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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 21 May 1914, p. 7

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ar - g t K- - i £ * -X > I 7; I "f ; If you would* W healthy, strong add j>py. Baths kèep i the skin ; ' dean and in good conditjShi Bdt what abotit the inside of the Dodyt You can no more afford to neglect it than the outside. It is just as important important that the system be cleansed of the poisonous impurities- caused by weakness of the digestive organs ( or by inactivity of the liver. Golden. (In Tablet.or Liquid Form) ' deanaea the system--end more. It puts the liver in such a condition of heluhthS it parS^Tthe blood-a5 it should.' It helps the stomach digest food so &at it makes good blood--rich, red blood to nourish and SïïfôtiS^rSSS-M. tonic, ro^rifyi-F » <£*** a bottle or a box of tablets from your medicine dealer--or send 50c for a trial box. Address as below rV. JUNOL^ KING'S FIENDISH RÉVÉNGE | FREE -, rTV. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Dr. \ PRICES OF FARM PRODUCTS BEFOBTS PBOM THE lEAMfO TBIOE CEVTXES OP AMBHIOA. lb-: 18c; Prices of Cattle,' Grain. Cheese and Other Produce at Home and Abroad. Breads tuffs. Toronto, May 1?.-- Flou r--On tar lo wheat, flours, 90 per qent, $3.80 to $3.85, seaboard, and at 11.85 to Toronto. Manitoba--First patents, in jute bags, $5.60; do., ieconds, $5.10, strong bakers-*, in Jute paga, $4. Manitoba wheat--Bay ports--No. l Northern. 98|c, and No. 2 at 94Jc. • Ontario wheat--No. 2 quoted at $1.0» to 41.04, outside, and $1.06, on track, " I ' < Oats--No. 2 - Ontario oats, 3$i to 40c, outside, and at 42c, on track, Toronto. "Western Canada oats, 42c for No. 2, ana at 401o for No. 3,. Bay ports. Peas-;--$1 to $1.05. outside. Barley--Good malting barley, 5$ to 68c, according to quality.,-- • Rye--No. 2 at 63 to 64tv outside. Buckwheat--80c, outside. Corn--No. 3 American, 75c, all-rail, T °Bran--Manitoba bran, $25 to $26 a ton, in bags, Toronto freight Shorts, $26 to $28. Country Produce. Butter--Choice dairy, 18 to 20c; inferior, inferior, 16 to 163c; farmers' separator -prints, 21 to 22c; creamery Prints, fresh, 24 to 25c; do., storage prints, 28 to 24c, solids, storage, 21 to 22c. Eggs--21 to 22c per dozen, Honey--Extracted, in tins, 101 to 11c per--lb. 'Combs. $2.25 to $2.50 per dozen dozen for No. 1. and $2 for No. 2. Cheese--New cheese, 141 to 15e large." and 15 to 151c for twins. in case for Beans--Hand-picked, $2.15 to^ $2.20 per bushel; primes,■ $2.10 to $2.Id. Poultry--Fowl, 16 to 18c per chickens, 19 to 20c; ducks, 17 ta geese, 15 to 16c; turkeys, 20 to 23a Potatoes--Datawares, $1.20 to $l.zo. on track, here, and Ontarios at $l.iu per bag. on track. Provisions. Bacon, long clear, 16 to 16c per lb. in case lots. Hams--Medium, 18 to I81c; do., heavy, 17 to 18c4 rolls, 15 to 161c. breakfast bacon, 18 to 19c; backs, 22 to 24c Lard-- Tierces, 123c; tubs, 13c; pails, 133c. Baled Hay and Straw. Baled hay--No. 1 at $14.60 to $15 a ton on track here;; No. 2 quoted at $1» to $13.25, and clover at $10 to $11. Baled straw--Car lots. $8.26 to $8-60, on track, Toronto. Seeds. Wholesale seed merchants are selling recleanéd seeds to the "trade, on the 100- lb. basis ;--Red clover, No. 1, $19 to $21; do.. No. 2. $17 to $17.60; alslke. No. 1. $20J 50 to $21; do., No. 2, $17 to $18; Timothy, No. 1, $8.50 to $9• d°., No. 2, $7 to $7.26; alfalfa, No. 1, $14 to $16, do., No. 2, $13 to $13.50. Winnipeg Grain. Winnipeg, May 19.--^Cash:--Wheat- No. 1 Northern, 94c; No 2. Northern, 923c; No. 3 Northern, 90gc; No. 4, 87c, No. 5, 793c; No. 6, 743c; feed, 69iç; No. 1 rejected seeds, 893c; No. 2 rejected seeds, 873'c; No. 3 rejected seeds, 853c, No. 1 smiitty, 893c; No. 2 smutty, .873c; No. 3 smutty, S51c; No. 1 red Winter, 943c; No. 2 red Winter, 923c; No. 3 red Winter, 90Jc. Oats--No. 2 C.W., 873c; No. 3 C.W., 363c; No. 1 feed, 351c; No. 2 feed. 36c. Barley--No. 3, 48c; No. «. 47c; rejected, 44c; feed, 433c. Flax- No. 1 N.-W.C., $1.36; No. 2 C.W., $1.33; No. 3 C.W., $1.23. Montreal Markets. FRECKLE-PACE Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots. How to Remove Easily. Here's a chance, Miss Freckle-face, to try it remedy for freckles with the guarantee guarantee of a reliable dealer that it will not cost yon a penny unless it removes the freckles ; while if it does give you a clear complexion the expense is trifling. Simply get .An ounce of othine -- double strength from any druggist and a few applications should show ypu. how- easy, it is to" rid yourself of the homely freckles freckles and gét a beautiful complexion Rarely is more than one ounce needed for the worst cast. