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The Wingham Advance, 1906-04-05, Page 3'"Td. ';tri; f Every home Needs This New and important Discovery. A NCIUNT Greece will always be remembered for the fine types of a;°i, r manhood supplied by the heroes of her battlefields and the l(� athletes of her arenas, but stili more will these heroes and athletes OIL, themselves be remembered for the custom they bequeathed to it �,,?,!1I+1f f later ages of kali. g sore and injured places on their bodies by ''li, �l; II��secret balm or sale-. The the external application of some e l Greek charioteers did not emerge from their mad races with» 1 out some severe bruise or gaping wound; and to anoint each • injury carefully with their favorite balm was an 11indispensable part of the day's programe. The old Roman , lmheroes, too, who were injured by the wild beasts in the t. ---, now ruined Colosseum of Rome, had to adopt similar methods of healing. if we travel back in history we find that this external "rubbing'► has prevailed right from the etrliest times, and the only explanation of its survival, amidst so many changes in scieece seems to lie in the fact that the exte; nal use of salves and balms is dictated to us by Nature herself. Our own instinct tees us to rub a part that hurts; and in Zam-Buk the ideal substance to apply to an injured or diseased surface is universally believed to have been found at last. It is a well-known fact that preparations, such as Iii ointments, creams, salves, liniments, and embrocations have hitherto been imperfect in their action, and, moreover, they frequently contain quantities qt rancid animal fat and mineral products of a harmful nature. A simple yet novel theory provided a way out of the difficulty. This was that Nature, having given to man the instinct to rub, might well be supposed to have secreted somewhere the proper substances to rub with. Search amongst medicinal herbal essence: showed how some of them possessed treating, soothing and antiseptic properties of a wonderful order. Many experiments were made with mixtures or blendings of these juices, and Zam.Buk, a combination wi h t stonishing powers as a heater and antiseptic, was secured. This is the great healer which is today generally regarded as a household necessity for skin -Sicknesses and injuries in home, factory, field, or workshop. Zam-Buk as a skin -cure and antiseptic healer can be confidently recommended as well for its general efficacy as for its wholesomeness its purity end power. The proprietors have such implicit confidence In Zam-Buk that they will send any reader a Scituate Box free who sends in the coupon below, according to instructions. 4 Fk; atO aee What Zan-4ukc v > should be used for. Zam•Buk heals and cures cute, bruises, burns, scalds, sprains, atittnese, weak ankles, swollen joints, bad legs. blind and blending piles, running sores, eczema, ulcers, pimples, boils, rash, raw ohapped hands, scalp irritation, Bore heads, barber's rash raw ohin after shaving, throat and chest, Chilblains cold -sores. fostering sores, poisoned wounds and other diseased, injured and inflamed or irritated conditions of the Orin, Rubbed well into the parts affected, Zam•Buk gives great relief from neuralgia. toothache,pacolds. A. lumbago, maygorheumatism, obtained of any drt uggik st at 500. per box (6 boxes for $2.50). BEWARE OF SCARLET FEVER. Germs Possessed of Remarkable Vitality, as Many Instances Show. In a farm house in one of the New England states is case of scarlet fever nnexpeotedly developed not long ago. On seeking for its origin tho physician found that some old cotton quilts, laid away in the garret for years, had recently been taken down and aired and put to use by the family. These bed coverings, it was remembered. had been put away after a siege of the disease. This is only one of ninny instances that could be re- lated to show how Iong the infectious agent retains its vitality ami Trow com- mon a thing it is for scarlet fever to be disseminated by bedding and other ob- jects. These quilts should have been burned as soon as the first patients had recovered. The ohildran of a certain physician were one day allowed to unlock an an- tique secretary that had not been open- ed for years. In it they found tresses of hair that ]rad been out from the heads of children who had died twenty years before of scarlet fever. In a fow days they were both stricken with the dread disease. The ease with which this disease is disseminated is appalling. It has been known to be spread to a neighboriug house simply from the airing of bed