Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Apr 1909, p. 15

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TROUBLE | For Four Long Years He Suffered Then "Fruit-a-tives" Brought Relief. Stratford Centre, Wolfe Co., Que. May 1lith, 1808, I have been completely cured of a frightful condition of my stomach through this wonderful medicine, "Fruit-a-tives," 1 suffered fo. four long years with this t-oubie. My head ached incessantly. 1 could not eat anything: but what 1 suffereu awful pains from indigest! I used every known remed: nd wa. treated by physicians, but the dyspepsia and head- aches persisted in spite of the treat- ment, I was toll to try "Fruit-a-tives" I sent for six box i only medicine t im now entirely y food and I 1 16, and for this vonderful rem y well kr uk this state LCIDE HE $2.50, on on postpaid on NERVOUS DEBILITY -- Neurasthenia Pr, Constantine O'Gorman, District Medical Officer, Depot Harbor, Ont, "1 find ' Wilson's Invalids' Port" as excellent as stated and endorse the many testimonials you have received concerning its eflicacity." -- WILSON'S Invalids' Port (A 1a Quina du Péron) is readily assimilated by blood, nerve and tissue nutrients, exerting a steady and sustained tonic effect which is strikingly -evident after its continued use, No re-action - ever follows, as is often seen after the use of rapid stimu- lant. It is specially indi- cated in nervous debil- ity, sexual weakness, anxmia, chlorosis, etc. As many inferior products are marketed as 'Invalid Port' see that "Wilson's" is dispensed. Ask YOUR Doctor. BIG BOTTLE Sold at all Pharmacies 82 KEEP LOOKING YOUNG. Do nol allow your gray hairs to make you old looking. Gray haired people are back numbers. De not be one. The use of Hay's will permanently restore the youthiul color to gray or faded hair, no matter how old you are. Will keep you looking young, feeling young. Will give you a beautiful head of hair tha' everyone will admire. Startusing itNOW and BE YOUNG, IS NOT A DYE. $1 and S0c, bottles. at druggists. Scnd 2c, for iree book, "The Care of the Hair. Palle Hay Spec. Co, Newark, N. J. JAS.. B. McLEOD You cannot Jusshy haw' a better Cocoa thaz A delicious drink and a sustaining food. Fragrant, nutritious and economical. This excellent Cocoa maintains the system in robust health, and enables it to resist winter's extreme cold. COCOA 31d by Grocers and Storekeepers = in }-Ib. and §-1b Tins. Special Notloo. BETTER THAN SPANKING. Spanking does not cure children of bed. t There is a constitt Mss. M. Sum will send froe t s, Pox 261 an¥-mother , with full ut write her Y this' ances 't also Don't Worry tai HOUSEHOLD TALK MUST SEE TO IT THAT THE WATER HE USES 1S PURE. Three , Ways of Its Purification-- Distillation is the Most Effective--Boiling Water is Ab- solutely Safe and Perfectly Harmless. The discases that may be spread by water (water-borne diseases, they are called) are 'many and so serious--typhoid fever, dysentery and similar troubles being the most common -~that the man who takes thought of his health or that of his family must see to it that the water he drinks is pure. Some cities filter the supply furnished, but most of them, unfortunately, take no precautions, or wholly ineffectual ones, to ensure a pure supply. The community being careless of its health, the individual must look after its own, and must himself purify the water he drinks or that used in the preparation of his food. There are three ways of household purifica- tion of water--filtering, boiling and distilling. The first is unsafe. There are many filters which will, when new and clean, remove near- ly afl the germs from the water, as well as other invisible impurities; but the best" of them soen become foul, and unless constantly renewed or thoroughly cleansed they cease to act, and may even render a comparatively good water unfit to drink. Distillation is the most effective means of purification, but the necessary apparatus is cimbersome and troublesome and the trethod is impracticable for family use. One some- times reads articles in the newspapers decry- ing the use of distilled water on the assump- tion that it acts injuriously upon the mucous membrane of the stomach and digestive tract. This is nonsense. No drink can be better and safer than distilled water. : The other means is to boil the water. This is absolutely safe and perfectly harmless. Objection has been made that boiling for fifteen or twenty minutes does not. destroy all the germs in water, nor does it. Somhe germs, which are provided with resistant spores, may survive heat so applied; but ncne of the ordinarily dangerous germs, such as those of typhoid and dysentery, can resist boiling temperature for twenty minutes, and such water is safe to drink. Boiled water is insipid because much of the air has been expelled, but this is easily remedied. After boiling, the water should be poured into clean quart bot- tles, which have been sterilized by being boil- ed in a separate vessel, each bottle being only half-filled. * It is then corked and well shaken for a few minutes, by which means the water