The Clinton News-Record, 1898-11-10, Page 6••••••••••••••••••••••••••
About the House,
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HOLLYHOCKS.
The,y rise beyond the fountain rooks,
Th4 spinsters robed in dainty
frocks.
So stately, prim and tall ;
Their hue the very rainbow mocks—
These quaint, old-fashioned hollyhocks
Against my garden wall.
Their crimson e'en the rose defies;
Their pink is like the morning
skies
While yet the sun is low ;
And if we turn away our eyes
They bold us with their witcheries
And will not let us go.
Too coarse to cull for a bouquet,
And lacking fragrance, yet do they
Compel us still to see ;
And as the breezes make them' sway,
What ribboned maidens are so gay
In dance upon the lea?
And when 1 look the garden through.
And, mark, against the mountain's
1)10.e,
The moon upon them bright,
I know not how it is with you,
But as for me it is a true
And exquisite delight.
The hands that set these posies here
Are turned to dust this many a year—
Sosoon our dearest die I
0 Memory, in this nether sphere,
'What art thou but a constant tear
That ri s to Love's eye I
SAID Or' FLOWERS.
"For the last two or three days I
have found scattered stalks of the car-
dinal flower, the gorgeous scarlet of
which it is a joy even to remember.
The world is made brighter and sunnier
by flowers of such a hue. Even per-
fume, which otherwise is the soul and
spirit of a flower, may be spared when
it arrays itself in this scarlet glory.
It is a flower of thought and feeling,
too ; it seems to have its roots deep
down in the hearts of those who gaze at
it. Other bright flowers sometimes
impress me as wanting sentiment, but
not so with this."—Hawthorne.
"Beside a ditch in the field beyond
we find the great blue lobelia and near
it, amid the weeds, and wild grasses
and purple asters, the most beautiful of
our flowers, the fringed gentian, What
v a rare and delicate, almost arislociatic,
look the gentian has among its coarse,
unkempt surroundings! IL does not
lure the bee, but it lures and holds
every passing human eye."—Burroughs.
"The pearly everlasting is an inter-
esting white at present. Though the
stem and branches are still green it is
dry and unwithering like, au everlast-
ing Howes; its white flexuous stem and
branches, too, like wire wound with
cotton. Its amaranthine is instead of
high color. Its very brown center
now affects nae as a. fresh and original
color. It monopolizes small circles in
the midst of[wweL fern, perchance, on
a dry hillside,"—Thoreau.
"\Vho knows not silver -rod, the lovely
and r'everened old age of golden -rod
else golden -rod beautified and saint-
ed, looking moonlit and misty even in
the sunshine) In this soft canescent
after -bloom beginning at the apex of
the flower cluster and gradually
spreading downward, the eye finds an
agreeable relief from the recent daz-
zle of yellow splendor. I almost for-
get that the herb is not literally in
bloom; that it is no longer ministered
to by sunshine and dew."—Edith M.
Thomas.
THE WARNING OF A LIMP.
There are two extremes, into one or
the other of which many mothers fall—
that of oversolicitude for their chi'.dren,
a fussiness and a tendency to coddle
them and t� 'run with them to the doc-
tor for every ache or pain; and that
of careless inattention tp a ceaild's com-
plaint of feeling poorly or to injuries
received in rough play.
In the first case the child is in dan-
ger of developing into an irritnble, sel-
fish valetudinarian, while the mother,
by her worry, destroys the happiness
of what ought to be the sweetest part
of a women's life, and is in danger
also of driving herself into a condi-
tion of nervous invalidism.
On the other hand, a mother who
habitually dismisses without a second
thought every complaint by her child
of discomfort or pain, or who thinks
it will make tier bot( mere. manly if she
schools herself not to betray sympathy
for him in his physical troubles, runs
the serious risk of ignoring some incip-
ient ill, which, if taken in time, may
he arrested, but if neglected may de-
velop into a lifelong affliction.
Of these two extremes the former is
attended with by far the more serious
danger to tee child, but the latter is
not without its perils.
There is one symptom, especially,
that should never be passed over light-
ly in a child, and that is a limp—espec-
ially one that is intermittent. It may
he nothing more serious than a slight
sprain or a "stone -bruise," or perhaps
mere footsoreness from unwonted
tramps over rough roads. It may be
due to a little muscular soreness or
rheumatism, or to n passing stiffness
in ,joint resu'ting from overexercise;
hill—and this is where its seriousness
lies—itmay be the earliest symptom
of hip disease,
This poinful and crippling disease
often, indeed usually, begins with an
apparently insignificant limp, which
comes and goes for perhaps several
months before any other symptom of
the malndy shows itself. it is often
attributed by the parents, and some-
times by the physician, to one or oth-
er of the above-mentioned causes or to
a simple habit, and as it is usually un-
accompanied by pain it is neglected
until finally other severe symptoms
show, perhaps too late for cure, what.
the real trouble is.