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength, othiue as this it the prescription prescription sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. ' 2 Cook's Cottoa Root Compound. A safe, reliable regulating medicine. Sold in three de- " grees of strength--No. 1, $1; No. 2, $3; No. 3, *5 per box. Sold by all druggists, or sent prepaid on receipt of price. Free pamphlet. Address : THE COOK MEDICINE CO.T T0H0MT0. ONT. (Ftrstrif Winds».'.) R ATËNTS I ■ PROMPTLY SECURED! In all countries. 'Ask for our INVENTOR'S INVENTOR'S ADVISER,which will be sent free. MARION & MARION. 364 University Montréal. OVER 66 YEARS* EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights 4c. SUIOIIT luuerum unr opuuoD iree l invention If probably patentable. G tlons etrictiy confidential. HANDBOOK on Patente ■eut free. Oldest agency for seoorlngpatenta. Patente taken through Bunn A Co. receive tpedal notice, without charge, In the . / StiqtifK Hmertom. i A handsomely 111 nacra ted weekly. Largest clr- S latlon of any eclentlflc journal. Terms for aada, $3.76 a year, postage prepaid. Sold by aawedealtra. ; MUNN & Co** s8r --New York Branch OffloeTCB P SL, Washington. |£c. Montreal, May 19.--Corn--American No. 2 yellow, 76 to 763c. Oats---Canadian Oats---Canadian Western, No. 2, 43 to 433c; do., No. 3, 42 to 42|c, Barley--Manitoba feed, 50 to 51c. Flour--Manitoba Spring wheat patenta, firsts, $6.60; do., seconds, _$5.10; strong bakers', $4.90; Winter patents, choice, $5.25 to $5.50; sfraigKt* rollers,~ $4".70 to $4.90; do., "in bags, $2.20 to $2.85. Rolled pats--Barrels, pats--Barrels, $4.50 to $4.56; beg of 90 lbs.;- $2.121 to $2.16. Millfeed--Bran, $23. shorts, 325; middlings, $28; moullMe, $28 to $32. Hay--No. 2, per ton, car lots. $14 to $15.60. Cheese--Finest westerns, 123 to 123c; do.i easterns, 113 to 12|c. Butter--Choicest creamery, 23 to 233c: seconds, 22 to ?.2ic. - Eggs--Fresh, 2i to 24c; selected, 26 to 27c; No. 1 stock 28c; No. 2, do., 21 to 22c. Potatoes-^Per bag, car lots, $1.05 to $1.20.. United States Markets. Minneapolis, Minn, May 19.--Wheat-- pMay, 903c; July, 903c; No. 1 hard, 951c; No. 1 'Northern, 92Jc to 94»c; No. & Northern, 921c. Corn--No. 3 yellow, 663 to 67c. Oats--No. 3 white, 371 to 38c. Flour and bran, unchanged. Duluth, Minn., May 19.--Wheat--No. 1 hard, 843c; No. 1 Northern,\ 93gc; No. 2 Northern, 92|c; July, 931 to 933c. Lin- seed closed, celsIi,i $ 1.66 i i July, $1.571. Live Stock Markets. Toronto, May 19.--Cattle--Chpice butchers, $7.90_-to $8.35; good, $7.90 to $8.25; common cows, $5 to $6.26; can- ners and cutters, $3.60 to $4; choice fat cows, $6.50 to $7.25; choice bulls, $7 to $7.60. Calves--Good veal, $8.76 to $10; common, common, $4.76.to $7. Stockers and feeders---Steers, 800 to 900 pounds, $7.25 to $7.50j good quality, quality, ZOO to 800 pouhds, $7 to $7.60; light, $6.25 to $7.26. * Sheep and lambs--Light ewes, $6.60 to $7; heavy, $5.7,5 to $6.25; bucks, $5.76 -to $8.25; Spring lambs, each, $6 to $10; yearling lambs, $9 to $9.60, but with 75c per head deducted for all the buck lambs. Hogs---$8.40, fed and watered; $8.60, off cars; $8, f.o.b. Montreal, May 19.--Prime beeves, 75 to 83c; medium, 61 to 73c; milkmen's strippers', 5 to 7c; common, 43 to 51c. Cows, $35 to $80 each; calves, 3 to 7cr sheep, 61 to 8c; spring lambs, $4 to $6 each: hogs, 93c. * . \ , It is a Liver Pill.--Many of the ailments ailments which man has to contend with have their origin in a disordered . liver, which is a delicate organ, peculiarly susceptible susceptible to the disturbances that come from -irregular habits or lack of care in eating and drinking. This Accounts for the great many liver regulators now passed on the attention of sufferers. Of these there is none superior to Parme- lee's Vegetable Pills, Their, operation though gentle is effective, and the most delicate can use them For a fortnight we had been slowly slowly ascending the Nan-Qhan River in Indo-Ohisnfa, and now, on the fifteenth fifteenth day, having quitted this stream, our caravan began the laborious laborious ascent of Mount Pou-Hong, which we had to -cross before making making for the Chinese frontier,^ says a "writer in the Wide World Magazine. The mission on which I was engaged engaged threatened to prolong itself much beyond the time anticipated.