A medical writer says --* The use of a thoroughly reliable preparation of cocoa should be universally en- couraged, and it is the consensus of opinion among medical men as well as laboratory workers that the break- fast cocoa manufactured by Walter Baker & Co. Ltd., not only meets the indications, but accomplishes even more than # claimed for it." Walter Baker & Co., Ltd. patablished 1760. DORCHESTER, MASS. BRANCH HOUSE: 86 $t. Peter Street, Montreal TITHE THE STEPS TAKEN TOWARDS THE EN- ROLLMENT OF ONE. Joan of Arc, Five Hundred Years Dead, has been in' Process of Beatification for Thirty- Thre: Years. BEATIFY--To ascribe extraordinary virtue of excelletice to; regard as saintly or exalted, CANONIZE--To enroll a beatified person among the saints, w- --Century Dictionary. The New York Sun gives an account of the steps taken toward enrolling Joan of Are in the category of saints of the Church of Rome. Widely current is a mistaken notion that at a solemn cefe- mony in Rome, in which the Pope participated, Joan of Arc was to be prochimed a saint. The Maid of France is to be beatified, not canonized; and beatification is the spiritual state which pre- cedes canonization, and is not necessarily fol- owed by it. It is a tardy act of justice thus ren- dered to one of the most interesting and sympa- thetic figures in history. It is nearly five hundred years since the deliverer of France from English occupation was burned to death after a trial, the iniquity of which was legally demonstrated with- in a quarter of a century thereafter, Just twenty- four years after her death, in 1431, Pope Calixtus 111 cleared her memory and declared her "a mar- tyr for her religion, her king and her country." Nevertheless it was not until the last quarter of the nineteenth century that her beatification was seriously contemplated. Meanwhile she had been the butt of Voltaire's ribaldry, and her most de- voted champions had been representatives of that English race which stands charged at the bar of history with the guilt of her death at the stake.. The impressive ceremony which will soon take place in St. Peter's will be the culmination of an inquiry which was begun thirty-three years ago. In 1876 the "use," as the proposal to beatify | THE WILD CHERRY TREE grows bark that contains sedative and bronchial tonic properties. Fluid Extract of this bark goes into Brick's Tasteless Cod Liver Oil as well as Compound Syrup of Hypophosphites. The finest Cod Liver Oil only used but that disagree- able greasy taste has been removed. THE CURE FOR YOU if you lack energy, feel depressed, all run down, thin; have a cough or cold is, beyond doubt, BRICK'S TASTELESS. At all Druggists subject of a long and careful trial in Orleans by [| | Mgr. Dupanloup, then bishop of the diocese. After |i 1 his death the judicial investigation was continued 1} | by his successor in that see, who an the fayorghble tt completion of the trial went to Rome and laid the formal request before the Congregation of Rites. Not lightly is the crown of beatification bestowed. The process of examining the claim consists of several stages, the third and final act being that of adjudication before the Pope him- self. The "cause" is entrusted first to a cardinal, conceived as chief petitioner; secondly, to the upholder of the faith, whose duty of, raising all {| | possible objections has earned for him the name li tof "devil's advocate"; thirdly, to the sub-upholder [| {of the faith, and lastly to other officials 'of the i | Congregition of Rites. The inquiry was delayed If {by the successive deaths of defenders of the faith, I land it was not until 1894 that the request for | | be atification was so far complied with by Leo | | XIIT that he ordered the three final inquiries to made which canonically are necessary. The | {aim .of these inquiries was to prove first that f | Joan of Arc had never been the object of public i { worship ; secondly, that she had practised the car- {! { dinal virtues on a heroic scale; and thirdly, that u } after her death miracles had been wrought by 11 Hi iH id i 1 il | 'de { be her intercession. In 1898 judgment was recorded in favor of the cause as regards the first inquiry. Some five years later, or shortly before the death of