is again aerated and made palatable. Ice should not be added to this water, but the bottle can be kept in the refrigerator until it s needed. : A Brief Health Talk. Those who are engaged in fighting tuber- culosis should consider the idea of winter exercise. . One of the conditions which is pro- ductive of the spread of ' consumption in that when people are first. afflicted with the disease in a primary stage they shrink from the dreary prospect of going to a sanitarium to lie out on cots on a verandah and read or stare at the landscape. This prospect is so gloomy that they prefer to take a chance of fighting off the disease at home, with the uspal result that they gradually get worse and the follow- ing winter must needs accept the inevitable. The Ottawa Citizen suggests that when med- ical men find persons of either sex developing symptoms of the disease they should induce them to go on a winter holiday. There should be winter resorts in the Algonquin park or in northern Ontario and Quebec, where people can spend the whole winter season in outdoor life. For that mattér almost any farmhouse would do, where everything is clean and the cooking good and substiamgial. Equipped with skis, snowshoes, skates and a tobaggan, and with nothing to do during the bright winter days but knock about and enjoy themselves in the open air, the cure instead of becoming a matter of trial and weariness to the flesh would be one long bright holiday, and the convalescent patient would be sorry, in a sense, when the cure was over and he or she had to return to the regular routine of life. Of course this would only be practicable with patients when they first contract the disease; but that is the time to take it and that is the very time it is most difficult .to convince the patient that it to atout a cure int earnest. If the cure can be made suf- ficiently attractive in the incipient stages, peo ple will scon be educated to the point where the disease will not be allowed to progress any further 1s necessary set Have No Right to Forget. "Remind me at half past two to-morrow that I have an appointment at three!" Thus a man: of wealth and influence spoke to his secretdry, a promising youth, but new in his work. - The secretary glanced up from his books. "All right sir. I shall remind you, if I do not forget it myself." For a- moment the old gentleman glowered at the boy, but presently his face softened and he said gently: "My boy, if there is to beg any forgetting in this establishment, allow me the privilege. 1 am paying you well to re- member. Forgetting means neglect of duty." The boy was thoughtful. "You are right," he said at last. "I bBad'mever thought of it that way before. I shall not forget." And he did not forget. That day he began to set down in his note book every detail he was given to cu-ry out, and, in later years he became his employer's most trusted friend and partner. How many of us in enlightened days. of the twentieth century have paused to think over our forgotten "duties? How many realize that when we forget our duties we are simply neglecting them, and convincing ourselves that we are excusable because #f-the forgetting. Our first duty to ourselves and to our employers is to remember. Let us take care not to forget. The Redeemer In Tableaux. If all goes well there will be shown in the autumn, in London, a series of tableaux modelled in wax and 'with lighting and scenic effects, illustrating the life of Christ. At first sight it would appear that waxworks are scarcely a proper medium for reproducing these tremendous incidents; the slightest er- ror in taste would give offence to a countless nuniber of people. But the reverent trcatment f the subjects i8 thoroughly well assured. The genesis and development of the idea is It suggested years the late Sir Augustus Harris to Louis Tussaud, and the latter intended to carry it Ever since he has kept it in view, and the last ten years has spent consider interesting was sixteen 120 by 'death." bs . THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY APRIL 3, 1909. able time in visiting the. principal galleries abroad and making himself familiar with every detail of the pictures it is proposed to repre- sent. Last year Mr. Tussaud laid his plans be- fore Father Bernard Vaughan, who | whole- heartedly endorsed them. The Father has drawn up a series of thirty-six tableaux, which Tussaud intends to carry out. To indicate the subjects chosen the first half-dozen may be mentioned: -- Annunciation, Visitation, No. room in Inn, Shepherds and Gloria in Excel- cifixion, The Burial, The Resurrection, Mag- dalen and the Garden, The Communion, As- cension from Mount Olivet. . , Father Vaughan will review. each scene as constructed, and to make suggestions for im-~ provement. He is also going to write a con- cise account of each tableaux, embodying the lessons qonyexed by the scenes, which will be printed in book form. The creation in its treatment and teaching shall be entirely non- sectarian. The profits of the scheme are to be devoted to charity, equal shares going to the King's Hospital