A limp that comes and goes repeat-
edly, especially when the child can-
not explain why he walks lame, is a
danger -signal that even the strongest.
advocate, of the "toughening" system
ought to heed,
BILLS OF FARE 'FOR BABY.
A writer gives the following sug-
gestions, which mothers will nppreei-
ate, for feeding the baby. These
hills of fare will agree with any heal-
thy ehild of from twelve menthe to
two and a half years of age:
Milk to drink. Half a saucerful of
oat.rnenl with a 'ittle butter and salt.
Half a saucerful of oatmeal with
cream and sugar, A few teaspoonfuls
of strained prune ,juice.
Thoroughly mashed potato, with a
little butter, eream and salt. A Ihidlk
strip of rare beefsteak to suck, should
be allowed only the juice. A few tsa-
spoonfula of finely seraped apple. Milk
to. drink.
Half of a soft-boiled egg. Milk toast.
Baby ten --made of milk and warm
water in equal proportions, with
sugar and a drop of vanilla.
Bread and milk. Two teaspoonfuls
of fide -grained apple sauce. Half a
slice of bread with beefsteak gravy.
Half a saucerful of rine with butter
and salt. Half a saucerful of rioe
with cream and sugar. Two or three
teaspoonfuls of orange juice. Milk
to drink.
Half a teacupful of beef tea. Crack-
ers and milk. Third of a slice of
bread with pure maple syrup.
A little strained fig syrup. if con-
stipated, made by boiling figs in wa-
ter with sugar. Mush and milk.
Small slice of bread and butter with-
out crust.
A 'teaspoonful of the breast of
chicken or turkey, minced very fine.
Toast and Milk, Small lump of sug-
ar for dessert.
Oatmeal, crackers and milk. Baked
potato, cream, and salt. Whipped
cream, sweetened and flavored.
Half slice of buttered toast without.
crust. Bread and milk. Taste of
custard, wire jelly, or melted vanilla,
or chocolate ice cream.
A POINT FOR FOND MOTHERS.
Here is au effective met hod of re-
lieving a child that has swallowed a
morsel of food "down the windpipe."
It has long been the fashion to slop
the suffering youngster on the back
without producing any especial re-
sults. Fond mothers, in order to re-
lieve their "poor darlings," should ob-
serve the following simple method
Seize both hands of the child and hold
his arms in a perpendicular position.
The consequent widening of the chest
will at once remove the cause of the
discomfort.
CAUSE OF RIEUIVIATISIE.
HOW THE DISEASE IS DEVELOPED
AND CAN BE AVOIDED.
l'or Years This Trouble !Melted I'hy.siclnns'
tihlll - Now I'uderstood and Easily Car-
ed -'1 he !!emit or AO1`1111ne ltesv:urh.
From the Advance, Kemptville, Ont.
There is a popular idea that rheuma-
tism is caused by exposure to cold, and
that some localities are infected with
it more than others. Scientists say
that such conditions frequently pro-
mote disease, but from the factthat
this ailment runs in certain families, it
is shown to he hereditary, and conse-
quently ti disease of the Blood.
Frequently an individual in whose
family rheumatism his not occurred,
develops the disease, and when a diag-
noises of the case is made, it is gener-
ally found t.het the ailment is due to
a, derangement of the blood.
One such sufferer who has been cur-
ed i5 C'apt. 17. W. Becket, wholivett in
the township of Oxford, Grenville
County. Capt. Becket is the owner of
275 acres, and lives in a beautiful farm
home on the banks of the Rideau,
some three miles from Kemptville. In
addition to being a thrifty farmer, Mr.
Becket has taken an enthusiastic • in-
terest in our volunteer force, and has
graduated from the military college at
Toronto with a first class certifieate,
which entitles him to the rank of
Major. '1'o a reporter of the Kempt-
ville Advance, Capt. Becket made the
following statement :—"h'our years
ago 1 was taken suddenly with rheum-
atism in both my elbows and thigh
joints. Th,, pain at times was some-
thing terrible. 1 took medicine and
doctored for over Six months, hut con-
tinued to grow worse and worse. My
arras from the elbow joints to the
tips of the fingers became numb and
had a prickly sensation, and Items un-
able to do any work; in fact I could
not lift my hand to my head. The
pain I suffered in my hips was almost
unbearable and my legs were nearly as
useless as my arms, 1 had frequently
read testimonials where Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills had cured this disease, and
at: last 1 tho'u.ghlt I would try them as
an experiment. Before I had complet-
ed, the first box I felt they were help-
ing me, and after I had taken the
pills rt little more than a month, the
pain had entirely left me, and I felt
an altogether different man. 1 feel
satisfied there is no other medicine
could helve wrought such a speedy
cure, and I Pan truthfully say I met
the enemy and defeated him through
the aid of Dr, Williams Pink Pills.