Leo XIII, the Congregation of Rites returned a favorable answer to the second query, and in January, 1904, Pius X was present at a meeting of thie congrega- tion just named when a decree declaring the Maid of France to have practised heroic virtues was {read., Finally, toward the close of November, 1908, was read in the presence of the Pope the decree which answered the third inquiry and de- clared miracles to have been performed through the intercession of Joan of Arc. In the following December, in the Hall of the Consistory in the VASELINE NO GOOD FOR HAIR. Dandruff Germ Thrives In It, * Well As In All Grease. A A well-known. Chicago hair special- ist invited the Inter-Ocean reporter to come to his office and see, « under microscope, how. the germ that cause dandtuff thrives in vaseline. The cialiat saul that all hair preparation cantaining grease simply furnish food for the germs and: help to 'propagat them: 'lhe only way to cuxe dan druff is to destroy the germs, ant the only hair preparation that will do that is Newbro's Herpicide. "Destroy effect," no the 'cause youn remove the Without dandruff no falling hair, baldness. Ask for Herpiade. It i the only destroyer of the germ. Sold 10¢, dandruf leading an stamps for Herpicide Co., sizes, O0c, and speoigl agent. by druggists. sample to Detroit, Mich. $1. GG. W. Mahood a spe- Send The Two Vatican, the decree of beatification was publish- ed and the Pope declared that he regarded the Maid of Orleans as the personification of chival- rous France, ever genefous and ever réidy to sacrifice herself for a noble aim. * The ceremony in St. Peter's. will make known to the Roman Catholic world that Joan of Arc has been admit- ted to the ranks of those who, having been bea- tified, are candidates for canonization. Ss o A a r-------------- The North Land of Promise. The wealth and tremendous possibilities of the - | Peace River country" werg painted in glowing col- Hors by FF. G. Lawrence before the Canadian Club of Teroto. The son of a pioncer of that dis- trict, he cast to interest capitalists in the transportation problems, . Like many others of « [the West, Mr. Lawrence wants: the Hudson Bay § | road, but he thinks that ope line won't be enough to handle the business that promises to spring up. The Peace River country is exceedingly fertile, with a far longer warm season than most of those in the east imagine. . Mr. Lawrence illustrated » [this by saying that a thousand bushels of pota- toes to the acre and fifty-six bushels of wheat 1s May's Never Color and Beauty. + No matter how long it has been gray or faded. Promotes a luxuriant growth of healthy hair. Stops its falling out, and positively removes Dan- | Graff. Keeps hairsoft and glossy. Fe- fuse all substitutes. 2% times.as mucl in $1.00 as 50c. size. Not a Dye. $1 and 50c. bottles, at Send for free hook ** The Care of the Hair, Philo Hay Spec. Co., Newark, N. J. Hay's lHarfina SO&P cures Pirtijies, fed, rough and chapped hands, and all skin dis. pases. Keeps skin fine and soft, 25c. dryreists, Send 2c for free book "The Care of the Skin * Fails to Restore Gray Hair to its Natural were among their records up there. He knew of a case where 638 pounds of potatoes had been raised as a first crop from three pounds of seed. Vegetables mature quickly, thus precluding that danger of frost which those who made it their business to cry down the country were always pointing eut. He made the prediction that some day northern British Columbia and southern Yu- kon would rival 'the Klondyke for rich finds of gold. ld the Athabasca district there is a deposit of asphalt a thousand square miles in extent. Mr. Lawrence's father left Frontenac county many years since as manager for the Anglican mission- at Vermillion, Peace River district. -- ere ender Poets of the Land. Sir James D. Edgar, who was unanimously , | elected Speaker of the Dominion House of . | Commens in 1896, was a frequent contributor to magazines. In 1874 he won a-prize for the | best Canadian national song, his poem being entitled "This Canada of Ours'. which was published in 1893 with many other pieces. Of {these the best is "The Canadian Song Spar- row," with it§ quaint interpretation of the bird's JAS. B. McLEOD nournful songi-- A