Fund, the charities of the Church of England, the charities of the Ro- man Catholic church, and the Countess of Aberdeen's Fund for the Prevention of Tuber- culosis in Ireland. ° od Commemorate Their Triumphs. The festival of Hanucah, kept by the Jews in commemoration of their victories under the Maccabees, over the Greeks and Syrians under King Antiochus Epiphanes, is held annually by Jews throughout the world, :nd is this year being célebrated with more than usual eclat, owing to the advance which Hebrew racial aspirations have made in Palestine during the past few months, and the fact that new con- stitutional rule in Turkey assures the Jews, if they become a majority in Palestine, they will, have the dominating vote in the Holy Land. The Zionist Societies of Montreal, held a united Maccabaean celebration. Rabbi .vathan Gordon said the right way to prove :admira- tion for the Maccabees was to imitate the spirit that had animated them. Clarence [. de Sela, drew a parallel between the condition of the English -people under Ethelred the Un- ready and of a section of the Jewish people to-day. Ethelred had been rightly named for he had never been ready to meet any crisis, and had no sooner bought off the invading Danes than he sat down andy did nothing further. There were many Jews to- day who, when an outbreak of persecution took place in Russia, or other parts raised money for immediate wants, but took no statesman- like steps to stop any recurrence of the out- breaks, and hence, were alwzys found "Un- ready" as each contingency arose. The great revolution in Turkey presented the Jews op- portunities of restoring Israel to the Holy Land, but many proved unready. to take ad- vantage of them. The Zionists alone had come forward with the proper solution of the Jewish problem, and that was the re-settle- ment of the Jews of Eastern Lurope in Pales- tine, the advantages, from gn ezonon. al point and from sentimental consid(rations; should incite them to help the mevement. At least one million Jews should be sottled in"Palés- tine within the next ten years, Speaking Out in Mesting. Joseph Hamilton, Lindsay. A few weeks ago, in a large congregation in Toronto, the preacher asked for'a show of hands from those who had heérd a 'Sermon on hell within ten years. Two bands were held up. Some time ago a noted Methodist min- ister told me that the minister; of that church in Canada do not believe in Everlasting Pun- ishment. A prominent Metholist official told me lately that he does not believe it, but that if it were known he would lose his position. The Presbyterian ministers s¢em largely to hold the same view. I have spoken on this subject with many ministers, aad not one con- fessed to believe it. The doctrine is contained in the creed of both churches. In the rgports of the meetings of the Laymen's Missiongry Movement I have seen no hin: of the alterna- tive before the heathen if they are not evange- lized. It is proposed to put in the creed of the proposed union of the churches that the doom of the finally impenitent will be "eternal What does that mean' It may mean either eternal extinction or cternal torment. Is the union to be built on such ambiguity? Go About Your Bu iness. It is personal work that counts. If every man would realize that he cannot sit back and leave this work he favors to others to perform, but must go forward and help it on himself, there would come a new era to the work of the church. When Temple Hall, London, was built the masters of the bench ordered a handsome clock to be placed there, and on the face of it an appropriate motto. For many days the skilful mechanic waited for the motto, until, becoming impatient, he made his way to the benchers' chambers and pressed them for the needed words. One of the masters, becoming angry, rose gp and said to the mechanic: "Go about your business." The latter, thinking this to be the order, placed the words on the face of the clock, and there they were allowed to remain. The clockmaker made no great mistake, after all. Wonders would be accomplished if only the entire body of laymen might hear and heed this word. Would Be Truly Grateful. For an idea that the world grows steadily better recall that organized movement for the prevention of cruelty to animals ogiginated less than fifty years ago. If the dumb crea- tures possessed the sculptor's art and could put their hands in their pockets a monument would straightway be erected to the memory of the man who founded the humane society movement. per A Daniel Webster Mosaic. If we work upon marble it will perish, if we work upon brass, time will éfface it; if we rear temples, they will crumble into dust; but if we work upon immortal souls, if we imbue them with principles, with the just fear of God and love of fellow men, we engrave on those tablets something that will brighten all eternity Belated Appreciation. Centenaries, bicentenaries and tercentenaries are quite the rage. Every week we do ho- mage to the memory of some great man whose genuis the world has taken one, two or three centurids to recdgnize. It is some- what