- The rivers, swollen by recent heavy storms, .retarded our progress, and the slopes of the Pou-Hong Mountains Mountains were intersected by deep crevasses crevasses which it was impossible to cross by the usual means of felled trees on account of our horses. We were forced, therefore, to spend whole daj's in going -around the precipices, these erratic zigzags dobling or trebling the length of our journey. Some of the crevasses crevasses were veritable abysses, the depth of which no eye could fathom. Often in their depths, concealed by luxuriant vegetation, mighty torrents torrents rushed along, precipitating themselves in cascade after cascade toward the valley. During the day the silence was unbroken, save for the calls of the guide and the piercing criés of monkeys monkeys chasing each other from branch to branch. At night, however, however, life violent and intense awoke our camp ; all the animals in creation creation seemed to have a rendezvous there to disturb our rest. We had to protect ourselves against tigers by lighting" huge fires, for so numerous numerous are they in this district that no native ever ventures to go near it alone. The temerity of these brutes is so great that they will sometimes come and carry off a man from the midst of his sleeping companions. The negligence of a sentinel in letting the fires get low for an instant has often caused the death of travellers. They have disappeared, disappeared, and no one has even seen the man-eater carry off his- prey. One night, when I was in a pro found sleep after a hard day's march, I was awakened by a most terrific chorus of roars. 'All the OWN BACKS THIS LAXATIVE /If you pnly khéW-^^rnuçh as We and those who have used thehi do about Rexall Orderlies, you would be as* enthusiastic about recommënding themasweare. They taste just like candy and act so easily and pleasantly that taking them is a pleasure. Rexall Orderlies have a splendid tonic, cleansing and strengthening effect upon the bowels. They help free the system and. keep it free from the. ailments that result from'irrègular or inactive bowels. They do "this quietly, without griping, nausea, purging purging or excessive -looseness. In a short time they usually make unnecessary the continued continued use of physics. We .don't ask you to take our word for this. We want you to make us prove it, and at no cost to you. Buy a box of Rexall Orderlies. If not thoroughly satisfied, tell us, and we will return your money without question. In vest pocket tin boxes; 10c, 25c, 50c. -You can buy Rexall Orderlies only at The only at J Rexall Stores, and in this town only of us. JURY & LOVELL, The Rexall Store, B0WMA1S VILLE were human remains -- fleshless heads, mangled arms and legs. She reds of clothing" and bemired shoes still clung to the ghastly relics which the satiated beasts had regretfully regretfully abandoned. Ravens and vultures--come to take their share of the feast after the departure of the tigers--rose and flapped heavily away at our approach, and, after circling around for some moments, perched on neighboring trees, loudly loudly croaking their protests at our inopportune arrival. My attention was next drawn to the singular attitude of some of the bodies, which the beasts had apparently apparently not been able to tear .away from the tree trunks against which they leaned. We soon discovered discovered why this was--the wretched men had been tied there and had been devoured aïs they stood, without without the ropes by which they were bound having given away ! On other trees I saw more ropes hanging, covered " with blood. At one place there was a veritable mound of human remains, as if the tigers, gorged to repletion, had stacked them there for future orgies. When I had pulled myself together together somewhat I sent to the camp for spades and picks to dig a trench in which to bury these sad remains Just to pass away the time waiting I counted the trees whose bark bore the tell-tale blood smear tigers in the forest must be attack-J There were fifty-six ! Fifty-six poor ! <r Detectives, Employed. The manager of a detective agency agency recently established in the Belgian Belgian university town of Louvain sent a circular letter to the parents of a number of students offering to send them monthly reports