clothing in a window] Infected bed clothing abould never be washed with For Thin abi hk Fat is of great account to a baby ; that is why babies are fat. If your baby is scrawny, Scott's Emulsion is what he wants. The healthy baby stores as fat what it does not need immediately for bone and mus c 1 e . Fat babies are happy ; they do not cry ; they are rich ; their fat is laid up for time of need. They are • happy because they are comfortable. The fat sur- rounds their little nerves and cushions them. When they are scrawny those nerves are hurt at every =gentle touch. They delight in Scott's Emul- sion. It is as sweet as Wholesome to them. Send for free aainpte. Qa sura that this picture M lila forte of a 1abe1 Is en the wrapper of every bottle et itmYtlston yet buy. Scott 4. i3owno Chemists ?'eranta a Ont. se&del Alloe Wiliest! BOX. The proprietors wish every reader to give Zam-Buk a froo toot. Send this Coupon and a one -cent stamp to Zam-Buk Co., Col- borne St., Toronto, and they will post you dainty to box. d y sam P Mm. Lint week end- ing April 7, 1906. any other. The disease has been trans- mitted in this way. .A bouquet of flow- ers that was sent from a scarlet fever room to a hospital carried the disease.— Good Housekeeping. In Modern Phrase, First Gentleman—"I beg ten thousand pardons for not haring paid that $10. Here it is." Second Gentleman—"Nine thousand five hundred pardons will be enough -5 per cent. off for cash."—New York Mail. HEALTH IN THE HOME. Baby's Own Tablets are equally good for little babies or big children. If a child is suffering from any of the min- or ills of childhood a few doses of the Tablets will cure it. And an occasional dose to the well child will prevent sick- ness. Mrs. A. Mercier, Bleier, Ouelle, Que., says:—"My baby was cross, irri- table, did not step at night and did not - soem to thrive, but since giving her Baby's Own Tablets all this is changed. She now eats well, sleeps well and is growing fat. The 'Tablets have proved a blessing to both myself and the child" So say all mothers who have used this medicine. Baby's Own Tablets are sold by all druggists, or you can got them from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont., at 25 cents a box, Not So Spoony. An observant person, who had been studying the ways of the young man and the debutante, has made the startling as- certain that the old-fashioned form of flirtation is completely extinct. No long- er is a rush made by the young people to cosy corners while their elders se- dately oujoy the lancers; no longer does Edwin rack his brains to devise excuses for tete-a-tetes with Angelina and op- portunities for whispering sweet troth- ings into her ear. The cosy corners aro instead occupied, ft may be surmised, by - elderly men talking politics and by dowa- gers discussing moot points on bridge, while Phyllis and her Best Boy go seri- ously through a square dance. In be- tween the waltzes the ball -room is lin- ed with couples who liko to do their flirting in public. Edward prefers squeez- ing his inoramata's hand in the grand chain to pressing it behind a paten and a curtain, the critic asserts. If true, this seems a deplorable state of things, and lends support to the theory which has been ventilated of late years that the young pian is growing less and less apoony and sentimental. It may also be that he has become more cautious, and has no desire to risk a private interview with pretty Phyllis, fearing that amid the glamor of such a moment he might say to clo something foolish, as he un- derstands'so ninny other men have done on eimiler oeeasions1 There is safety, at least, in the ballroom. On the other hand, it may be that the modern youth finds the contemporary girl less inclined to flirt than het predecessors used to be. I:xcltange. Tolstoi And the Bishop in Hell, The church of Tasowo, in the province of Kursk in Russia, posaesees an extra- ordinary painting, for which the inhabi- tants are said to have paid 4.255, and of whieh they etre exceedingly proud. The picture represents hell, and the most no- table figure is that of Count Tolstoi, in 4 peasant dress, sitting in at huge boiler placed over a blazing fire, which gleeful demons are stoking. tonne of Totstot's friends made remonstrance to the Risher, who ordered the figure representing Tol- stoi to be painted out. The Bishop sent his vicar -general to ernmine the pietnre but the curious thing le that he dirt iv't discover that both he himself and the Bishop are among the figures in toe- tnent. After medieval precedent, it berms the parish priest instructed the painter to give a hot place to everyb0dv Against whom he hnd a score to pay off. ---Westminster Gazette. 