late and often ridiculous. But is it not better to do the kind thing late than never? In Scotland, prior_to the union with Eng- land, bankrupts were compelled to wear parti colored garments--grey and yellow, not unlike the modern convict-dress. As a result singular- ly few Scotsmen in these days failed to pay their debts sis, The Nativity, With Shepherds, The Cru- | TO CAUSE OF EDUCATION BY UNITED EMPIRE LOYALISTS OF CANADA An Interesting Review Given by Dr. George Hodgins, of the Department of Education . of Ontario--It's a Valuable Contribution to , Educational Records. The historiographer of the Department of Education of Ontario, a veteran official and churchman to whom reference was lately made in these columns--Dr. J. George Hodgins-- has in his annual report given an interesting review of the valuable service dome by the United Empire Loyalists of Upper Canada to the cause of education. The British Colonists who settled in New England and the Atlantic States. were not long in establishing elementary schools and superior institutions of learning. They had established no less than nine universities and Flleges before the Revolution, videlicet:--: arvard, Massachusetts, in 1638; William and Mary, Virginia, in 1693; Yale, Connecticut, in 1700; Nassau Hall, now Princeton, New Jer- sey, in 1748; King's (now Columbia), New York, in 1754; Brown, Rhode. Island, in 1765; Dartmouth, New Hampshire, in 1770; Queen's, now Rutgers, New Jersey, in 1771; Hampden- Sidney, Virginia, in 1775. The loyalists, in their forced migration brought with them to Upper Canada from the Colonies their educa: tional traditions. Those who had settled along the Bay of Quinte united in framing a Memorial to Governcr-General, Lord Dor- chester, (Sir Guy Carleton) in which, lament- ing the educational privations which they had endured since their settlement in Upper Can- ada, they prayed for a "Seminary of Learning" at Frontenac, (Kingston). Lord Dorchester paid immediate attention and gave directions to the Surveyor-General to set apart 'elfible portions of land for the support of schools in all new settlements. In 1806, by act of parliament, a grammar school was planned for each of the eight districts. But the real beginnings were much earlier. In 1785 Rev. George O'Kill Stuart opened a select classical school in Kingston, where Mr. Donovan also conducted a garrison school. In 1786 Messrs. Smith and i Clarke taught schools in the township a little westward. Ernesttown and Fredericksburg; in 1789 Mr. THE VALUABLE SERVICE DONE grace also to consider that they are but strang- no dwelling place, but secking one to come; that they, remembering the short continuance of their life, may be content with that that is sufficient, and not join house to house, nor couple iand to land, to"the impoverishment of other, but so behave themselves in letting out their tenements, lands and pastures, thar after this life they may be received into ever- lasting dwelling places: through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen' "What Mean Ye by This?" To the Editor: When men sign "petitions," if they give the matter thought," it is in re- gard to the thing "prayed" for therein, never --aor hardly ever--of thé promise it i . Does the reader say he never knew a petition to contain any promise on the part of him who signs it? 1 reply that every petition I can recall having seen--I rarely sign one-- contained not only a request but a promise. dt usually is "And your petitioners, as in duty bound, will ever pray, etc." This is a promise to pray for the blessing of God upon the body addressed; that its deliberations may be imbued with the Holy Spirit, and its conclus- ions such as shall conduct to the glory of God and the good of the realm, or words to that effect. (It is a long time since I read the full promise.) Is it right to treat this promise as a mere matter of form? Truthfulness, consist- ency and expediency answer No. For our own comfort and welfare, it is desirable that those in places of public trust and responsibility should be wise, honest, and God-fearing. In order to secure this, they must have Divine guid- ance. Every Christian must surely hold that the only channel through which this can be + ers and pilgrims in this world, having here | and soon 3 stomach, regulate the liver and ex- ercise the bowels, Their good ef fects are felt i ely. Beecham's Pills contents of the stomacl easy work of digestion. ishing properties of the food are then readily assimilated and the residue carried off without irrita- ting he intestines or clogging the wels. : Beecham's Pills should be taken whenever there is sick headache, furred tongue, constipation, sallow skin or any symptoms that indi cate an inactive liver. Sold Everywhere. In boxes 25 cents. secured is prayer. And besides, there is the direct promise to uphold them in this way} If this were done "according to promise" I believe that much of the ill in our body politic whi~4 good men deplore would vanish like snow before the sun and balmy breezes of spring. At all events, when you give your written promise to pray for the administration of your country, province or municipality, whether you are "for" or "against" them, ful-. fil that pledge, and if it does the body prayed for no good, certainly will 'help you, as a loyal subject, a patriot, and Christian.