Wide Range. Everybody's Magazine. Aunt--A= an' old' family darkoey ne, was sitting with knees crossed in the| kitchen, when the voung daughter «¢ the house entered and, impressed wit the hulen asked what size shoe she wore: "Well, honey," replied Aunt "J kin wear eights; 1 generally wea nines: but dese ver I'se got on ar twelves, an' de good Lawd knows de hu'ts: me |" All that glitters is not fiscal. ss of the old woman's feet Anne, | From From From the leafy maple ridges, the thickets of the cedar, the alders by the river, From the bending willow branches, _From the hollows and the hill-sides, Through the lone Canadian forest, Cones the melancholy music, Oft repeated, never changing, " All--is--vanity---vanity--vanity." r Where the farmer ploughs his furrow, mn Sowing seed with hopes of harvest, v In the orchard, white with blossoms, In the early fields of clover, ? Comes the little brown-winged singer, Flitting in and out of bushes, of | h | - €)Yuinine 2 Days 1 ures a Coldin Ope Day, Gra Hiding well beyond the fences, - Piping out his song of sadness, "Poor--hu---manity--manity --manity."" Like Dr. Goldwin Smith's lines on the por: |trait of a toy dog this is a pleasant trifle WAG_0F 4 SIT Joa of Arc is technically called, was made the A Bishop Who Can Say Religious Attitude Has Changad. : A Campbell of Skipness, Archibald Ean Camp- bell, the new and hard-working Bishop of Glas- gow, was enthroned lately. He comes of the men who raised the Earl of Crawford's Independ- ents, now known as the Black Watch, and his ancestors harried the Perthshire Episcopalians. So. he's the man' to say the religious attitude of Scotsmen has changed. "As a boy I heard the thunders of Calvinism but could sot believe souls were dammed for God's glory, 1 couldn't help remembering the Scottish church daily prayed: '0 Lamb of God that takest away the sins of the world': Now, practically all Scotland takes the Catholic: view, and congregations have become familiar with the prayer book, they hear so much of it from their ministers." The bishop "has said, "in human mature there ought to be no waste, and the efficiency of the church as God's agent depends on utilizing the neglected residue of humanity. People say there are multitudes of heathen at home--they havé been brought into being by: the lack. of the missionary spirit. You can't keep home and forgign. work in separate water-tight compartments. The church failing to extend the kingdom beyond the seas, loses the power of conversion of souls at home. Here in Glasgow we five from hand to mouth, but I say the. only 'way 'to aveid bankruptcy is to put our hands in both" pockets and"give to foreign mis- sions. That was why we gave almost recklessly to. the Pan-Anglican offering 'when we needed the money ourselves. And for the first time we had a hopeful report from our secretary," and following that £25,000 came to us from the skies, yout might say." With such sentiments 'from the bishop, #'s no wonder the huge diocese of Glas- gow -and Galloway is said to be "the most mis- sionary diocese in Europe." { An Inspiration From Casey. The 'women in the church -in a suburb in Chi¢ago were. soliciting money to pay for re- decorating their house of warship. They were told, diplomatically, that if they would call on Casey, who. kept the leading saloon | in the scetion, they miglit get a good donation. They called, ~ Casey met them genially, listened to whit they had to say and subscribed $500. This was so much more than 'the solicitors had hoped for that they were much flustered, and could do nothing but stammer their, thanks. Finally one of them rounded to ahd sajd; "Why, Mr. Casey, this is most generous of you. : It will allow us get what we want very much--a fine, stained-glass, window." Casey thought that would be the right thing to do. : "And, Mr. Casey," said the spokeswoman, "in view of this magnificent donation, isn't there something you would like to put.on the window, some sentiment or some remembrance, or something of the kind?" "Well," said: Casey; "I think it would luk foine to have on th' glass, bechune th" two parts av it, in nate letthers, somethin' loiké this: 'Afther Mass. Visit Casey's." Make Landlords Keep Hotel Canadian Baptist. We heartily join in