of the behavior of their sons for a small fixed fee. The students heard of this, and several hundred of them marched to the offices of the detective detective agency and broke all the windows. windows. They, then made à démonstration démonstration at the house of the vice- rector of the university, who had approved of the scheme of monthly reports. „ The students- .state that they will not cease their protects until the vice-rector has resigned. mg our camp, I thought, and rushed out- of my tent, fearing to -find the 'guards asleep and the fires quenched . Happily my fears were false. A bright circle of flame girdled the camp, and it was ihi- possible for our tawny foes to approach approach us without being seen. Reassured, 1 stretched myself on my mat again, and was just about .to drop off into the slumber which had been so ruthlessly interrupted by the uproar, when one of the sentinels sentinels came up. "Captain," he said, "I can distinguish distinguish human cries amid the roaring- roaring- of the tigers. I am certain that not. ver£ far away there are men ■whom those tigers are preparing to devour." - I listened and very soon satisfied myself that the man had not been mistaken. I at once sent for the chief of the native militiamen, who acted as my escort. £ 'We must go to the assistance of the unfortunate men whose cries of distress we hear," I said to him. '"'Tell your men to arm and provide half the porters with torches. . The other half must stay and guard-the camp in our absence." "Captain," he replied, "it would be folly on our part to venture into those dense thickets. To judge by the roaring, the tigers are in great numbers. Ekcitéd by the smell of blood, they will spring on us before the fitful light of the torches allows of our seeing them and we shall lose many men and save no one. Listen Listen ! One no longer hears human cries. The poor unfortunates must have perislhied by now." At 5 o'clock in the morning I started off with a dozen well-armed men, one of the soldiers, a native of this part of the country, acting as guide. We headed in the direction whence the cries had come, but so difficult was the going through thickets and briars that it took us nearly, an hour to cover 500 yards. Then at last we came out into a clearing, where a_ most. terrifying spectacle iriet our gaze. Even my men recoiled in horror, and they belonged to a race whose impassivity impassivity is not easily shaken. Never before bad our eyes beheld such a shambles. The ground, reddened reddened with blood j was soft and wet, and there had been no rain for two months. Here and there lay great pools of blood which the earth had hoti yet absorbed. Everywhere J. L. Haddock tit McGee,' Mo., writes: "I Id muscular rheumatism six weeks. Had iree doctor*, but did bot get much relléf. , A lend Insisted on me trying B. R. B. and sent two bottle». In^twenty minute» after the t application. I could turn In bed with. ease, ire used two bottle's- and am well." "Apply the Belief externally to the part or 'rts affected, as briskly as circumstances will •MSWiféaiSW'SB Marly suited to thi» disease. Where the its are swelled, stiff or contracted, the Be*, witb aweet ott, 1» An admirable lubricant, BAD WAY * CO.. Montreal, Can. As Susie Saw It. " Caller--Will you -seé if your sister sister is in 1 Susie--Yes, sir, but I don't think she will be. She saw you coming up the steps. He Had Enough. Counsel--I'm sorry I couldn't do more for you. Convicted Client--Don't mention it, guy-ndr, aini't v -five years enoughV " '• the efficacy of this thoroughly tried home remedy is never misplaced: In every way--in health, strength, spirits spirits smd in looks--women find them- • selves better after timely use of 1 PILLS M3 ererywhere. "la kexw, 25 < creatures had met their * death in this awful way, then, during the night. It was utterly unable to. fathom the meaning of what exactly had taken place in this clearing and I began to think I should nevér solve the mystery when suddenly it was revealed in the most unexpected way. After having dug a trench my men buried ;< therein what» the tigers had left ei. fhëir wretched victims. Toward the ' end of this dreadful task they discovered to their astonishment a body almost intact at the bottom of the mound. The hands only were missing but they did not appear to have been taken of by the teeth of a tiger ; the wounds were too even to have been done with