Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Jun 1910, p. 10

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

iE FF PACRIRN. SOME FAMOUS EXITS hey Work In Forests and Mills Pre ECZEMA MUST YIELD TO THE WONDERFULLY SOOTHING HEALING INFLUENCE OF DR. CHASE'S OINTMENT ¢ There is one thing you can depend . on Dr, -Chage's Ointment to do every tighe, and that is to cure eczema. There is no more severe test to which an ointment can be put, and because Dr. Chase's Ointment triumphed over eczema it has become the standard Ointment. . When another ointment is praised it is said to be as good as Dr. ' Chase's. And this illustrates the high "position held this preparation. } Mrs, Oscar Vancott, St. Antoine, .Bask., writes: "I have found Dr. "Chase's Ointment to be a permanent ' eure for eczema and other skin dis 'eases. Ome son while pursing broke out with running, watery--sores - all Lover. his and around the ears. Many salves were preseribed to no of- fect. The child's fol became a mass 'of scabs and he suffered agony untold: He became weak and frail, would not 'eat and we thought we would lcse him. i "Providentially we heard of Dr. "Ohawe's Oidtment * and it soon thor- § ly cured him. He is seven years _ old now and strong and well. An old- 'er boy was alse cured of eczema hy 'this Ointment, and we hope more peo: ple will shout it so that their {poor li ongs. may be saved from suffering." i i Do not be satishiéd with the experi- ence of others, but pat Dr. Chase's Dintment to the ter' ' hen occasion arises. Try it for chufing and irrita- tion of the skin, for chapped and cracked hands, for chilblains and frost bites, for sores and burns. It is de lightfully soothing 'and healing. 60e. a box, all dealers; or Edmasson, Bates & Co., Toronto. Write for free copy of Pr. Chase's Recipes. | BARGAINS Used Five Octave and Piano Cased Organs ranging all the way from. $20.00 up. Easy terms 'of payment can be ar- ranged. Purchaser of any organ will be allowed full value within two years' time should they decide to purchase a plano. We also have a full Ime of musical Instruments, including Violins, Guitars, + Banjos, ndolins, Strings, eto. No Trouble to show goods. Kindly call and in- spect our stock. EEE Wormiith Piano | Gompany, Limited ' RETAIL DEPT. 238 PRINCESS STREET, 1 A Simple Treatment That Will Every up-to-date woman should have radiant hair. : . There are thousands of women with hargl, faded, characterless hair who do not try to improve it, In England and Paris women take pride in having beautiful hair. Ey- ery Canadian woman can have lus- trous and luxuriant hair by using ~ BALVIA, the Great American Sage Halr Tonle. Every reader of the Whig can have 'an attractive head of hair in a few days by using SALVIA, . Mr. Best sells a large bottle for 50 gents, and guarantees it to banish *. Dandruff, stop falling hair and f{tch- "ing scalp in ten days, or money back. SALVIA is a beautiful, pleasant, a-sticky Hair Tonic. Ice Cream Take some delicious Ice Cream home with you ~ 40c¢ qt., 20c pt, 2 WHEN GREAT STATESMEN HAVE! LEFT ACTIVITIES. The Gladiator Taking a Last Look Arena in Which Hé Played a Stern | Dramatic Part-- Some Seenes, Other When, some weeks ago, Mr. Cham- berlain entered the British House of Commons from behind the Speaker's chair, and, supported on each side, made his feeble way to the Clerk's table to take the Parliamentary oath, it must have oecurred to many of the silent and awed spectators of this dra- matic scene that the great gladiator of the past was taking his last look at the arena in which for so many years he had been the doughtiest fighter. Just sixteen years earlier a still greater statesman had said farewell to the Chamber, of witch he had for more than sixty years been such a distinguished ornament. Mr. Glad. stone had made his last speech, in a voice as ringing and with a passion as intense as in the days of his youth. The Bpeaker had left the chair; and as the veteran was making his way out of the House for the last time, he stood for a moment beneath the Speaker's chair, gave one swift, com- prehensive glance of those eagle eyes of his around the scene of 20 many t. triumphs, and then, squaring his shoulders, strode grimly apd reso- lutely out of the Chamber. Thirteen years earlier Gladstone's from rival li, made his last won the tical stage in the House of Lords, at the close of a speech against the evacuation of Can. dahar by British troops. Broken man as he was, there was no trace of weak. ness or faltering in this farewell ef- fort of oratory. There was much of the old fire and the picturesque elo- {uence of his prime. "The key of In- ia is in London," he cluded. "The majesty of Bovereignty, the spirit and vigor of your Parliaments, the jueshaustible resources of a free, an ple--these are the keys of India." And as the old statesman resumed his seat, the peers burst into one of those rare rounds of applause which showed