'Pommy- of er, why +till nominee live fit a tubs Tomny'a Pop --•I itnppose be- cause, there were he flats In throne days. BEAUTIFYING CONCRETE. New Solution of the Problem Which Has Puzzled Constructors. With the constantly increasing use of concrete in all sorts of buildings and structural work, the question of its ap- pearance has arisen. Many users of the material have spent some thought in de- vising means to make the finished e ' trk look better than it does. It is naturally of a yellowish or greyish color, which is extremely monotonous and without c'•: s- tinetion, suggesting, more than anything else, a surface of discolered player. To overcome this the tendency has often been to conceal the character ,f the material by smoothing or coloring, but this idea has been condemned by artists from the great Ruskin all the way down. Ruskin, in particular, owes much of bis claim to fame on the successful prva- gation of 'his idea that in architeet+ice, as in all else, things, to be hoa.itiful, must be exactly what they seem. Nevertheless, the fact remains that concrete is not beautiful, and in its nat- ural state, or plastered over, it presents an appearance of weakness, without hint of the great strength or of the endurance against time and weather which it really possesses. What is being done along truly artistic lines in this direction ly the Bureau of Surveys of Philadelphia, under the direction of George S. Web- ster, chief of the bureau, is, therefore, A TRULY IDEAL WiFE HER HUSBAND'S BEST BEEPER Vigorous tioaith is the Great Source of Power to Insp?re and f iroursge —Alt Women Should See One of the most noted, successful and richest men of this century, in a recent article, has said, "Whatever I am and whatever success I have attained in this world I owe all to my wife. From the day I first knew her she has been an inspiration, and the greatest helpmate of my life." ,./torr .8 e sic ePi rl�,3i To be such a succensful wife, to retain the love and adntiration of her husband, to inspire him to stake the most of him- self, should be a woman's constant study. If a Woman finds that her energies are flagging, that she gets easily tired, dark shadows appear under her eyes, she has backache, headaches, ]raring -down pains, nervousness, irregularities or the blues, she should start at once to build up her system by a tonic with specific powers, such as Ly- dia E. Pinkhanl's Vegetable Compound. Following we publish by request a letter from a young wife : Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "Ever since tny child was born l have srtt- fered, as I hope few women ever have, with inflammation female weakness, bearing - down pains, backache and wretched head• aches. it affected my stomach so I could not enjoy my meals, and half my time was spent n bed. "Lydia I+l. Pinkltnm's Vegetable Compound made me a well woman, and I feel so grateful that I am glad to write and tell you of my marvelous recovery. It brought nut health, rs new life and 'vitality."—Mm. eseie Ainsley, 011 South 10th Street, Tacoma, Wash. What Lydia E. l)inkham'e Vegetable Compounddid for Mrs,. Ainsley it will do for every sick and ailing woman. If you baro symptoms yen don't on. derstand write to Mrs. Pinkham, daughter -in lata of Lydia E.Pinkhant, at Lynn, Mass, Mr advice id free tend ilwaye belpful,. ee 1: Incubators .R. A te Prose bulletin from the Ontario Agri- cultural College, Guelph, Canada, by V, R. Graham. The hatching season is at liana and those who contemplate raising over two annotto (Welts will find incubators '.nd broods mere convenient than the nettn•- al method, and at the same time they can ltateli their chickens cants which means a better chataiee of getting eggs taext winder, 'There arty a few pointer that need eon sideration in artificial incubating and brooding. The intubator should be operated Where tlw air is pure. 1f the air in the room where the machine is run has an offensive vier due to the smell of kero- sene, of decaying wood or vegetables, the room is not a good place to run a matohinc. The machine may hatch fair- ly well but to raise the chicks is anoth- er queetice. Thousands of chicks are ruined by being batched in ill -ventilated rooms, especially if very moist. 