anything but a sharp instrument. instrument. In all likelihood this body had been brought here by a tiger, which, at the moment of beginning to devour devour it, had, for. some unknown reason, abandoned it. All sorts of debris was then piled up on the"poor unfortunate, and this served as a protection against the voracity of the wild beasts. "Captain," cried my head man, when he had succeeded in extricating extricating the body from the dreadful remains remains that covered it, "this unfortunate unfortunate man is not dead ; I am sure of it!" ' Indeed, as I speedily ascertained, the heart of the native was still beating. I hastened to let a few drops of brandy trickle into his mouth, and this soon brought him back to consciousness. Presently his lids lifted and he looked at us in terror. "Don't be frightened," I said to him. "You are among people who will do you no hurt. My men are going to carry you to my camp, where we will dress your wounds. When you are better you will be at liberty to remain with us or rejoin your people, wherever they are." After he had recovered somewhat from his weakness, he gave me an explanation of the tragedy of the forest. Here is the tale he told, and a more terrible one I never heard. You :have, doubtless, heard of the War which _broke out between Prince Ong Keo and Prince Quanh Teu after the death of their father,' the King of Xong Det. This monarch monarch had chosen his second son, Quânh Teu, As his successor, to the detrim& n t of his eldest son, Ong Kecnig. ". Feeble with age, the king bad .noib been able to withstand the pleadings of Quanh Tea's mother, ahd during -hie lifetime he had this son prctclaiimeti king of Xong Dét. When the old king was dead-- poisoned, ' some said, by the mother of Quahh Teu, who was impatient to see her son on the throne--Prince Ong Keo refused to recognize his brother's authority. He armed bis adherents, who were- numerous, and, after a number of smaller successes successes , came and besieged Quanh Teu in hi 8 'capited* Hie success here . .seemed assured, when/ through the treachery, of ôné of his lieutenaoits, he fell into^s, toiothcr;' s. rands. This catastrophe "so terrified Ong/Keo's army that, instead "^^continuing v the struggle tovo Yhëiir chief, they dispersed in' the space .of a few -days. Quanh Téu/wHd" had believed himself lost, took a cruel revenge. He hadiall jhc'to who had taken up arms against him sought out and" beheaded, with the exception exception of those chiefs who were notoriously notoriously devoted to his brother ; these he reserved for an even "worse fate. The very refinement of torture was inflicted on Prince Ong Keo-- and you know how fertile is the imagination of the people of our country when it comes to inventing torments ! f When his body was nothing more than one great wound, he was im^ paled, in the presence of those " who had sustained him in his revolt, and his mangled ^corpse was finally thrown to starving dogs in a neigh-, boring shed. A strong ^soort then conducted us who remained toward this forest of Danghoa ; it is particularly particularly dreaded on account of the number and ferocity of the tigers it harbors. After some days' march we halted in the clearing where you found me among all that remained of those who were my companions in arms. Here we were brought up, one by one, to a block, and the executioner executioner cut off our bands, so as to render our flight impossible. Then each of us was securely lashed to a tree, and the escort set off on its return journey to Xong Det. Before Before they went, however, they laid a trail of our severed hands, the better better to attract the tigers to us. It was about noon when we were thus abandoned by those who carried carried out the orders of the fiendish Quanh Teu. The afternoon passed. We suffered agonies from our mutilated mutilated arms. During the first hours no one 'murmured, but with the passing time one heard moans, then cries, then shrieks, then here and there a death rattle. When night fell the tigers had already already scented us, and we could hear them prowling close by. The crashing crashing of branches and undergrowth told us that the circle of ferocious man-eaters was closing in upon -tis. When it became quite dark we saw the eyes of the beasts gleaming from the thickets*, impatient to hurl themselves on their prey. But the strange scene evidently astonished and f rightened them ; they