Dr. \Villinms' Pink Pills are a speci-
fic for all diseases arising from an im-
poverished condition of the blood or a
shattered condition of the nervous
forces, ruchasSt.. Vitus dance, locomo
for allaxis, rheumatism, - paralysis,
sciatien, the after effects of la grippe, I
loss of appetite, headache, dizziness,
chronic erysip'l t scrofula- et c. They
are oleo a flpi•cifie for the troubles •
peculiar 1d1 the female system, correct-
ine da regal;trit ies i.uppressions and all .
forms of fem-ape weakness, building
anew the blood and restoring the glow
of health in pale and sallow cheeks.'
in 111e case of men they effect aradical
cure in all rases arising from mental
worry, overwork or excesses of any
nature.
Protect yourself against imitations
by insisting that every box you pur-
chase bears the full name Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills for Pale People.
The most careful man sometimes is
off his guard, and makes a mistake. Tt
is never judicious to be boastful, or
merciless in judgment.
TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY.
Take Laxative Broom Quinine Tablets. All Dm*
.1,. Wool the money if ,t tails 10 (lar, 9.'e
The bridegroom is never of as much
importance es the bride and she is of
less importance than her dress.
Some men ovoid a disagreeable task
by persuading Themselves that ifs nc-
complishment is nn impossibility.
LONDON'S GRIM POVERTY,
BETWEEN FORTY AND SIXTY PER
CENT. ARE PAUPERS.
Where Mugs, Munger and Misery Abide— A.
Tremendous Problem 1u Social Englne-
erlitg—Soebtllenr No Cure.
One need not look alone to fanati-
cism and sentimental rhetoric 'for evi-
dence of thereduced condition of a.
large proportion of the population of
London, writes E. P. B., in the Chi-
cago Record. The carefully sifted
facts in the case are abundant, and not
to be questioned, Mr. Charles Booth
and his assistants in their remarkable
series of statistical enquiries, the re-
sults of which appear in a book en-
titled "Labour and Life of the Peo-
ple," show that 30.7 per cent of all
London is "in poverty." Nor does this
large percentage include any of the
regularly employed and fairly paid
working class. It is further shown
that the entire middle and upper
classes of this city number only 17.8
per cent. of the whole population. In
the percentage of poverty given the
rich districts are taken With the poor;
but in thirty-seven districts, each
with a population of 30,000, and all
containing a total of 1,179,000 persons,
the proportion in poverty in no case
falls .below 40 per cent., and in some
of them it reaches 60 per cent.
As an observer passes amid the con-
ditions from which the statistics
quoted were obtained, he finds an ex-
cuse for Mr. Henry George's appar-
ent extravagance when he declared it
to be his deliberate opinion that "if,
standing on the threshold of being,
one were given the choice of entering
life as a Terra del Fuegan, a black
fellow of Australia, an Esquimo in
the Arctic circle, or among the low-
est classes in such a highly civilized
country as Great Britain, he would
make infinitely the better choice in
selecting the lot of the savage." But
it is not only such temperaments as
Mr. George's that are profoundly af-
fected by the spectacle of pauperism
as it is presented on 11l1 sides in many
parts of the richest city in the world.
These conditions have so deeply moved
Prof. Huxley, the leader of 501000e in
England, that he exclaims, "If there
is no hope of a largo improvement
of the condition of the greater part
of the human family. I ebould hail
the. advent of some kilydly comet. which
would sweep the whole affair away as
a desirable oonsummal.ioa " And again
Prof. Huxley asks: "\Vilat profits it to
the human Prometheus tbat he has
stolen the fire of heaven to be his
servant, and that the spirits of the
earth and air obey him, if the vul-
ture of pauperism is eternally to tear
his very vitals and keep him on the
brink of destruction 1"
A SOCIAL PROBLEM.
Before any great amount of good
can be accomplished in the direction
of lifting up the submerged. classes I
believe the world .must better under-
stand their condition and more keerily
feel their Inisery. It seems to roe,
therefore, that owe renders a service
to society who gives some idea as to
Lhe harshness of the lot of the poor.
There are pathos and tragedy in their
isolation and loneliness. In all parts of
Whitechapel and the contiguous par-
ishes the observer sees an utter waste.