'Ile mal+kine, especially a hot air male, must not lie run in a direct draught, ne -it may heart unevenly. It is well to have four or n:m•o thermometers and place them in different parts of the egg tray before putting the eggs in, to make sure your machete has no "hot spots." Raise or lower ti:e ends of the machine until it heats nt least within a degree and ono -half at all parts. if a hot spot is found in the centre, this can be screen- ed by attaching a. elot.h or a phi.: of metal under the top of the egg elinmber. This will ii wally uttuse the heat; to dis- tribute better. It is wis:• to follow the manufacturer's directions as to operating the machine. Different makes regnero different treat• ment and the maker usually knows what his machine requires to do good work. Care should always be taken to keep the lamp and burner clean. At times the wire at the base of the burner gets dirty or covered with dust; this shonid be well cleaned, otherwise, the lamp is liable to flicker or smoke. Chicks, ite a rule, are more easily hatched then reared. Mortality in young clucks is frequently due to bad incubating; i.e., machines run in rooms in which the air is foul, or ran uneven in temperature, the parent stock being sickly or 1s.elong in vigor, one can not be too particular about this point when selecting breeding stock; or it may be clue to bad brooding awl feeding, such ass too bow and too high temperatures, feeding sloppy feeds, indigestible feeds, or too much at n time followed by abort feeds. Our method of feeding is usually to remove the chicks from the incubator to the brooder, which has been bedded with r cut straw or hay and warmed to flu de- grees, at the age. of 30 to 48 hours. We place on a board some grit, also some bread crumbs or cracked wheat and -AC__, aN We Own The Galeal Steck Food Factor,, le The World. It covers over a city block, contains ever 18 acres of floor apace, cosi Gnd'weusedaymutionlettere of our office rhheads 20, ndQenvelopes�everySea Ae, 150 iearr- load every E0 days. Our chemical laboratory is one of the hest, Our office is one of the great status of the businestaa world. Many veru ottani concerns advertise large buildings. We invite You to visitAur factory and see that we have everything we claim. Manufactured and Guaraatecd by International Steck 1o04 Cr. "International Stock Food" "International Poultry rood" "into:nationa heave Cure" "internetlonai Louse Miler" "International Worm Powder* "Igteraatioaei Diete a5er Cure "iaternational flail Cure" " Irteraatiosti Foe; Remedy" '''Sliver ?tae Healing 0th" "interactional Cello Cure'" "la:ernationai Compound Absorbed' "interastioeai Sheep DIV" "International Phone Chlora "laternationat Boot Ointment" "Sao Patch Static Disinfectant" "laternationai flumes Soso" Also "Jewel imitators" and Brooders, and Jewel Chick and lieu Peed. DAN 1. A,TC.Iii lass/ DIA.ILIEIA FREE. We have a Beautiful 6 Color Picture of our Champion Pacer, Dan Patch 1:553;, size 16x24. Free of advertteing, fine picture for framing, gives all the records made by our pacing wonder. We will mail you • one free, postage prepaid, it you will write us Trow much t;toek you own and name this payer. Write at once to INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD CO., hlinnespolis, F.Thne., U. S. A. i it : °'1i,1,/:;If!i3411'1 ,,t '+i ,l j mt I iif'1 \`.,' 1, r :��ii� �Ilu'),�;t/ l ,' 1Uir lei I J ''''��'Jls�1'1 a _ l,rrzti; Some important Discoveries Are made only after a long time of patient and intelligent search. Yet we cannot say that the public were slow in discovering the excellence and superiority of oatmeal. We keep this well supplied. for • perhaps two days, until all the chicks know where to look fur food. We also COBALT keep a constant supply of pure water in The directors of the GORDON OOBAL1' easy access. After the second day in SILVER MINING CO., LIMITFOD, eme osier. the brooder we begin feeding about five dug to the nubile for the PUt,PO5E OF DE - or six times daily, just what the °hick- VEI.OPM'ENT OF THE G0@si'ANY'S FRO• ens eat quickly. It is still somewhat of PBRTIES, A LIMITtt) NUMBER OF T. a debatable point whether it is wise toY SHARES OF HnAR�,, TREASURYo7 rtt�ma oS sub feed a young chick all it wants to eat serij,tton. before it is two weeks of age. We try THE GORDON Gone= MINE, ooncista to feed a. little less than they would of 80 iaones in the besot of she GSobalt M4nin� eat. Such feeds as bread and milk are ilistrfet. and one valla aunt the TOWN OF iters earlyin the morning,lvhich is fed OOBAIJr, AND IN THE ?PhAarbuS OOL10- g ' MAN TOSVNSIT[P, •Orta t[tle lass Creon ananted t bythe present government. Tire fl o'clock eM, t or troughs. At>u�•ty boards trop ao on clean ghas been opened and a stole o4 four feat is some cracked wheat or pin head oatmeal is fed, or if these aranot to be had, Wit made, .cod este #. SSAY sE-Iaava