ses that begin wi wit) ion--al)l Catarrngy u | resulty of ine o us debility Liquo, ; 3) 2 " accomplishing "hat pec 4 trig c. Bottle Fre a Liguozone, aad Ye will » to eonvince tial fon 1quozone is," ol In Justice to yourgy fo ay, for it places 4 igation whatevey, = 000 Un e cosis SOc. up 81. OUT THIS Cogpge™ 8_.offer ma Fill out "the Diag and e Liquiq () 4 Wabash Ave. Chica { . never tried 'Ligue Liquified tone. mi Supply me 5 50€. 'Bot it I take it. "ly ill address--write plainly was formerly knowp § . 3 n ey's Liquified Ozene te a CORSET EARS= + No. 468 woman's figure, rfect nature has rset is wrong the st of what nature eara D. & A. el' with the long ines will make t, while it will est service and $ sell them from ir. Or you can CORSET MPANY 0 MONTREAL OA \L, AND STILL THE BI orld is fario. n these ear by special re -and d, are es and s aged r, be- ry of 'dyspepsia began. food the time before _. . Strength, courage and endurance are the characteristics of the pioneers of any country. The - reason for this is 'that pa as all they could get until advancing civilization arrived with all its unnatural foods and methods of eating, and introduced dys- pepsia, weak muscles, defective teeth, mental debility, and inflammatory diseases. Your brain, bone, muscle and flesh are built of the food, you eat, and: your health depends on whether the food you eat contains the nourishment for each of these elements in the proper proportions. Ith theif regular diet. turally organized food was EAT BISCUIT .., TRISCUIT The Natural Foods you get every 'element of which the body is com= posed. Its' light, porous nature aids digestion by permitting the saliva and gastric juices to penetrate at once to every morsel; while in white flour bread each morsel forms 'a doughy mass and only the outer surface gets the effect of the digestive juices, the balance remaining in a fermented condition ir the stomach. Trisouit makes ideal toast--it islight, whole= some and ctisp. Make Triscuit your daily bread, Shredded [Wheat Biscuit with milk or cream Send for "The Vital Questuon Cook Book® free The Natural Food Company, Toronto, Canada 4] And what can be the use of him is more than I can admirgbly adapted to tho Wants of infants." Sir Citas. A. CAMERON, C.B., M.D. Drofessor of Chemistry, R.C.S.1., Lx-President o the, Royal College of popes For Infants, Invalids, And The Aged. GOLD MEDAL, WOMANS EXHIBITION, London; 1800. DR. BARNARDO says :-- ** We have already used Neave's I'ood in two &f our Homes (Babies' Casile and the Home), and I have no hesitation in shying it has proved very sati factory. "- July 27th, 1901. Russian Imperial N sery. Manuficturers :- JOSIATL R. NEAVE & CO Fordingbridge, England Wholesale Agents: --~THE LYMAN BROS. ~ & Oo,, Ltd., Toronto and Montreal. "IN BIGELLENT FOOD, | IN THE STEERAGE, - Awful Brutality Shown Helpless Passengers. Frank Leslie's Monthly. An incident 'of exceptional brutality and one which showed very conclusive ly the meekness with which the emi- 'grant submits to such treatment, fear- ang -it will affect lis chances for being landed, occurred after dinner this day. group from Potenza, in, which we had some friends, hud all been very seasick, but were recovering and just beginning to eat and "regain thir strength. Their dinner was fresh and hot in their pan, they having been amoug the last to be given their por- tion, and they hastened into the lee of the last hatch aft on the forward dock, and sat down to enjoy it. On the hatch, was a young sailor, who had a besoa., and was sweeping the refuse and filth off the hatch 'cover. .\lready a pile of répulsive dinner leavings was gathered on the hatch not three feet from the heads of the Potenza group. | 'He paused in his work and noticed that they were just beginning their dinner, and in brutal sport gave a grand sweep with his broém to the heaped-up re fuse, which landed it all over the un- warned circle, half filled their dinner pans and completely ruined their meal. The sailor stood leaning on his besom laughing at his clever trick. Not a word did the poor devils say,but quiet- ly rose, poured their spoiled dinner over the rail, cleaned off their elothes as well as they could, and waited till supper to appease their hunger. It was only the next day that a Greek, who had been long enough in the States to become a citizen and to know his individual rights, gave a sailor a severe beating lor Jostling the Creek's wife. He disabled the German in just three blows. -- A