He stands in the midst of complete
spiritual and material desolation. The
abodes of the poor are in hovels, cellars
and garrets—places of overcrowding,
squalor, rags, blasphemy and immoral-
ity—places that reek with the germs of
physical and moral diseitse.
Nor (lo the poor suffer alone from
congestion and .wretched sanitation.
They have no pleasures. They are ex-
iled from all good things. The "mighty
world of eye and ear" is to efeem a
blankness and an .oblivion. -While
others see. th' limpid lake, the,chang-
ing cloud, the t',wering mountain, these
see only their narrow court or alley,
paved wit h granite blocks, hemmed in
with brick and mortar and roofed by
the fogs of London. 'J'hey have no pie -
Lures on their walls. Music never
comes to quicken their faculties into
life and to kiss their souls into blos-
som. To them literature and art are
as"if they never had been. They know
nothing of the world's beauty, noth-
ing of its poetry; they know only of
its rags and hunger and misery. 'they
have never travelled; they have no
pictures in their minds; the galleries
of their memories stand empty. And
the result is that for all the joy they
have they are narrowed to the pres-
ent, with its deadly monotony and its
chronic privation.
THE R,EJYLEDY FOR IT.
What remedy can be applied to this
disease of the social organism? Are
poverty and its concommitant evils a
necessary feature of progressive socie-
ty ?—that feature which exemplifies
1 he operations of the law science calls
"natural selection?" Certainly no one
seems to dispute that the ameliorative
forces at work in East London fall far
short of satisfactory results. • The
Christian and philanthropic enterpris-
es here found, vasta and potent
though they he, are but luminous iso -
la t ions in the waste. Universal and
complusory education is not enough.
The criminal law is not enough. The
poor paw system, broad and sympathe-
tic beyond question, is a pallative, and
not a cure, wale charity, as at pres-
ent administered, presents a doubtful
logic
.n my opinion the social equilibrium
The Best
!Medicine
Money Can Buy
Is Hood's Sarsaparilla. It is prepared
by educated dud experienced pharma-
cists and every ingredient entering into
its composition is selected with special
reference to its being the best of its
kind, 'These ingredients, consisting of
Nature's best known remedies, have
never been used lo so great an ex-
tent, in any other preparation. In the
enormous sales of Hood's Sarsaparilla
the people have written in indelible
lines their appreciation of this Medi-
cine, and its wonderful cures, retard-
ed in thousands of voluntary testimon-
ials, prove the great power of Hood's
Sarsaparilla over all diseases caused or
promoted by impure blood.
Hooda S�I,rea-
®® parilla
I+ ceeee a's Grattest Medicine. :fold by all
druggists. $1 ; rix for $5. Desiree to gut flood's.
flood's Pills are the only p1118 to take
with Ido ti's Sureaparilla,
1
is not to be established by anarchism,
or socialism or communism, or any
other theory of government or no gov-
ernment. It isnot an affair for party
settlement. It is not something that
can be accomplished by legislation.
The chasm between the chosen ones
and the outcasts ,presents a stupen-
dous difficulty in social engineering.
It cannot be spanned, if the majority
of people are right in their thinking,
by nationalized land, railways, rpiach-
inery and other means of producing
wealth—in a word, by socialism. The
susepnsion bridge of theoretic anarch-
ism will not support its own weight.
The requirements of the structure of
which we are speaking are such that
iL must not be built of the moonbeans
of an 'Utopian shadowland. A great
bridge it must be—the greatest the
world has ever seen. I take it that it
will not he built upon the wreck of
existing institutions and order. I•
hike it that it will not be built of na-
tionalized land and railways. In my
opinion the chief material used in its
censrtuction, if it ever be construct-
ed, will he nationalised sympathy.
NEW ZEALAND'S RABBET EXPORT.
The exportation of rabbits from New
Zealand has assumed such dimensions
Heil it has quite got beyond the exper-
imental stags, and has now l000me an
important industry. One exporter is at
the present time in receipt of between
15,000 and 2(1,0110 rabbits per day, and
is pitying to trappers -in wages hetw•een
x;4,000 toad $5,00. per week. He has
24,000 traps out, giving employment to
about five hundred trappers. fast year
his export of rabbits was about. 700,-
1)00 while be •int icipates sending away
about one million and a half this sea-
son. By this exporter alone about
eight trucks of timber are used per
week to make.the boxes in which the
rabbits are frozen and exported, while
in carriage be pays over $500 a week.
EMPEROR MAY
LIVE,
THOUGH HIS PHYSICIAN
NOUNCES HIS DISEASE
INCURABLE.