daréd not venture into the clearing, fear ing a trap. They seemed to encourage encourage one another to advance by terrible terrible roars, which froze iis with terror^ terror^ but still they did not come. I forgot even the pain of my wounds as I momentarily anticipated feeling the claws of the awful brutes which growled behind me sink into my flesh. It was a refinement of cruelty, cruelty, of which, perhaps, King Quanh Teü had mot thought. "Had he known, however, it would have filled filled him with content. This dreadful agony of mind and body, from which there was no chance of escape, ended in overthrowing overthrowing the reason of the weaker ones among us. The prolonged terror terror drove several men mad, and they began to imitate the roaring of the tigers; they howled so herribly that the wild beasts, disquieted, became became silent for some'moments, and seemed to withdraw from us. But it was only a short- reprieve. Very soon they returned ; and, this time grown bolder, they came into the. clearing. One of them, more daring than the rest, suddenly bounded on to one of my comrades who was nearest to him. It was the signal for the beginning of the carnage. carnage. With ferocious howls thé tigers sprang on the victims who were thus offered to their voracity, and my bdmrades' criés of suffering were speedily silenced. - Almost immediately immediately I lost consciousness, overcome by a blow from the powerful powerful paw of a great brute I vaguely saw springing at me. From that moment I remembered nothing more. In truth, the unfortunate man bore on his head and chest deep marks of the claws that had lacerated lacerated him. It seems probable that the tiger, succeeding in biting through the cords which bound the man, had carried him 'to the centre of the clearing,- where we found him ; then, perhaps--some .more enticing bait lured the beast away, and it forgot forgot the prey it had been about to devour.. The native's wounds were terrible/but terrible/but none of them appeared to be mortal." For twp or three days I had every hope of saving him, but, unhappily, he was so weakened by loss of blood that, despite all my care, he died on the fifth day. I hurried his burial in order t-liat we might get out of this horrible forest, which had become dangerous dangerous even to us. Every night we knew that tigers prowled round the camp thirsting again for the human blood they had been drenched in. Sometimes, by the sudden flare of a dry branch thrown on a- smouldering.fire, smouldering.fire, the sentinels would see the TWO WOMEN SAVED FROM OPERATIONS By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound--Their Own Stories HereTdd. In conversation recently with the representative in India of a leading leading London publishing house it was mentioned that India, and especially especially the province of Bengal in northeastern northeastern India, in which Calcutta is located, affords an important market market for educational text books. The more ambitious and intelligent intelligent young people in India evince a great thirst for education, as the principal .means" of rising superior to their environment and impryve- ing their conditions in life, so that every possible sacrifice is made to get an education. . There is a special special desire in India for employment in government positions, as such positions give fixed income and have'special advantages. English education is considered essential for those who wish to have the best success, and a large proportion 1 of the text hooks are in the English language, although many of the more rudimentary books are translated translated into native languages. The most" elementary schools for natives «in India begin their instruction instruction in vernaeûlar languages and then teach English later On, and finally considerable instruction in many courses may be given in the English language from English c textbooks, and in higher education most of the courses may be given from English textbooks. In some instances, instruction in English is given at the very start. Among the young people in the Province of Bengal, where there is bv far the 4 ffr} Edmonton, Alberta,.Can. --' 1 1 think it is no more than right for me to thank you for what your kind'advice and Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound have done for me. "When I wrote to you some time ago I was a very sick woman suffering from female troubles. I