man may feel as voung at forty as he did at twenty, but he knows he doesn't know half as much. separable. and Ceylon TEAS are ine connected with "the finest téa the world produces." A half pound will soon prove why everybody likes + LIPTON'S TEA or Name always © Wy Shadow [sy I have a little #hadow that goes in and out with me, very Hike Ra from the eels up to the head; And 1 see him jump before me, when I jump into - The funniest thing about him is the way likes to . , TOW -- Net all lke Soper children, which is ways very slow: : For he sometivies" shoots up taller, like India-rubber ball, And he sometimes gets so little that there's none of him at all. He hasn't got a notion of how children t to play, And ous only make a fool of me in every sort of way. : lle stays so close beside me; he's a cow- ard, vou can see; I'd think shame to stick to nursie, as that shadow sticks to me! One morning, very early, before the sun was up, I rose and found the shining dew on every butter-cup: But my lazy little shadow, like an ar- rant sleepy head, Ilad stayed at home behind me, and was fast asleep in bed. --Robert Louis Stevenson. Carl And The Earthworms. * Carl's hands were dirty, Carl's face was dirty, Carl's finger-nails were black at the ends, Carl's clothes were soiled, Carl's hair was not brushed, and his head looked like an old chest- nut burr. Carl could not tell if he had had a hath and 1 do not believe that he had more than three in three years in which he had been able to walk alone. But when he, went to the kindergarten a gentlewonlan took off his soiled clothes, put him in a tub of clean water, and with clean, soap and towels, made+ him look almost like a cherub. When he was dressed in fresh clean clothes, he felt as-if he could never be dirty again, and he was so happy that when he went out to play, he wanted everybody and everything happy too. In the garden he found an earthworm, and by dig- ging, he found as many as he had fingers, and he ran for a wash-basin, oe warm water, and before the gentlewoman knew what he was do- ing, he had them all washed and was vainly trying to hang them on the fence to dry, for, said he, "Poor dirty things, they want to be clean for once in their lives." But they did not want to hang on the fence, and they did want to get. back into the cool, dark earth, When he understood that that would make them happy, Carl put them back and heard, with great surprise, tnat they had much work to do under the ground, ploughing and boring the whole earth, making it soft and loose about the littlesseeds, so they can grow, the earth needing as many of these little living ploughs as there are seeds. . Now when Carl dips up an earth- worm, he puts it back in great haste, saying, "Go back to your work, little earth-worm, you are good to my flow- er seeds, and I will be good to you." Helping Mamma. Hey. little laddie ! Whither away, You and your barrow, on 'this merry ay *? What is your freight and where does it 0 And where does it come from, I'd like to know ? '" Well, we are busy, mamma and I, Making the garden; and if I try, Guess I can help her, so she can see Just what a smart little son I can be." Now, in the family, the child sees the parents and other members of the family at work, producing something, doing something; the same he notices 'with adults generally in life and in those uctive interests with which his family is concerned. Consequently the child, at this stage, would like him- self to represent what he sees. He would like to represent--and tries to do so=all he sees his parents and other adults do and represent in work all which he thus sees represented by human power add human skill. What formerly the child did only for the sake of the activity, the boy now does for the sake of the result or pro- duct of his activity; the child's in- stinct of activity has in the boy be- come a formative instinct, and this »eupies the whole outward life, the cutward manifestation of boy-life at this period. How cheerfully and eagerly the boy and the girl at this age begin to share the work of father and mother-- ot the easy work, indeed, but the difficult work, calling for strength and lahor ! Be cautious, be careful and thought- ful. at this point, O parents! You can here at one blow destroy, at least for a long time, the instinct of form- ative activity in vour children. if vou repel their help as childish, useless, of little avail, or even as a hindrance. Do not let the urgenev of vour busi- ness