expressing the conyiction that the time has come for our Provingial Legislature to consider the matter of Kcewging hotels that have no bar-rooms. Selling liquor is one thing; keeping hotel is another thing, or should be. We must have hotels for: the travelling public, but these hotels should have some standard defined by law. And, while, it does not follow, because victory is following more and more the efforts of temperance work- ers, that temperance people should go into the hotel business, it surely seems reasonable to expect them to become intérested in seeking to provide hotel accommodation equal if not superior to that which obtained when hotel keeping and liquor selling went hand in hand: Where hotel keeping apart from bar-rooms i$ what it should be, there will not likely be much clamoring for the return of the old method of having it bound up with liquor sell- mg. Call For Equa! Rights. Canadian Baptist. f It is no disappointment to us that the court- esy of half fares on the railroads in the West is likely to he withdrawn or greatly curtailed. Poorly-paid missionaries should be so renum- erated by their respective boards as to be able to meet-the expense of their necessary travel- ling. Special circumstances may arise once in a while when reduced fares, complimentary tickets, or passes may become a business pro- position between ministers, missionaries and church officials and railway companies. But we see no sufficient reason for any railway company granting favors to clergymen and nuns on the score of religion. Even mier- chants who announce a ten per cent. reduction to ministerial purchasers might well be called upon to make clear that they are justified in so doing. The War on Opium Spreads. "Opium causes half a million suicides a year," declared the Rev. A. S. Gregg, of the Internation- al Reform Bureau, this week in Cleveland, with reference to the opium conference which begins sessions at Shanghai, on Febuary 1st. The state- ment is based on reports from Dr. E. W. Thwing, special secretary of the bureau, sent to China to investigate, As an expert, he will ask the con- ference to hasten the destruction of the opium traffic throughout the world. He has obtained statistics from the provinces of Kui Chau, Yun- nan, Sze Chuan and Anhwei, with a population of 58,000,000, of which the proportion of the people using opium is from twenty to thirty per cent, and the money spent for the drug is $200,000,000 a year. The conference will have a most import- ant bearing on morals, markets and missions in the Orient. About one-fourth of the human race will be affected Overstepped the Line. The town of Ocean Grove, New Jersey, was the outgrowth of a camp-meeting; at' first hundreds, then thousands, gathered there, to worship, to praise; to keep boarders, to con- duct remunerativé shops, fo bathe in the sea, and to attend concerts, Being the property of a so-called religious corporation, it escaped taxes, and went on making money with no fears of the assessor. Not only did it indulge in secular amusements, but the large audi- torium that had taken the place of the first and more primitive one, was the scene of enter- tainments mot particularly religious in char- acter. The thrifty state of New Jersey, with- in whose borders the little wave-washed sum- ther city existed, now calls upon it to pay taxes, the same as other towns that do not have camp-meetings. Even back-taxes may be required, running up into great fgures. If these demands are made effective, it will be evident that, as Daniel Diew used to say, IS THE KIND OF NAME THE PLAIN JOHN SMITH USUALLY BEARS. No Bird Regarded As More of a Pest than the Little Sparrow--What Is Found on the Lintels of a Hous: in Holydean, Scotland-- The Very Wise Inaxims. high-sounding; it does not suggest aristocracy; it is not the name of any hero in die-away novels; and yet it is good, strong and honest. climb the ladder of respectability. Latia it is Johannes Smithus; the iards render it Juan Smithus; the Dutchman adopts it as Hans Sclimidt; the French flatten it ott into Jean Smeet; and the Russian sneezes and barks Jonloff Smittowski. When John Smith gets into the tea trade in Canton he becomes Jovan Shimmit; if he clambers about Mount Hecla, the