FR0!ti 90 TO 260 OUI�C1nS OF .SILVER fro Tan sinal] wheat screening. This is buried _ TON. THE ASSAY MAY BSD SEEN AT THE slightly in the litter on the floor, so as COIKPANY'S OFF0C1a. 111 to induce the chicks to exercise. The TIlE CAPITAL a)F THIn 100(3/PANT 28 i above feeds are used alternately , Before ONLY t;t;000,000. The qo®sans bas, no tty trcndcsD dci'ats ands MID preferred( amuck. The !feeds a day, after the chicks are a week mens ser his prce,r ea t.es. fold, of grated or chopped root or onions, PROPERTIES,one ea the est GORDON COBALT sometimes boiled potatoes; enough shorts the district and tunny have invested in the ' and bran is added to this to absorb the asp party's shores; the property 'la within 40 juices of the root. IN e try to have the chicks drink some milk, or if this is not at hand, we keep beef scrap in easy ac- cess. The feeding of such cooked or raw pleat is dangerous—a little is good. Where there is plenty of milk or insects, the animal food is not so essential. After three weeks of age, feed three tinges daily, plenty of vegetables and grass (and exercise.) Grit, water and broken charcoal in easy access. Reduce beat of brooder four degrees per week until 75 degrees is reached. Chicks 5 or 0 weeks old require no artificial heat. LYRICS FROM THE LOCKUP. Plea of a Remorseful Bard Hits the Heart of a Magistrate. With a prefatory note saying that be i • particularly interesting at this time, J1lre " Webster, in the concrete bridgework re- cently finished and now going forward in various parts of the city, has dis- carded entirely the idea of concealment, and he and Henry 1I, Quimby, his as- sistant, have made many experiments to determine how the material may be made to stand Teeth for what it is and yet present a satisfactory appearance. One ordinary method of laying con- crete has been to divide the finished sur- face into squares of rectangular spaces, marked out by indentations, to give it the appearance of stone laid in courses. Unfortunately, however, it does not look like stone. Another method, used to conceal the Iine where one day's work is ended and the next began, was to plaster the place of joining. This is never sat- isfactory, as it leaves a discolored streak and suggests an attempt to hide a weak spot. Mr. Webster's method of overcom- ing this is to make a sharp clear line of indentation between each day's work by the temporary use of a triangular strop of timber, kept for the purpose. The result. shows the concrete laid in courses, symmetrically marked off, and yet not attempting anything like an im- itation of dressed stonework. An ex- cellent example of this method is to be seen in the bridge, just about completed, which carries the boulevard over the N. P. Railroad. This style of building is further interesting as indicating a means of calculating approximately the time required to construct the bridge. Another successful experiment in the treatment of surfaces, especially those of railings, ballusters and columns, has been washing, to remove the fine mater- ial and leave a roughened exterior which shows the grain of the substance std the larger pieces of which it is composed. This brings out at once a suggestion of the great strength of the concrete and whether the pieces of rock shown be the black trap or the rounded pebbles, either of which may be used in the mixtures, the color Is highly satisfactory and the impression that of genuineness. It does not look like rock of any kind unless it might be that known to geologists as conglomerate, which, in fact, it is, though made artificially. It has been found that this washing off of the sur. face dons not destroy the sharpness of points or corners and the roughness pro- duced is not so great as to permit of the lodgment of moisture. About all of the new bridges now under way or to be provided aro to be of this decorated reinforced concrete, Aside from this happy solution ofthe question of beauty the material for bridge work is as strong as steel or -d much more enduring. Especially when subjected to the acid gases 01 locomotive smoke and the action of steam the con- crete remains unaffected, whereas the steel is subject to corrosion. Of course, too, in the matter of cost, the figures are greatly in favor of the eoncrete. The concrete bridge on 1'rankford avenue, across the Poquessiug Creek, for in- stance, more beautiful than any steel structure corld be, cost about $12,000. For steel the cost would be about V25. - 000. "t5:000. In general, the difference in cost for conercte bridges is about 33 per cent less than for steel and fully 50 