PRO-
iirtght'e Moeller' is Not incurable, for
Dodd's Kidney Pills Have Cured
It Teonsands of Times, and
Will Cure ItThonenads
of Thome Again.
Toronto, Oct., 31.—Newspaper des-
patches from Pekin, China, bring in-
formattion to the effect that the Em-
peror is dying of Bright's Disease, He
is under the cure of a famous French
physician, who asserts that the Em -
I peror's complaint is "an incurable Kid-
ney disease."
That is where the famous french
physician is mistaken.
There is no incurable Kidney disease.
Every disease of 1 he Kidneys is cur-
abl'e, (they, like all other diseases,
yield readily to the proper medicines.
The experience of the past eight
years has shown conclusively, beyond
the shadow of a doubt, that there is
one remedy tautwill cure any case of
Kidney disease, no matter how severe,
nu matter how long it has run.
This remedy is known throughout
the English-speaking world, to phy-
sicians, and laymen alike, by the name
of Dodld's Kidney Pills.
When Dodd's Kidney Pills were first
introduced, medical men were scep-
tical regarding their power to entre
Bright's Disease. Experiments were
made, in cases that had defied the skill
of the most eminent medical men on
the American continent, cases that had
been given up as hopeless—fatal To
the astonishment of the medical men,
Dodd's Kidney Pills worked a com-
plete cure in each and every ease.
Thenceforth they were recognized as
the only known cure for diseases of
the. Kidneys, including Bright's Dis-
ease and Diabetes.
This place they have held since, and
hold lo -day. No other cure for these
diseases has ever been discovered, al-
though many worthless imitations of
Dodd's Kidney Pills have been placed
on the market.
If the famous French physician, un-
der whose care the Chinese Emperor is,
yvould Use Dodd's Kidney Pills in the
case of his imperial patient, his recov-
ery would he rapid and certain.
ete
?4',6
•
r A
qfw
s7 i-
See
5,
1
:-
eeT 41,2f.
ee
IIS S '4'
THE RIOTS IN THE PARIS STREETS.
REMARKABLE RESULTS OF THOM-
AS-PHOSPEIATE,
W. Godwin, of Market Drayton.
writes to the "Linoulushire C'hrunl-
ole, April 2ud, 1898, brow which we
quote:
As the phosphoric acid in Thomas -
Phosphate, is, presumably from its ad-
mixture with free lime, in an insol,u-
ble condition, and as it was a generally
accepted theory that plants can only ab-
sorb soluble substances by their roots,
1 had some hesitation in accepting it
as a reliable manure, and I spent a
flay last autumn among a number of
farms in North Staffordshire, and an-
other in South Shropshire. I am hound
and indeed pleused, to confess that I
was never more astonished in my life
then when? noting its effect upon pas-
tures, clover roots and oorn fields, es-
peoially upon the harsh, cold and al-
most intractable clay lands. The effect
in numerous caries was simply marvel-
lous; poor 'pastures, after being dress-
ed with it, were redolent in clovers
and wild vetch, and similar fodder
plants. One field, especially, of some
thirty acres, apparently poverty strick-
en to a last degree, had been dressed
as to five acres withl a ton of Alberts'
Thomas -Phosphate Powder, which was
one sheet of beautiful white clover in
flower, fit to mow, while the remain-
der of the field afforded scarcely a bite
of wiry, coarse grass." Mr. Godwin
further at considerable length describ-
ed root and wheat fields dressed with
this manure as having withstood the
drought and yielding splendidly. He
concludes that genuine Thomas -Phos-
phate Powder comes as a decided boon,
especially as its effects seem very
lasting. 1n the same issue of this pa-
per, Mr. Wooley, of Salop, attested to
its wonderful value in bringing up an
old, worn-out farm, which he had tak
en and which is now in capital condi-
tion. This is the farm which is being
noticed in the English press as produc-
ing 77 bushels of 60 -pound wheat per
acre from the free use of Thomas-Phos-
phete Powder. Still another letter ap-
pears in this paper frmry Robert ..Eard-
ley, of Newark, who says it seems to
carry the roots through the frost bet-
ter, end he noticed the good effects on
the following crops, the third year be-
ing the most surprising the acv heat
crops being greener and stronger all
through the season where it was
used.
AN' OBLIGING COOK.
Mistress — lefary, heave I not seen a
policeman in the' kitchen nearly every
evening tbie week?
Mary—To be course you have, mem,
and mighty handy it is for y,;es to
hive a copper on hand in case yees
should want one.
SPECI.A[, PROM KINGSTON.