Icelanders say he is Jahne Smithson; if he trades among the Tuscaroras he becomes Ton Qa Smittia; 'in Poland he is known as Ivan Schmittiweiski; should he wan- der among the Welsh mountains, they talk of Jihon Sehmidd; when he gets to Mexico he is booked as Jonth.F'Smitti; and in Turkey he is utterly disguised as Yoe Seef. . "Now there is probably no bird regarded as more of a pest than the little sparrow. Hig ill- bred, loud-voiced clatter drives away song birds. He hangs around your barn and steals your grain' and he nests in the eaves of your poultry house and infests the chicks with that vermin pest of 'chicken life--mites--and he proves a paid visitant on your house piazzas, Yet balance the little sparrows account with what is to his;eredit. "A scientist in Towa by test after test founl that in winter time 'the weed seed a day. Then he counted the number of sparrows ordinarily seen in wintér to the square mile. Of a basis of ten birds to the mile, he figured that the, sparrows must eat in the State of Towa alone, esght hundred and seventy tons of weeds, a winter. Figure out how many acres of 'good land these weeds would have assuredly contaminated. '© Ow:the lintel of a house in Holydean, Scot- land, where the ancestors of the writer of the diary lived, 'is, a stone on which is carved the {words "Known as "Dame Esbel Ker's Three Precepts": "Feir God, Fle from Sin Mak for the Life Everlasting to the end. Dame Esbel Ker, 1530." Could thete be a trio of fundamental truths plore succinctly stated? Could there be three wiser. maxims for life's conduct? So, over three-and-a-half centuries after good old Dame Esbel thus caused the words to be carved, the House still standing and the lettering still in- tact--her Three Precepts continue to do their work of advice and admonition. : Paradise for Lazy Men. The five years' war that ruined once pros- LRN *Piraghay left ten women to one man, id was the cause of the women becoming the U burden bearers of that country, a hardship they have never been able to escape. They kill the animals in"the slaughter yards, and are the butchers in the market-places. Light, delicate- looking women walk the streets barefooted, ¢arrying on their heads large baskets of man- dioca, oranges, 'tobacco leaves, and other pro- ducts of the country for sale. Some have quaint pots of water poised on their heads, and wear white skirts and white muslin thrown over the head and shoulders like the chuddar of the women in India. Such sad, appealing faces! One is reminded by their forlorn and down- trodden appearance of the women of Palestine at the time of Christ,--and many of them are veritable women of Samaria, just living out their lives in the deepest ignorance, super- stition, and immorality. When a woman is married, she is so proud to have a husband that she would not permit him to work under any circumstances, and sq he sits around in elegant idleness. When they go out, he has a horse or donkey and his wife walks proudly by his side, carrying a heavy load on her head, and leading the child- ren by the hand. The making of exquisite fine lace, called nanduti, is one of the industries of the country. The lace merchants who make the lace are a better class of women; many of them support and educate large families from the sale. Nanduti means cobweb, and the name is most appropriate, as the fine pieces of lace look as if a breath of wind would cause them to vanish into thin air. The Great Uplifting Power. Education is the transforming influence of the world. It is the basis of Christian cul- ture, It fakes the Indian from the plains and puts him into the shop of the mechanic. It takes the negro from the cabin, and makes him the owner of a plantation. It carries the Biblé to the cannibal, and makes him a child of the kingdom. . It spans the continent with bands of steel; it drives floating palaces upon the sea; it circles the earth with the message of lightning; it analyzes the sunbeam; it weights the stars; it reads the testimony of the rocks; it throws bridges across the yawning chasm; it brings to light the buried cities of the past; it lifts the cathedral spire to the dome of heaven. Education grasps the pen, and gives poem, the essay, the novel, the drama, the oration, the