--Ulster Pat. Faithful Friends of Man. The Arabs, even though barbarians, are Lyons taught in the near by township of at the latter place, the seat of Governmnt, Robert Addison. In 1794 Rev. John Burns, Presbyterian, also opened a school at Newark Two years later a notice in the York Gazette proclaimed that ignérance would no longer be tolerated. i In1800 John Strachan, afterwards Bishop of Toronto, opened a school in Kingston, and in 1804, though intensely Scotch and Presby- terian, became an Anglican clergyman, and was appointed to Cornwall, where he opened another select academy. But schools were now becoming general, being established near jagara; at York, (by the father of Hon. bert Baldwin); at Sophiasburg and Grassy oint, Prince Edward county; at Meyer's @Greek, now Belleville; and at Bath, near King- ston, (1811), by the father of Hon. Marshall Bidwell. Mr. Bidwell removed to Kingston in 1813 and taught there till his death in 1833, dn 1807 Governor Gore appointed Rev. George O'Kill Stuart, afterwards Archdeacon, to be headmaster of the new Home District rammar school, at York. In 1812 Dr. trachan went from Cornwall and relieved him, holding the post until 1823. The next successor, Samuel Armour, became a priest of the church and missionary in Cavan. In i814 Rev. Robert Baldwyn was appointed ster at Cornwall, vice Rev. John Bethune, afterwards dean of Montreal. The Church of England was an important pillar in education, supplying a majority, apparently, of its teach- ers, both in public and private schools. Rev. John Langhorn, missionary along the bay shore from Kingston westward, 1787 to 1812, did teaching intermittently. Rev. Thomas Phillips, an zccomplished scholar from Eng- land, after being in charge of the York Gram- mar sthool was placed in charge (1829) of the New Upper Canada College. The govern- ment grammar schools have this record of openings: Kingston 1792, Cornwall 1806, Brockville 1818, Niagara 1828, St. Catharines 1828. When Rev. Mr. Strachan took charge of York School, at the request of Sir Isaac Brock, govegnor, he issued this practical pro- spectus, dated Oct. 10th, 1812: "The Subscriber, having been nominated .Teacher of the School of the Home District, informs the Public that his Seminary is now open for reception of Pupils. The rates of Tuition appointed by the Trustees are in Hali- fax currency, Common Education, £5 per an- num; Classical Education, £8 per annum. An- xious to extend the advantages of this School, the Suberiber will even abate somewhat of the above Rates to the poorer inhabitants, pro- vided they keep their children neat and clean, and supply them with proper Books. N.B.-- Scholars from other Districts are charged £10 per annum.--John Strachag. Dr» Hodgins has collected much material of still later date, as early school days, the grouping of which is an invaluable contribution to the educational records of the province. Reviving Prayer For Landlords. | Sir John Benn has asked in the British Commons "whether attention has been direct- ed to a prayer in the liturgy of Edward VI. dealing with the equitable disposition of land within the country; whether the government will consider the advisability of issuing Let- ters of Business to Convocation, recommend- ing the restoration of this supplication to the revised edition of the Prayer Book" The remarkable prayer .in question is believed by some to have been composed by Archbishop Cranmer: -- "The earth is Thine (O Lord) and all that cornitained therein; "notwithstanding Thou hast given the possession thereof unto the children of men, to pass over the time of their short pilgrimage in this vale of misery: We heartily pray Thee to send Thy Holy Spirit into the hearts of them that possess the grounds, pastures, and dwelling places of the earth, that they, remembering themselves to be Thy tenants, may not rack and stretch out the rents of their houses and lands, nor yet take unreasonable fines and incomes after the magner of covetous worldlings, but Ist them out to other, that the inhabitants thereof may both bé able to pay the rents, and also honestly to live, to nourish their families, and to relieve the poor; give them 1s FO Adolphustown. Westward the example spread; | bian horses. ! as | schools were opened at Port Rowan, 1789, and | much as he does any member of his family; | in Newark, now Niagara, in 1792, the teacher | and in return the faithful horse loves him. | | Each would offer his life for the other. being also a Church of England cleric, Rev. |Arab never touches his horse with whip or | well as reminiscences of humane. Every one knows the fame of Ara- TO MS MAJESTY. THE KING . SirJohn Power & Son Ltd, ESTABLISHED AD. 1791, [THREE SWALLOWS IRISH WHISKEY Famous for over a The Arab loves his horse as The | spur, but wins his obedience and affection | with kind words. It is told