Mr Editor:—
I'lease inform your renders that WO
wish to place in their hands, pre -paid
n. free sample of an al;:elute calve for
Catarrh, Bronchitis, Irritable Throat,
&c. It is neither a snufif, nor a wash,
nor an c.18tment, but a pleasant re-
medy which iscarried by atmosphe.rtic
8111 to every part of the throat, lungs
and nasal passages. I'or trial bottle
of
thi•
sfa ,
me us preparation and in-
haler. Andress, N. C. Polson & Co„
Kingston, Ont.
NO COMPLAINTS:
Horse Dealer—Nell, John, how about
that' horse I sold you? Was he quiet
enough?
!Undertaker — Well. sir, he did give
us a little trouble at first. We put him
in one of the mourning coaches, you
know, and parties don't like to be
shook up in their grief. But we've
put him in the hearse now, (land we
haven't heard any complaint so far.
AS HE HAD FOUND IT.
What soured your life'? asked the
judge of the desperado. You sedm to
have gone back on the world. Why ?.
'Cause
-
'Cause it hain't squar', ger honor.
$100 Reward, $100.
The readers 5'thlsaper will be ppteesed to
lewd that there Is at Peart one dreaded disease
that t ciente has been. able to cure in all ire
etagen and that 1e. Catarrh. Hail's Catarrh
Cure ie the only poelt.ive cure now )mown to
1 h medical. fraternity. Catarrh l:eieg a con-
rt1 1 o tonal disease, requires a coneCtntional
R•antrnent. Hall's Catarrh Cure to Taken in-
ter,,a;ly, acting directly upon the blood .and
mucous surfaces Of the system, thereby des-
troying the touadatlon of the dleeaao, and el v•
in; the patten`, strength by hufldin'; up the
conetItutlon and assisting nature in doing Lia
work. The proprletore have eo ram h faith in
its curative powers, thnt they offer One Hun-
dred Doll ire for any ease that it fails to cure.
Send for list of Testi monists,
Address. F. J.CHENEY&CO„ Toledo, 0.
Sold hgg Druggist s,70c.
Hall's Flintily Pile are the best.
The harder a man w',rks the more he
warns for others.
A COMBINATION SURE TO Wiry--
LUDELLA
BEST QUALITY.
Lead packages.
CEYLON TEA
BEST PRICES.
25, 40, 50 and 6oc.
According to the Bible, there will
be no marrying or giving in marri-
age in heaven—probably because there
won't be enough men to go around.
�V
P C 944
L
Mills, Mills & Halos
Darrietore,eto„ removed
to Wesley Inch
mond tit, W., Toronto.
SPEEOH IMPEDIMENTA of any nature suoceee
fully treated. Consult a qualified practi-
tioner, who was for years a paltlful stammerer,
and has cured many who felled elsewhere.
Writo to W. J. A1. NETT, tam., Berlin, Ont.
1F you want to either buy or sell Apples
in car lots, writeus.
The Dawsoq Commission Co., Limited,
GCoroal o -
HARRIS ' LEAD
BUYS COPPER
SCRAP BRASS
wholesale 00174 William Et., Toronto.
Long Distance Telephone 1729.
Agents wanting to make $150 In next 61
days, this '9 your chance—ean'1
'o'er. W. H, Anger, 41 Richmond-st.,Toronto,
SAU8A013 CASINOS --Now Importations finest English
Sheep and Amerioan Hog Oaetnge—reliable goods a$
right pries& PARK, BLAOKWELL A 00., Toronto.
Fr 00 F 1 N G and Shoot Metal Works.
ROOFING SLATE, In Blank,
Seder Orson. SLATE BLACKBOARDS (We supply
Mile and High Soboole Toronto). Roofing Felt, Pitch,
Goal Tar, eta ROOFING TILE See New Otey Build•
ars, Toronto, done byonr8rml fetal Ceilings, Con
Ices, eto. Estimates urnished for work complete or for
meeriaie 'hipped any part of the oonntry. Phone1e&1
UTNIte & 50NS, Adelaide&Widmer Ste. Toronto
YAMMERERS.
Only Inseltutlon In Canada for the tune of
every pbaee of .peceb detect. Established
in Toronto, 1850. Oyyro guaranteed
CHURCH'S AIrTO.VOCE INSTITUTE,
9 Pembroke St., Toronto, Canada,
Rapid Roller
Letter Copier,
SAVES 'rime. AND MONEY.
The Office Specialty Mfg. Co,
LIMITED.
Torontoand Newmnrket.Onl
The Reid Bros. Mfg. Co') MaBLLRD
SABLES and BOWLING ALLEYS. Phone 1303. Send
for0ataloguo. 257 Ring St. West, TORONTO.
Dominion Line Stealnshi s.
V h
Montreal and Quebec to Liverpool ip summer. nr t
and fast twin screw *tenlnaht pe 'Labrador
,' n '
couver,' Dominion ' 'sgotempp Yorkshire.