historical record. It seizes the pencil. and the world stands in admiration be- fore the Last Supper and the Sistine Madonna, Da Vinci and Raphael. Education takes the chisel, and from the marble block appears the glorious Jupiter of the { Phidias and the majestic Moses of Michael Angelo. It lifts the lyre and heavenly har- mony fills the soul in the Messiah of Handel, in the sonata of Beethoven Education of the hand and heart, of the mind and soul! Unceasing, endless, infinite, eternal! No subject too profound for its grasp, no thought too exalted for its tquch. The Mission of Hope. The poet Hesiod tells us that the miseries of all mankind were included in a great box, and that Pandora took off the lid of it, by which means all of them came abroad, and only hope remained at the bottom. Hope, then, is the principal antidote which keeps our heart from bursting under the pressure of evils, and is that flattering mirror that gives us a pros+ pect of some greater good. Some call hope the manna from heaven that comforts us in all extremities, others the pleasant flatterer that caresses the unhappy with expectations of | happiness in the bosom of futurity. When all John Smith--plain Jolin Smiith-- is not very | Transferred to other languages it seems tof Thus «in| Italian | smooths it off to Giovanni Smithi; the Spans| sparrow ate about.a' quarter of an ounce of The Net Result of 'the Voting at the Recent The uet results of the voting on local option in Ontario have been fully tabulated. Some returns were slow in arriving. Toronto's majority for reduction of forty bars was 846 on a total vote of 37,830. The Citizens League, a Sempteafice organization, swept Brantford, Catharines voted for reduction of I from 19 to 12, by 151 majority. Smith's Fal The returns by} voted to cut off two licenses. Escott Front . . ......450 0 Havelock, village®. « ..... Biller... o2» froguois, village . . ... enncbec \ Sidney soos Bessasehaieiin Wellington, village +. . Wallaston . § «oivopaees Wyoming . . : Tweed, village . ."... A Yonge & Escoft R. ........... Seneca J. Lis Thurlow . . .. Tudor & Cashel. ...+. 000s Limerick ©... ovis s T: siavad Brougham . . «oy cis sieaioseee oo Malahide . fav. coated. 662 In_twenfy places option. had a majority, was defeated by by: law'-- 8 Aylmer, town Blandford'. . © :\e.iiys Chestetville, village . . . Caledonia, village . 4 +... Charlotteville . Forest; town . . 50 ; Goderich, city .s seessinvaias Howland .°. ..&u5d ivi Hungerford |. . &5i vi inl i ' Ingersoll, town .. 5... he. ve Lucknow, village . . .. Madoc; village - . « Oso. i. Perey... . ..i.iiveniiion . Ridgetown . . . Bago? .. ... agian Catibero . . . fv Bsn Orillia . . . Middleton .. . .ivoans re ? Embry ia ser sas enan TB 67 5 In thirteen municipalities option was defeated by direct adverse vote. 21 -. Against. Maj. 120 31 174 4 162 53 233 65 89 4 374 38 500 151 Alnwick . . . .. hd Elzevir & Grimsthorp: Glencoe, village . . .........., Morrisburg, town . . Pt. Edward, village Tilsoribdrg . .. ..........000: Trenton, TOWN . . ci... 000 Waodstock, city + « ..ovviiinns 1,106 217 Whithy . |... nm 26 Billings :.. ..... 3 33 Glamorgan . ./« ive. ianinvnn 495 ! 1 Morris... .......n.0 59 Hagerman . . . 0 By-laws to repeal prohibition were voted upon in 29 municipalities. In 27 the option law was again sustained ,including Owen Sound, in most cases by very decided majorities--the totals be- ing: For continued restriction, 11,475; for repeal of prohibition, 6,851. In two places, Courtwright and Hepworth, repeal was carried by majorities of 27 and 11 respectively. Different Gauges of Offences. Father Minehan, R.C., Toronto. What are the causes of poverty in cities? They are many--disinclination to remain in the country and the consequent congestion of population in cities, laziness, shiftlessness, lack of industrial training--above all, drink, Re- cently it was shown that of the 50,000 children supplied daily with breakfapts. by the London (England) School Board, nearly half belonged to drunken parents. We send to the peni- tentiary the mail carrier who tampers with a letter and the offender who cleans and uses for a second time postage stamps,and justly, We demand the extradition of, and follow to distant lands, the clerk