had organic inflammation inflammation and could not stand or walk any distance. At last I was confined to my bed, and the doctor said I would have to go through an operation, but this I - refused to do. A friend advised Lÿdia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and now, after using three bottles of it, I feel like a new woman. I most heartily -recommend your medicine to all women who suffer with female troubles. I have also" taken Lydia È. J Pinkham's Liver Pills, arid think they^are fine. I will nevér he without the medicine in the house. ' '--Mrs. Frank Emsley, 908 Columbia Columbia Ayenue, Edmonton, Alberta. The Other Case. Beatrice, Neb.--"Just after my marriage marriage my left side began to pain me and the pain got so severe at times that 1 suffered térribly with it. I visited three doctors and each one wanted to operate on me but 1 would not consent to an operation. operation. I heard of the good.Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was doing for others and, I used several bottles" bottles" of it With the result that I haven't been botheréd with my side since then. I am in good health and I have two little girls."--Mrs. R. B. Child,Beatrice, N eb. by European "commercial houses, such as are concentrated at Calcutta-, Calcutta-, there is an especially keen demand demand for education from English textbooks. No other city in India contains anything like the nifmber of fairly well-educated- English speaking native -clerks, typists, etc., as are in Calcutta. • --:-- -- He Admitted It. This is a fine time of the night to be coming home." "You can't start an argument with me that way, my dear. I agree with you." Crimsonbeak--I see by the paper that automatic cafes are to be established established at Sydney, Australia. What's an automatic cafe ? Ybasfc-- Why, I guess it's one that throws a man out when he's had enough. . great brutes, surprised by the sud- largesfc " opportunity of employment den brilliance, bound away and dis- V^mmpmial hmises. appear in the thickets. One night two of our horses, maddened with fear at the smell of the tigers, broke-, their hobbles and took to flight. The poor animals did not get far before the man-eaters were hot on their heels, and soon terrible roarings told us of the death of our poor steeds. All that night the ferocious beasts made a frightful uproar, and we had to keep constant watch over our remaining horses, whose instinct instinct seemed to tell them the fate of their companions. Under the influence influence of terror these animals, usually so docile, seeme^d no longer to recognize their masters, and tried madly to break their ropes and fly the danger which they thought menaced menaced them. All of us had to remain on the qui vive until dawn broke. With the first rays of the sun the uproar ceased, and we were at last able to takè a few hours' well-earned repose. repose. Even our departure did not rid us of these disquieting neighbors. The tigers followed my caravan all the time we travelled through the forest of Danghoa. . Our sleep was constantly broken by their howling and roaring; and I was constrained to watch the fires my sell during part of each night, fearing .that some negligence on the p&rb of a guard might cost us our lives. This tiger- hunt--with the roles reversed--only ceased on the day; when we were able to put the obàt&clë of a large river between our pursuers and ourselvés. Although it is not an unusual unusual thing to see tigers swim a ri ver, they did not venture, into unknown unknown country this time. Proba- 5 bly hunger was not pressing them sufficiently/ and they,, no doubt, returned returned to that gruesome clearing in the forest which recalled to them a memorable feast. ..------*---;--- . Will Have Many Reminders. He (in their new home)---Do you know, I can hardly Believe'that we are really arid truly married. She--Glance over these . bills, dear, and you'll have no doubt whatever. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. ** Must Bear Signature of See Fee-Simile Wrapper Below. The setting hen may be. a loafer, but she delivers : the goods.: • I Very..emAll. oi»( easy tetake u eegaxv irai headache. FOR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIOUSNESS, FOR* TtfRWD LIVEN. FOR CONSTIPATION FORttLttWSKilL for vwrtnnmni win navi eiexATWM.' I^j nramr^rmrep-- CURE SICK MBADAGHS*

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