Be crier accommodation for First Cabin; See
and Cabin and Steerage passengers, Rates, of
paseaga—First Cabin, $60.00; second shin,
on; Steerage $22.60 and upwards according to
steamer and berth. For all information n ly
to Local Agents, or Devito Tb8aesca &�o„
Oenl Agents, 17 1St. Sacrament St., Montreal,
L. COFFEE & CO., Established 18461
— GRAIN AND COMMISSION
MERCHANTS,
Rooms 409-12 Board et Trade Building,
TORONTO. ONT.
Thomas FLYNH. JOHN L. Coma
1 1TTLE GIANT TYPEWRIT5B- A really nractire
le machine and nota mere toy. Prue deli yore(
VA,. 21). Agents wonted, The HOWISLL I3001
.COMPANY, 26-28 Adelaide St, W , Toronto.
(TORONTO CUTTING SCHOOL offers special
inducement,' to _young wen desirous of
I�a,,ktnl up Coutog !ull partfo on ascii.
nation, ,se. YONaH BT., TORO ,
One 3 -cent stamp will get yog y
tree sample of stamp
wille'e Itall+�
Free Balm, the. beet preparation for nU
roughness of skin, chapped hands
jor tape. The Hutchings Medlofne Co., Toronto.
STRATFORD, ONT.
Beet Commercial Solrcol In the Province; enter now,
patelogue free. 'W. J. ELLIOTT, Yranoipel,
Wm. Millar& Co.
Manufacturers of filmyOases Office, Store, Bary
and Hotel Fixtures, Jews
eters', Druggists' and all
kinds of Interior }witting",
British Plato Mirrors, is 19 to 23 Alice St., Toronto.
TELEGRAPHY Shorthand, Typewrittait
• Bookkeeping end all Comemerolal Bub cots are Properly tsught to tpe .
CENiRAL 91181NE8$ COLLEGE,
pronto, Yonse and Gerrard Etta Fail Term now qpm
pronto,
admitted .t anytime. Eight regular u
9iC
lendld ul
p e4 Duaens,. tarns for catalogue. -
W. H. SHAW, PNnolpal. , I
This transom one Om"
original designs.
All descriptions of Woo,
Grille,, Praneoms, La
tioe and DeooreG
Wood Work,
W.e LIMON, 760 Tongs es,
Allorigi eelgna. Write for prima. Toren,
Sur�crier To all othore,
s+ Gernr-prouf clout!
Four Dollars
Complete. To be had Q_ly from DIB31 Queen Be E. Torun' oI
Send stamp for circular and sample;
of cloth before buying elsewhere,
THE' TRIUMPH'
ADJUSTABLE STOVE PIPES.
Easy pit up and taken down. Can
be cleaned, nested, and put away in
a email ewe. Aak your dealers for
them. Manufactured by
C. B. BARCLAY,
168 Adelaide St. W.,'Ioronto.
°Leh ZD.
LI11&L'rR ItESTOIIHID WITI[OUT Mull)!.
111 GINE U It IOXPI INS19 to i h , X20 ^T 1)1��RR.
ORDERED 8l'OMAC11, Lr'NOd, N1611Cgs,
LIVER, B[.000, BLADDER, KIDNEYS,
BRAIN and RILE ATH by
I)
U BARRY'S REVALENTA AR-ABIOA
FOOD, which' SAVI:d 1NVALIUh an
(,li1LI)RNN, and ate° Rea r eua'e gully In-
fante whose Ailments and Debility have re -
Fisted all other Low meats. It divest 9 whop
all other Food le rejected, eaves 50 timer' its
cost in medicine.
50
YEARS' INVARIABLE SUCCESS„
100,000 ANNUAL CURES of Consrip.
µtion, Flatulency, Dyspep 41a, Indigestion, 01n,:
eumption, Diabeees, Brontldtts, Influenza,,
Coughs, Asthma, Catarrh, Phlegm, Diarnccea
Nervous Debility, Sleeplessness, De.pondeacy,
LIU BARRY and Co. (Limited), 77 Regent,
1J street, London, W., also le Paris, 14 Rue
de Castiglione, and at all Grocers, Chemists,
and Stores everywhere, in Line 2e„ 3s., dd., as •
Sib. 14s. Sent carriage free,Also 1,U
BARRY'S REVALENTA BISCUITS, in tins.
Be. ed, and 6s.
THE MOST NUTRITIOUS.
EPPS'S
GRATEFUL—COMFORTING.
COCOA
BREAKFAST—SUPPER.
WILKINS & CO.
SEND FOR ILLUSTRATED PRICE LIST.