who has absconded with a few dollars, yet a father can skip out and leave his children to be maintained by the community, without fear of molestation: Or he can squander his earnings in drink and have his children sent to an orphans' home, to be supported partly by private benevolence and partly by government or municipal grants. He is not.treated as a criminal though robbing the community. We hear much about drunkenness destroying homes} But we do not hear about he easygoing condition of public opinion which regards drunkenness as a mere indis- cretion. The father who through laziness or intemperance does not support his family is a far greater menace to society than the dis- honest postman. And if the former were treat- ed as the latter--if the same odium were at- tached to his offence and the same condign punishment meted out--our orphanages would soon be all but emptied. Real, Practical Benevolence. At the time of the great disaster in Italy the United States supply ship "Celtic" lay in the Brooklyn navy yard loaded with supplies, for the great fleet on its way home from its journey around the world. Within 'eighteen hours she was on her way to Gibraltar. Red tape had been cut, the telegraph and the tele- phoné superceded regular channels of official communication. Officers and men rivalled one another in pushing forward the loading, and just three hours after the order had been received' the vessel put to.sea. On the "Cel- tic," beside enough rations to feed 50,000 peo- ple for a month, were 500 tents, 40,000 pairs of shoes, as many suits of working clothes, 40,000 suits of underwear, 96,000 pairs of socks, and medical stores. Though New York is 3,600 miles from Messina, the U. S. Govern- ment will be among the first to carry material relief to the sufferers. The supplies represent $300,000, so that in the actual amount, as well as in promptness, the gift is notable. All One Church in China. "We are prepared to take a certificate of membership in a church of one denomination, and accept it as a certificate of membership in any other: church," said N. W. Rowell, KC, speaking "on missionary work in China, at Carletoh Street Methodist Church, Toronto. "We are prepared to receive a Methodist. into the Baptist Church, or a Baptist into the Meth- odist Church out there where Methodists, Preshyterians, Baptists and the rest are eager to save the souls of men. And I hope the day a 'three-fifths vote being required $ and ¥ offal with | great' pleasure, as I hope thereby some other sufferer of headaches will induced to try "Fruit-a-tives" and' be will be cured." j (Sgd.)_ B. Cornell. Taylorville, Ont. ] #Fruit-a-tives" is now put up in the' new 28c trial size as well as the reg-' "uliir 60¢c boxes. Write Fruit-a-tives: Limited, Dita, it your dealer willl TO HISIMAJESTY. THE KING + Sir John Poweré& Son Ltd. ESTABLISHED.AD, 1791. "THREE SWALLOWS IRISH WHISKEY Famous for over a century for its delicacy of flavor, Of highest standard of Purity. it Is especially recommended by the \dedical Profession or account of its peculiar "DRYNESS" Palpitation of the Heart. RN One of the first danger signals that an- nounce something wrong with the heart is | the irregular beat or violent throb. Often there is only a fluttering sensation, or aa ~ #all gone" sinking feeling; or again, there may be a most violent beating, with flush- ings of the skin and visable pulsations of the arteries. . The person may experietice a smothering sensation, gasp for breath and feel as though about to die. In such cases the action of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills in quieting the heart, restoring its normal beat and imparting tone to the nerve centres, is, beyond ali question, mar- vellous, They give such prompt relief that no one need suffer. Mr, Sylvester Smith, Hampton, N.B., writes;--*1 'was troubled with palpitation of the heart and tried doctor's medicines, but they only gave me relief. I heard of your Heart and Nerve Pills and bought two boxes and before I had used them I was completely cured and would recommend them to all similarly affected." Price, 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25 at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. ee. 4 chk Yon cannot pi haw than