tempt vou to sav, "Go away. vou only hinder me," or, "I am in a hurry, leave me alone." Boys and girls are thus disturbed in their inner activity, they see them. selves shut out from the whole with which" they felt themselves so intim- ately united: their inner power is aroused, but they see themselves alone, and do not know what to do with the aroused power; nav 'it be- comes a burden to them, and they be come fretful and indolent. help, he busied himself about every. thing: now that he knows somethine and is strong enough. he does not want to do anything ?"' Just so! In accordance with the nature: of the spiritual, principle work: ing in man, as 'vet unconscieuslv and unrecognized, the first utterances of the instinct of activit~ of the form- ative instinct, come without anv ef- fort on his part. and even acainst his will, as indeed happens to him evenin later life. Now, if this_ inner impulse] to formative activity in' man. particn- has been thus dis- hot consider why his was © at one time and rg another ime; | he chodees that which is more agreeable to his i- cal nature. He abstains Sis phe activity 'the more readily and willing- ly, because the will of his nts scemé to make it*his duty to do so. The child becomes indolent, i.e., spirit and lifé céase to animate his pliysical being; the latter becomes a mere body to him, which now he must carry as a burden; whereas, for- merly, the sense of power led him to feel his body, not as such, but as the mighty source of the power that fill- ed him. Therefore, 0 parents, if you wish your children to help vou, foster in them at an early period the instinct of activity, and especially the. formas] tive instinct of bovhood, even thought it "should involve sgme effort. some sacrifice, on your part. It will repay a hundred-fold, aa. Hoes good wheat lanted in good soil, P Strengthen and develop this in- stinet; give to your child the highest he now needs; permit him to add his power to your work---specially dear to him because it is yours--so that he may not only gain the consciousness of his power, but learn to appreciate its limitations.--From "Education of Man," paragraph forty-nine, by Froebel. Mister Frog came out of the pond one ay. And found himself in the rain Said he '* I'll get wet, and 1 may catch cold," So he jumped in the pond again those who are try- Here is help to ing to watch the development of Mister Frog in the home or school room. Arrange two or three aquaria (glass, earthenware, wood or iron may be used, but tin, lead, zine, gal- vanized iron, copper and other metals should be avoided, since they may poison the water and kill the tad- poles), as nearly as possible like the nd from which the eggs are taken. ave the water not more than two to four inches deep in the deepest part, and let the bottom slope up gradual ly to the surface at one end. This will enable the tadpoles to find any dopth of water they wish and afford a place for them to come out gradually to the air at the proper time. In fact, the bottom of the squarium may be made of sand, gravel, and moss- covered stones from a fairly clean pond. It is necessary also to have plenty of green algea and water plants, duckweed, stonewort, bladder- wort, milfoil, water cress, or the like, to oxygenate the water properly, fur- nish food and take up the exerctions of the growing tadpoles. If the ag- uarium is large cnough a water hya- cinth is an excellent plant to have growing in it for this purpose. If the tadpoles do not keep the water 'pir- Iron-ox Tablets a Well-Known Guelph Man of Catarrh of the Stomach. The Guelph Waterproof Cloth ing Co., Guelph, Ont. December 12, 1902. Through your Iron-ox Tablets I have received a great How years 1 was || my stomach. several f L : i E 3 § 0 E : tr] E iif ii £2 : wig B a. gf Eg g [ie 5 = 3 fx He lI § a 8, 2 was I two and I must say my stomach is fully rere th old-time ! Er . 2H i 7 i i . ill include Leslie M. After a third rebuff of this charac. that knows how I Sdulerence ill, ina re : ter, scarcelv any child will again pro- with my stomach knows the Shaw, Be Cort 3 the easy pose to help and share the work. He now. Iwould have aos aml ht and Rear Ad becomes fretful and dull, even when he Sifigrence . mice) Francis , J Higginson, of the seus Tis parents: sugaged in work sooner, but waited tO | United States navy. Admiral Hig- Jil J fei Share Wiis hus nest make sure it was lasting, and ginson will preside over a special ses- t ; ¢ ich ? ion to discuss the naval work of the children complain: "When this boy I feel sure it is. I must say it Yor C.A., in which Miss Gould is also (or girl) was small and could not y cially Pa Fifty Iron-ox Tablets, 1 ad attractive EY larly in early youth, is met by an ex- fectly clear, a fresh-water mussel two will accomplish this. a window with sunlight, a good part of the day as they dren carry any surplus back to ond and avoid overcrowding by al- owing about an inch of water surface to a tadpole. I they tend to eat the aquarium bare add fresh supplies slime and plants from the pond, and in a word, keep and growing."'