per cent. less than for any kind of hewn atone. As between stone and concrete this differ- ence is made np largely in the cost of construction rattler than to the material, _-x Origin of a Family Saying. A student who Is devoting his time to the work of tracing the origin of frm- liar sayings, declares the stepladder les- son which follows was founded on fact: "For want of a nail the shoe was lost; For want of a shoe the horse wag bet; For want of a horse the rider was Let; And all for the want of n horixishoe nail.' The rider was aide-de-camp in a Europ- ean army. He neglected to have a nail driven one day, and that afternoon the army began a tong retreat. The horse east the loose shoe and fell lame. The young officer halted at a blacksmith shop in order to have the shoe rc+pl,•ueed, whau a equttd of the enemy's pursuing cavalry clashed. up and slew hint with sabres, says home Chat. Yet no doubt ire had heard often °nought that "e stitch in time cheer nine." EA.RiN CA.S Yrur Leisure Time If you could start at once in a busi- ness which would add a good round sum to your present earnings—WITH- our IN4I&STING A DOLLAF—wouldn't you do it? Well, we are willing to start you in a profitable business and we don't ask you to put up any kind of a dollar. Our proposition is this : We will ship you the Chatham Incubator and Brooder, freight prepaid, and You Pay No Cash Until .After 1906 Harvest. Poultry raising pays. People who tcll,you that there is no money in raising chicks may have tried to make money in the business by using setting hens as hatchers, and they might as well have tried to locate a gold mine in the cabbage patch. The business of a hen is—to lay eggs. As a hatcher and brooder she is out- classed. That's the business of the Chatham Incubator and Brooder, and they do it perfectly and successfully. The poultry business, properly con- ducted, pays far better than any other business for the amount of time and money invested. Thousands of poultry-raisers—men and woolen all over Canada and the United States—have proved to their satisfaction that it is profitable to raise chicks with the zsEr tto. 1- 60 Eggs no. 2-120 Eggs Mo. 3--250 Eggs CHATHAM INCUBATOR AND BROODIER e " fours is the first incubator' have used, and I wish tIo state I had 52 ir firsb lot; truly -a eggs. This cent, hatch. I am well pleased with my incubator nett hemeer. Taos. McNatun2•0V, Chilltwack, B.(." "My first hatch came off. I got 170 floc chicks from Otto eggs. Who onrliato Oratrial, ei so that spring. . Iantwl pleased with incubator, and if I could not get another money could not bay ft front me. Every farmer tift1lt isvttunilebior".i.0 Dv, Ont. "Tho incubator you furntahed me work" exceedingly well. it is easily operated, and only needs about 10 MOOer tli,tMeosr. J&W. Avery ,Ea." It, The Chatham fucubator and Brooder is honestly constructed. There is no humbug about it. Every inch of material is thoroughly tested, the machine is built on right principles, the insulation is perfect, thermometer reliable, and the workmanship tate best. The Chatham Ictcubator and llroodee is simple as well as scientific in con• strut:eon---a woman or girl can operate the machine in their leisure moments. t'ou pay us no cash until after heed harvest. Send tis your name and address art a post card today. We ca'r supply sou quiekly front bur -distributi;u warehouses At i'alymry, Bran. don, Iteeena, IVinniptcii, New Westminster, li.(.,M:tutroal, Halifax. Chatham. Address till eorre, tondenco to Chatham. 311 "theManson Campbell Co., mind Dept, 33, CHATHAM, CANADA Faeterice at C 11ATI Ard, OM, and TFrnolr. Lei us quote you prices on a daod Fannlnd Mill or good Farm Scale. • . there is any grass, we feed usually two owner of the wino aocepte,d stock is tun pay - Mains of the famous HUDSON BAY MINES AND PROPFRTI1e8. The company will commence work at the mines by April 1st. This stook mill' ghostly be drawn from the onarkoet. For prospectus and apm1lcatlona for stock ed,dfress THB GORDON COBALT SILVER MINING Suite 40-41,0OMPAN344 Victoria street, onto. W.A. Marsb, President. Jno. F. Lennox, Secretary. Possible Explanation. "This man seems to be 'half dead." said the hospital r,hysioian, and yet I can't find ,anything the matter with him. Where did you get him?" "At the street -car barna," replied the am- bulance driver, "lie was Radom from a srow'1ed car." "Ah. I sae," mused the M. D. "11. prob. ably pave his neat to at wore= and she said "'Munk von.' " HEALTH IN SPRING would reform and work if released from ' Riker's Island, where he was sent for three months for disorderly conduct, Jan- uary 27, John Donnelly, of New Rochelle, sent the following appeal to Magistrate preen yesterday: New Health -Giving Blood. 