that they had been strangely moved. Bix weeks later the 'great voice was stilled in death, The farewell words of the "great Earl of Derby," in the House of Lords on June 17, 1869, were among the most eloquent and impressive the "Rupert of Debate" ever delivered. "My lords," he said, in his peroration, "I am now an old man, and, like many of your lordships, I have now passed the three-score years and ten. My official life is entirely closed, my poli- tical life is nearly so, and in the course of nature my natural life can. not now be long." . In the following October the curtain had been rung down on the last scene of all. Palmerston's farewell speech was delivered on May 23, 1865, in the rix- teenth Parliament in which he had sat. It was a speech of considerable humor; ingenuity, and raillery on the leakage of Cabinet secrets; and prob- ably none who enjoyed the Grand Old Man's delicate humor (he was so at that time), full of the effervescence of youth, dreamed that the House would never hear his voice again. bden's. last words mons, delivered on July 23, 1864, were an eloquent condemnation of the ex-- tension of Government manufactures,' Tod and ec 1 thus: "Our fortunes as a Government and nation are indis- solubly united, and we will rise or fall, flourish or fade together, accord. ing to the energy, euterprise and abil ity of the Jront body of the manufac. turing and industrious community," When Peel rose to ak in the Co 'at one v'clock'on Saturday morning, June 28, 1860, those who lis- tened to his eloquent condemnation of Palmerston's foreign policy would have been horrified if they had known that the stately presence would be m in death within four days. After the speech Peel went for his usual ride in Hyde Park; on Consti- tution Hill he was thrown violently from his horse, and on the following Tuesday night he drew his last Tosuth. Pp V's farewell speech pe! Perceval's farewell spee was pn 3 three days before he was ly murdered, in the Iabby of ' House, by the madman, Belling- ham; and O'Connell's was "a per- formance in dumb show; a feeble old man untiring before a table' --a piti- ful travesty of the giant whose superb eloquence and rollicking humor had, in past years, made the mmons shake with applause or rock with laughter. But no statesman has made such a dramatic and tragic last appearance in Parliament as that of the great Earl of Chatham, who was carried to the House of Lords from his death- bed, haggard and emaciated, and wrapped in flannels, As he spoke, he leant heavily on his crutch. "I am an r a few more painful disjointed words he fell back on his seat, appar. ently dying. and was carried out of the chamber, go . : \ "Lucky Lambton." 80 Sir Hedworth lainblen, whose engagement to Lad is known Farce uf i ~ rl] ei leicte 5 i : I LEE i of India, elephants are employed +t! aid in preparing teakwood for ship. enious, and a determined peo in the Come a ELEPHANTS AS LABORERS paring Teakwood for Market. In the lumber yards and saw mills to ment. In the forests and at the ports also these big creatures handle the timber. They drag the logs to the streams aud arrange the booms; they stack the planks, and they carry all ! sorts of lumber at the direction of | their masters. Every saw mill its elephants and there are some compan- ics which employ seyeral hundred. The average institution, however, can. afford but few, for the animals are costly, a green one bringing $800 a prize worker often as much $2,000, : THe elephants come from the forests tof Upper Burma. The wild ones are all' owned by the Government, which has an elephant de ent to catch and care for them. The elephant com- missioner keeps track of the wild herds and annually sends out men to hunt them and catch the young bulls, which are trained and are finally dis- posed 'of to the lumbermen, - These huge beasts handle logs of great weight, writes F. G. Oa A writing of scenes he has visited. "An elephant would kneel down before the middle of a log, erowd his tusks un- der it and then, thro his great trunk over the top, wo raise it bodily and earry it to the truck upon which it was to be pushed to the buzz sow, If the log proved very heavy he would rest one end on and drag it. An ele t ng lumber would lift the timbers up and lay them down on the others as evenly as though it had measured each piece. In some cases where it was necessary to carry two logs at a time the men tied a rope around them and the ele phant would pick up the end of the rope with his trunk and place it over his tusk and then, raising his head, walk off with it. The elephants gather up the scraps of lumber and lay them so that the workmen can 10p8 them into bundles. They also work at pil ing the boards and loading for the SAY the lumbe they not only At the lumber camps they on carry the logs 10 the streams, but aid in forming the rafts and booms. They wade or swim about, according Yo the depth of the water, towing the