--From 'Nature Htudy and Life," by Hedge. The Jubilee Of The Y.M.C.A. Buffalo, Gould, will come to Buffalo next week to attend the international conference of the Young Men's i ciation. The gatherin, in celebration of the He 'I sary of the first vention of the associati which was held in this city in 1554. Besides Mise Gould, the distinguished guests at the os if attended by at They will come from all parts of the United States and Canada and « fe are expected from Mexico, india and other parts of the world. of The Iron-ox Reinedy Co it inglish tweeds, serges, worsteds Walkerville, Oat, © ~~ ©" le Viens Touma. owosia The Gem of Table Wat An Elegant and Effective Remedy In - Gout, Rheumatism, Grevel, Stone in the Bladder, Bright's Disease, etc. | DIURETIC Used sticcessfully in the treatment of sub-acute and chronic cases of Rheumatism, Rheumatic Gout, Urie Acid Diathesis, Renal Caleuli composed of Urio Acid, Irritable Bladdef from excess of acid in the urine, ete. J a Tennant and Pearson, 1795, discovered that gouty concretions were principally composed of uric: acid. "Garrod supplemented this by the fact that an excess of uric acid existed in the blood of gouty patiedts aid was a predisposing cause of gout. That rheumatism js dus to' the Presence of an abnormal amount, 'of lactis, acid in the system, while gout ig due to that of nric acid, is universally agreed: We, therefore, are osalrant-. . ed in gout, rheumatism, and rheumatic gout with the fact that these conditions are digeotly dus ta abwermal acidity of the blood--in one, lactic acid; the. other, uric acid. Hence, we rhust administer a, remedy for elimination of these acids to produce a normal alkalinity of the blood. Lithia is one of the foremont elisa. ants to-day, and is largely used for its alkalizing propertics. As a solvent of uric acid it may he confidently relied upon. When the kidneys, which bave been very aptly termed "the filter of the human economy," fail te elimin: 5 ate properly, are sluggish in their action, with the result that the entire system becomes clogged up with effete matter, lithia is indicated. Therapeutists tellus that many of the organic diseases involving heart, Jangs, liver, etc., are directly traceable to renal inertia, and the consequent retention of deleterious and harmful mat- ter which the kidneys should eliminate. Lithia stimulates renal activity, and assists the impaired kidneys Ll perform their normal functions. Charcot was once asked what he considered the most important function of the intricate human mechanism, and he replied, "Elimination." The best results in above diseases are obtained by taking one to three glasses of Kromthal daily, whch is also unequdiled for migting with wines and spirits. ip ; W.R. McRAE & CO,, JAMES McPARLAND, JAMES REDDEN, RIGNEY & RICKEY, ad 3.8 HEN- DERSON, Kingston, Canada. or Give them row let the chil- the of them healthy, vigorous HELEN WILL BE THERE. At Buffalo. : : MISS HELEN GOULD. NY., May 7.--Helen M. +hristian is to ho held tioth anniver- international con is expected the conveniion will be |: least. 1,000 wvisitors- fads viots and . iy all imported for order work. You Mr. Te invited to inspect the above goods, . Having one of the best store-houses in the Tilo Pips and Fittings constantiy on hand. Free Trial 'for Medical Book, TE Saad + sok ERE YR \ ANTACID ANTILITHIC . we: 1 ~For Sale By-- Se : : city we will take down, remove and store your stove for the season for $1. All orders promptly attended to. ELLIOTT BROS .. 77 Princess Street. Telephone, No. 385, Residence, No. 56, ik vd emt Jo [2 wi rows, and 1 will f I WILL TRUST YOU This modern Belt | onl; hip TR Ah af electricity without soaking the ba in vinegar as all o belts do and ther rl ever to tis a fe ate 5 nef ly au and tism, V D; Losses. ' HT erent Ta and excess,' oi on by abuse FREE To each person writing me, one wh uid be read to you F lay