1), noble fudge, great, mighty judge, to you in verse I write: I ask for my prompt release—please help me in my fight. to January, at the bar, in far famed Yorkville Court, I was intoxicated and—I thought myself Spring is the season when your system needs toning up. In the spring you roust have new blood, just as the trees must have new sap. Nature demands it. Without new blood. you will feel weak and lan- guid; you may have twinges of rheu- a sport. rnatiarn or neuralgia, occasional head- WI'hile standing humbly, penitent, before aches, a variable appetite, pimples or you at the rail 1 eruptions of the akin, or a pale, pasty You. said that I was guilty and then sent `complexion. These are sure signs that rue oft to jail. t the blood is out of order. A tonic is 1 have to date, served balf my time and needed to give new energy, Dr. Williams? promise to repent, i link fills are the best tonic in all the If you will let me-niend my ways before world. They make new, rich, red blood the end of Lent. N. -your greatest need in spring. They 11t, if. j on du, I promise you that wills- 1 clear the skin, drive out disease and kiss, ales and beers lush e. fired, depressed men and wonem Will nut pollute my lips again, I vow, for bright, active and string. Mrs, Charles many year:g. ' Masson, Y amaehiehe, Que., proves the Fur i hate found at last that chat the great value of Dr, Williams' Pink Pills tunken use people say, in building u people who have become `, drunken lite, 0 mighty Judge, is life that doesn't pay. i weakened and rim down. She says: "In Come, open wide. your heart to me and the winter of 1005 I was very much run let me out of jail I down and lost flesh rapidly. My blood Ind i will promise that for years I'll was peer.. I suffered from indigestion, drink no more mixed ale. , Fet'er'e headaches and general debility. In t)o pay attention to these words, so this ondition T decided to give Dr. Wil- hutuLly writ lir rhyme, t Hams,Pink Pills a trial, and thanks to And if your heart no pity takes—I'11 . ibis valuable ntediciuo I am again enjoy - have to serve my time. i ing perfect health," :Magistrate Breen said that a manwho I Dr, Williams' Pink Pills, euro alt the wrote such poetry ought to get a chane° ailments clue to poor blood or shattered to reform, ant he ordered his !nerves. That is why they cure anaemia, probation - try officer to go over to the Island to. rheumatism, neuralgia, kidney trouble, lay with an order for Donuellly'a re- , indigestion and secret ailments of women 'ease, —N. T. Herald,t and girls. Cold by medicine dealers or 1 by nmil at 50 cents a box or six boxes To Prevent Seasickness, for $2.50, from the Dr. Williams Medi- :accordingeine Co,, Brockville, Ont. to German papers forward- - -e. • • el to Consul General Guenther, of Frank- The Inevitable, fart, Mr. Otto Schli;'k, of Hamburg, has Porkand (n£ Chicago, showing friends invented an appliance which redttces the his new residence)—Now ,what do you coiling of shills se it . lie calls think of thea fora hooey Quintly din - '1 sthif isel' (ship top.) It is ing room I I guess them Astor -Astor stated that if iti per ante, toos itwill hotels ain't got nothing on that, eht prove of great importance, not only that , Friend (from New York)—I should but the wonitl be done away with, say note By -the -way, you haven't but the eftieleney of warships would be shown me the library 7 would betly rtvastly'lincreAs asel 'Mue ch inter- 1„„1, ork.'rnd Lib'ry? , +Wake up, wake est appears to be manifested in this in. ' t \\ lir+ Carnegie s made ens Eo ventiun in rhipimilding circles. this : ,cartoon, till the best families ere eut- tin,, em matt --•Puck. in - Recently large shipments with thus .w...,.. "top" took plitee at the works of the 1Taurbur;g•Americirn line, in the harbor of Hamburg, before a company of inter- sated 1+,,song. Tr:tn fire old torpedo boat Saabaci. a ship tt•p bad been build amid- t slaps. 'able tap bus turbine piddle; awl is so eon't(rneted that it can snake simul- tat:eine:1y rotating and pendulous no- tions. By the combined motion the roll- ing of the ship le to be u verted. The ap- paretus was set in notion by steam power, malting 17,.n(X) rorulution mitt - lite, and the result is said to Mine been such as to justify the belief that it would aceom.lielr what is claimed for' it. chronic With HIM. Attorney for the Defense --]lave you over been eress•eramined before? The \Vitness•--Have It I'rn a married Man.—Life.