Tempue est vocadi a manger, 0 seigneurs 1" The "seigneurs" were obliged to eat in absolute silence. Best Thing Known For Croupy Children A Mother Tells Her Experience. "Bringing up young children bas Its responsibilities under the best of cir- cumstances," writes Mrs, E. G. Fagan, of Holmes' Corners, "but croupy colds add considerable to the worry. My little family of four all went through the croupy era, but I always had Ner- viline on hand and never felt nervous. I just followed the directions, and I can tell you that nothing I know of is surer to cure croupy colds than Ner- vilino. "In our home we use Nerviline fre- quently. For cold in the chest, pleur- isy, hoarseness, etc., it is simply won- derful. My husband uses it for rheum- atism, and I often employ it for neu- ralgia and sick headache. Nerviline has so many uses that no mother can afford to be without it." The large family size bottle, which sells at 50c., is the most economical; trial size, 25o. Your storekeeper or druggist Bells Nerviline, which is pre- pared by Tho Catarrhozone Co., Buf- falo, N.Y, Willie Was Generous. "Here is an apple, Willie, Div- ide Try murine Remedy it geuerously with your sfu ter,'( If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes "How shall I divide it generous- or Granulated Eyelide. Doesn't Smart ly, mamma " --Soothes esy Eye Pain, Druggists Sell "Why, always give the larger Murine Eye Remaly, Aseptic 25c, bee. art to the other ye Salva k Aseptic MaTubeil. p person, my 25c, 50c. Eye Bootie Free by Mail, child." Ae. tie. Tante nese ter All Ease that blood Car. , Willie reflected for a moment; Iturlu° are Remads Co" Chloro. then be handed the apple to his -- little sister, saying, "Here, Ethel, Sura you divide it." Gabe—There goes a fellow who. enjoys ill health. Steve—Enjoys it? What is ha, a hypochondriac? Gabe—No, he's a physician. MINCE 'MEAT Choicest fruitsetc.,—perfectly • balsuced—ready to use. Saves endless ,ie`our. one Ind 1111W11111 it quality mt4ll1 —heif r Rs, frt ;zt sihltiatt111111111 EDUCATION. PLLIOTT'S BUSINESS COLLEGE, TIY .4 ronto. Canada's Poneler Commer. cial School Magnifloent Cutaiggvo free FARMS FOR SALE N. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street. Toronto..' Ty YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL A - Fruit, Stock, Grata, or Dairy Farm. write II. W. Dawson, Brampton, or SI Colborne St.. Toronto, N W..DA74SON, Colborne Et„ Toronto NEWSPAPER FOR SALE. .1TEWSPAPER AND JOB OFTIOE 1N 11 Oravonhnret, Proprietor being a druggist, 1s unable to give 'the printing office the attention neeeeeary, and offers it for sale at a eaorillee. No opposition, One of the beetnewspaper onantngs in the Province for a practical men, .Apply Wilson Pnbliehing Company. Toronto,`. WANTED. I. IYE PDXES AND LIVE MINK. QUOTe price when writing. geld Bron., Bothwell, Ont. - - OaitT FOOT CEDAR POSTS FIVE .4 inch tore. guide delivered Bothwell. Reid Broe., Bothwell, Ont, WE UNINJURED MINX, MARTEN Ont and Fisher. 1V. D. Bates. Rldgetown, ' MISCELLANEOUS a C4JANCER. TUMORS. LUMINA ETC., internal and external. mired with. • ant pain by our home treatment Write no before Inc lets. Dr R,'iinien Medical r -T tn.ttna nnntna..nnA O -t el ALL STONES, KIDNEY AND man. If der Stones. Kidney trouble. .travel, Lnmhnge and kindred stem•-t-.pe,eit.lvely cured with the new Dolmen rented/. "Sarni." price- 91.80 Another new rnmed7 for Diabetes-Metlltne, aMOS. re cure, le Renore Anti -Diabetes.' Priee Re nr, Froth druggists or direst. The R'nnl biennia& tering Omenany of Canada. Limited. w" -eines. Man. AO Yotrn STOCKINGS SHRINK from washing and hurt your Do the children oomplain? The IDEAL STOCKING STRETCHERS make old stockings feel and wear like new. relieve timd feet, ease corse and °ave darn- ing. Two sixes, adult and child- ren's: 50c. a pair by mail. 1. E. YORK t CO., Waterford, Ont. No Extra Charge. Lady of the House -Half tb things you wash are torn lift Washerwoman—'Yes, s when g e a thin is tore.' more pieces, mut' for them as or- frP 1 ane eared of Rheumatic Gout by MIN - AIM'S LINIMENT. Halifax. ANDREW KING. I was cured of Acute Bronohitbe by ML01- ARD's LINIME 'r .LT. -COL. 0. CREWE READ. Sumas. I was cured of Aerate Rheumatism by MINA RD'S LINIMENT, Markham, Lakefleld, Quo., Oct. 99, 11907. Mlnard'e Liniment Cures nlpntherla.. Do not spend half your time le the .making ofpromises unless yol' want to give up the other half tc the making of excuses. It was his marriage day, and the best man was doing his best to make the groom • brace up. Always In It. 'Where's your nerve, old man 1" he asked. Why, you're shaking Mr. Fuss (furiously) -It's mighty like a leaf," "I know I am," chat - strange you can't look after things tered the groom. 'But this is'. a little better! Here I want to nerve -wrecking time for me. IN,, shave, and there isn't a drop of hot got some excuse to be frightene e water here. haven't I7 I've never been married Mrs, Fuss (icily)—It is strange! before." "Of course you haven't," .. Why, that is ane of the things I've soothed the. prospective, father -in- . never been out of since I married law. "If you had you'd be -a great you 1 'dealmore scared than you are." Whether For Yourself or as a Gilt to your Fusee r d The well known Perritt trademark sal . •1 shown in cuts should be on every glove you get, al this assures you, perfection of > Style, Fit and Finish. heat dealers the tooted •over *ell' the gonuusttr 1P 1) Ri t1`'t GL01184