logs this way and that. When the logs come to the rta they break the booms by a a out the key log. They then take the timbers out of the water and put them on the cars, which carry them to the mill. In some places the elephants work together, and there are boss elephants who kee the others up 10 their work and poun them with ir trunks when they lag. They have to be carefully fed, and each must have his bath twice a day. During this operation they sit down while buckets of water are thrown over them. After that their masters scrub them with rough brushes and curry them, as it were, all over. As the water is dashed upon them they wag their tails and flap their ears and grunt in joy. 2 Lord Rothschild's Influence. A pleasing story is told apropos of . ouse the prestige of the great othschild "and its influence in City circles of London. A young scion of a noble house was given a letter of introduction to Lord Rothschild. In this it 'was stated that the young man, though undoubtedly talented, had had the misfortune to be wholly thrown upon his beam-ends owing to the death of his father, who had succumb ed to grief on account of his bank- ruptey. Lord Rothschild to do his very most for a deserving case. After hav- ing read the note, Lord Rothschild took the young man by the arm, and walked with him from the Roths: childs' dffices in Bt. Swithin's Lane, t the Bank of England, through hrogmorton street, and past [ 8tock Exchange, introducing him on the way to several well-known brokers end financiers. him "ge "But," said th young man in astonishment, "are you not going to do anythi for me?" - dear fellow," re ch will know what to do." man was bright enough to take the hint, and not only obtained unlimited eredit in the City through the prestige of the great financier's friendship, but | soon made the headway which has since led to success. ° Three Distinguished Brothers. Although he probably had high bo 8 for his sons, it is doubtful if ent occupy. One, Bir John, was made a baronet three yearg ago, Sir Thomas was knighted in I and now Arthur Dewar, K.C. M.P., Bolicitor-General Beotland since 1909, has been ap- ted a Scottish judge. There are itics as candi- il 1899 his y a BR... Le gee Beret A { 5 HE DAY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, JUNE 2 The letter wound up asking i rd Roths- | , "if you are one half as clever | as I am assured you are, you yourself | on 1 CANADA IS GETTING THEM. U.S. Is Waking Up to the Exodus to the Dominion. Recently a report was submitted to the Congress of the United States by BSeuator Dilingham, chairman of the' Joint Immigration Commission, in regard to the inmigration situation in Canada. y Probably the pest impertant state ment made in the report is that Can. ada wants immigrants whose purpos2 is to enter agricultural pursuits either as owners, tenants or Mborers, and desires to exclude those immigrants whose presence would tend to the congestion of towns and cities. Another striking fegture of the re- port is the comparison of immigration into Canada during the past decade with that into the Uni States. This shows that while 70 per cent. of Canada's immigrants during that period came from northern and west. ern Europe, and only 30 per cent. from southern and eastern Europe, the re- verse was true in regard to the im- migrants entering the United States. The report says that no effort is made to secure immigrants from southern and western Europe, and unless it is the purpose of such immigrants to enter agriculturists pursuits their ad- mission to Canada is doubtful. On the other hand, it is pointed out that effort is e, through salaried agents of the Canadian Immigration Department, aided by sub-agents to whom a bonus or commission is paid, and by means of advertising, to se- cure immigrants from the United Kingdom, France, Belgium, Helland, Germany, Denmark, Iceland, Finland, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, and the United States, Of the total number of immigrants going from the United States to Can- ada during the past three years, more than seven-eighths were classed as farmers or farm laborers. Probably no other considerable movement of population from one country to an- other, says the report, at the present time is so largely composed of agri- cultural people. Pigeons--Halfpenny Each. Castle Wemyss, situated on the Firth of Clyde, where Lord and Lady Inverclyde have been spending a few weeks, is a handsome and imposing house, which was built by the late Sir John Burns. Lord Inverclyde is one of - best-known sportsmen of the North, and besides being a good shot, is an expert at hockey and curling. With one whose fortnnes are bound up with the sea, it is but natural that he shoul inecjnde yachting in. his list of recreations. His lordship tells many good stories, one of his best be- ing connected with a pigeon-shooting match.