AXES, ° Solid Steel,
Hammers HGeOr; 25c each
Violins :riff°' $nd $J•'e
end $F.00 Tech.
Lance -Tooth Saws,
THE 44 HEADLIGHT,"
One of the fastcet and most perfect
eawe made• every 50c per
saw guaranteed only. foot
Mouth Organs'so 6ts
each. Our 25c and soc Mouth
Organs are post-paid at the
price.
so Cents Each.
WILKINS & CO.,
66 and 168 King St. East, Toronto.
:.••••006000.00000.•••••00••••••••••••••900400ti•80066000•0•A•••••®••tB•00084•t®•90••
•
•
•
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•
•
•
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A BOOK OF ----11062-
1,500
F 1 __
1,500 PAGES FOR
feeleesseeeseenesee
aCk number contains upwards of PAITI
with a munbnr of125 LithogEfI-
ia
phi(' and Colored Plates devoted to FASHION, CULTURE.
WOMAN'S. WORK A1%D RECREATION. Interest-
ing, reliable and thoroughly up-to-date information and exposition
• of the prevailing and incoming styles in dress and materials are
• set forth and illustrated, besides which The Delineator covers a
• wide range of topics touching on nearly everything else of interest
to women : Fancy Work, Cookery, the Care of rho Children, House-
hold Duties and Appointments. Beauty and Hygiene, Etiquette,
• Education, Employments and Professions, Handicrafts and Occupations,
2
Entertainments, ore., etc., with a short story each month by a diet.in•
• guiehed novelist.
OALLSO THE
the DecemberChristmas
number of* • %.• Delineator **number •
Iand le a marvel of completeness to all its departments. The Winter Fashions In Dress
and Millinery are elaborately Illustrated rind desnribed, the Literary features are of an
unusual! high order of merit, and the household Specialties aro of the most seasonable
and original character. The tender sentiment. of A Modern Christman Saint, by Clara
E. Laughlin, will appeal to lovers of Stevenson in a pernllarl7 arreetionato way. The
hoboso of Senora Viglel, by Eva Wilder Brodhead, Is &captivating sketch ofpassionate,
kind-hearted character to be found In the Southwest. Washington satiety During the
War, by Mrs. Archibald Hopkin* is an interesting retrospect of pits at the Capital during
the late conflict. Keeping Watch, an impressive Christmas poem, by Edith M Thomas,
tells the shepherd's story of the finding of tho Christ -child. in the series on Tho Com-
mon lits of Lite, Dr. Grace Peckham Murray analyses the physical conditions and metal
aspects of Old Age. The article In the series on Amateur Photography contains 5 num-
ber of suggestions in regard to making photography remunerative tot the amateur.
Eleanor oteorgen contributor another scholarly chapter on The Cultivation of the Volpe,
in Poster Tableaux, by Line Beard, will be found complete toohhiosl carewonn for pre.
paring an elaborate artistic entertainment. A notable group of Holiday Household
• .ubjeote is embraced in An Old-Tlms Christmas, by Helen Comber, Holiday Candy Mak-
ing et Hem. by Ruby F. Warner and Festivities of the Holiday season, by RIM,. Girls'
Interests enol Oooupstlons by Lavelle MoLaws, and Olub Women and Club Life, by
Helen M. Winslow, are characteristical) entertaining; and the regular departments:
Social Observances, conducted by Mrs. characteristically
.'ones' The Tea -Table by Edna s.
Witherspoon ; Fanoyy Stitches and Embroidery, by Emma Haywood; The Dressmaker,
Millinery, Lane -Making, etc., comprise a protusion of additional matter of distinotive
interest.
• I agme a book 11 In. long, -8 in. wide and 3 in.
thiole, which mmprlses 1,500 pages of
Helptul, Muff's]. Fsetul, Dealt--
able matter, printed en good paper, and including et
least 24 Full Page lithograph Plates, 36 Printed Color Plates
and 06 Colored Pages on Heavy Paper, and you will have a
ooneeption of what you will receive when you
SUBSCRIBE
--- TO
AJOURNAL OF
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FINE ARTS? .
OANSD)AN 6or110N
1'
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manpatterns with the coupon oraMince over s tte n oheok'nwhieh aorderip
poarsto each Issue of the Magaatile7 Look in The Deline-
ator lust after the Ladles' colored pages, and you will find
the check. Von can woollen) a year, or 40 rents a month,
if you find your family or dressmaking requirements call for
•one each of the Patterns specified in the Oheck.
o you know
tbe Delineator Publlsbhig Co. of Coronto, Cimit¢d,
• as Richmond $trees west, Coronto, Out.
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r a
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