that Hassan, the | Arab, was captured by enemies, bound hand | and foot, and laid outside the tent-prison. | When night came Hassan could not sleep and | heard the whinny of his faithful horse He rolled to where the horse stood, and the animal sniffed about him and recognized his master. He picked him up and ran all the way home witir-the great weight between his teeth. When they reached home the poor animal died. One day a wonderful bird tapped at the window of Mrs. Nansen, (wife of the famous Arctic explorer,) at Christiania. Instantly the window was opened, and she covered the little messenger with kisses, The carrier pigeon had been away fronr-the cottage thirty long months, but it 'had not forgotten the way home. It brought a note from Nansen, stating that all was going well with him and his expedition in the polar region. Nansen had fastened a message to the bird and turned it loose. It flew like an arrow over a thousand miles of ocean and plains and forests and delivered the message anxiously awaited. Travelling Britons and the Emir, Captain S. S. Butler interested a meeting of the Royal Geographical Society in London by describing his experiences and Captain Ayl- mer's in a journey from Baghdad to Damas- cus, in Northern Arabia." At El Jof they were | received by Feysul Ibn Rashid, the Emir. | His first remark was extraordinary: "Are your teeth your own or are they false?" He had heard with wonder that there were such things as false teeth in Europe, and thought that all | Europeans had them! They were exceedingly glad that they had not any false teeth, as he would have taken them A house was placed at the disposal of the travellers. "We had not been there for more than five minutes when Feysul's head slave, a richly dressed personage called Dahm, came to tell us that the Emir would not take our | camels jor our money, as he had plenty of | both, but that he would like any things of European make or of interest that we happen- ed to have. During our five days' stay there was a continual procession of slaves and hangerson from the castle demanding things for the Emir and his viziers and favorites, and demanding them in such a way that it was impossible for us in helpless isolation to refuse. At last we had practically nothing of any value left, having been fleeced of watches, revolvers, compasses, cl8thes and other artic- les." . 5 A Penalty of Genius. It seems to be the frequent penalty of genius that 't is denied the privilege of perpetuating its name and kind beyond a few generations. There is not now living a single descendant in the male line of Chaucer, Shakespeare, Spencer, Milton, Cowley, Butler, Dryden, Pope, Cowper, Goldsmith, Byron or Moore; not one of Sir Philip Sidnef® or of Sir Walter Raleigh; not one of Drake, Cromwell, Hamp- den, Monk, Mariborough, Peterborough or Nelson; not one of Bolingbroke, Walpole, Chatham, Pitt, Fox, Burke, Graham or Chan- ning; not one of Bacon, Locke, Newton or Davy; not one of Hogarth, Sir Joshua Rey- nolds or Sir Thomas Lawrence; not one of David Garrick, John Kemble or Edmund Kean. Dickens was christened Charles John Huffam, or Huffham, as it is erroneously entered in the parish register. But when he became famous he dropped the last two Christian names, as he de- sired to be known as plain Charles Dickens, 'a wish respected off his tombstone in Westminster abbey, and by his biographer and friend, John Forster. ' ; At a Defence Association banquet in Eng- land Admiral Campbell declared himself an optimist. Once upon a time, he related, two frogs jumped into a bowl of cream. One was a pessimist, and was drowned; the other was an optimist, and, swimming about, churned the cream into. butter, and managed to get on top and get out. : we The Blgck Hand record in New York city for the past year was: singularly black--more century for its delicacy of flavor, Of highest standard of : Purity. It is especially recoirfmended by the Medical Profession on account of its peculiar "DRYNESS" "Bronchitis" Is generally the result of » cold.cansed by exposure to wet and inclement weather, and is a very dangerous inflammatory affes- tion of the bronchial tabes, breathing, and a secretion of thick phlegm, at first white, bus later-of a greemish or Cure it at ones by the use of De. Weeds Norway Pine Syrup. Mrs. D. D. Miller, writes : * My husband got a Pine Wood's Norway Fine 5 = She liad » bad cold this Dubin wl 'winter, stead of eis Norway Pine 8 made receipt which I but found that her Wendi and sagan bottle of De I tried & home - lasted about ios says rattle of is is always kepvin the house" Tt is put up in a yellow wrapper, hase pine trees the trade mark, the price £5 ote. Be sure.sand accept none of the smay sub stilton. With Maypole Soap With Ease at Home With Pronk L. Benedict & Co. Montreal, p Sixty Years of has resulted in the arfistically finished patterns in hoon: knives, 3, elc., BOLD BY LEADING DEALERS Whes you buy silver dishes be Sie they are wade by EN BRITA CO. than 400 cases and less than 10 per cent. of convictions. % §

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