~~A party of amateur pigeon- shooters some time ago arranged for a match, and ordered thirty pigeons from a dealer in a neighboring town. The shooting was of a Really wonder- ful character; but the actual perform. ances need not be described in detail. The net results will be gathered read- ily from the following note, which was subsequently received from the' dealer. It ran: "Gentlemen,--I beg sincerely to thank you for your order, and. to intimate that I s_all be only too happy to supply you with any number of birds on future occasions of this sort. The whole of the thirty birds, for which you paid me at the rate of eightpence per , returned DE ith me at ls tone: Jv roug em a stray pigeon. My ce to your me henceforth will si a 8 ba Crops of 1908. Of the total production of wheat in the Western provinces last year, 96.43 per cent. was merchantable, of oats 95.13 per cent., and of barley 95.44 per Manitoba shows the highest per- of merchantable wheat, oats Then, shaking hands § i "good-day" last year, | 4,550,000 bushels {$7,780,000 as against 44,715,000 bush- els, of barley 4920000 as against 7,144,000 'bushels, of potatoes 13,224,000 as against 10.026,000 bushels, of tar- nips and other roots 11,658,000 as against 32,757,000 bushels in 1909. In Quebec at the same date there was hand of oats 13,677,000 i N. B. Log Seasori. With all the logs out on Bay Dn Vin Nappan, Black River, Bartibogue, | Tabusintac and Tracadia waters, and blind for the last 'ten years, Bridget an inmate of the of the Fri at Wi Ld in, driving donkey out of its eustomary stall. Be- 1, 1010. EE ---- AFGHAN AMENITIES. J Noses. : Dr. Theod missionary, lecturing at the Caxton Hall, London, recently, on his experi- ences among the 'wild tribes of the Northwest Frontier of lpdia, while at Bannu it was no unusual thing to be called upon 16 supply arti- ficial noses for the wives of men who, in a fit of jealousy, had cut off the ends of the nosez-of their women folk, One man who had cut his wife's nose off altogether was told by the doctor that, in order to make a good job of the repair, it would be neces. sary to ¢fmdte England for an rrtic ficial nese, On being told that the cost would be thirty rupees the man hesitated. Asked the reason of his hesitation, the man said, "Well, it's this way, sahib, I can get a new wife for eighty rupees." (Laughter) "However," pro: ceeded the doctor, "he agreed eventa. ally to have the old wife patched up." "Every year," he added, "we are called upon to make new noses, and same of the ladies are very well satis. ed with the result." Robbery and brigandage were the profession of some of the tribes, especially the Waziris. When a child was born his mother usually placed him in a hole in the wall of the mud. house, and said to him, "Learn to be a thief." Thieving was largely done by digging under the walls of the mud-houses. : But the Waziris alse liad a sense of humor. Last year there was a big assemblage of chiefs at a certain eenfre to meet a political officer ra. speeting the Inwlessness of the tribes. Having been sumptuously entertain. ed, they presented the officer with a beautiful antelope as a mark of appre. ciation, Before the chiefs had reached their hills on the return journey a message ~arrived stating that an antelope had been stolen from the house of a Nawab. Speaking of the blood feuds of the various tribes, Dr. Pennell said these were so intense that it was only pos- sible to cultivate land within gunshot range of the villages, each of which possessed a gun tower with loopholes for firing. Each man worked in the fields with a rifle over one shoulder and cartridges in his belt, in order to be ready for all emergencies. In such a district the advantages of European surgery were naturally much appreciated, and a doctor could pass from ong tribe to another with- out fear; in fact, each tribe would rovide him with an escort to the oundary of the next tribe, Patients ¢ i the hospital at Banou from as far away as Cabul, and often there would arfive at the hospital a stfing of the blind, each holding on the other in front, -and a man who could see a little leading the lot. In the course of an interview with a reporter, Dr. Pennell gave another il- lustration. of 'matrimonial jealousy among the border tribes. "One day," he said, "an Afghan chief who had been across the border came back and saw his wife speaking to a man over the wall in his com- pound. He at once drew his sword, cut off his wife's head, and threw it to the man, saying, 'Uf you want to speak to her now, you can.' " Many of the patients at the hospital are the victims of frontier raids. One man who was admitted there for treat ment had been shot by his uncle. The bullet had gone through his lung, but careful nursing pulled him through. "When he was convalescent," said Dr. Pennell, "he called me one day to his bedside and said. 'Oh, sahib, I want Jo to give me some cartridges.' I said, "What do you want the cart- ridges for?' Pointing to his chest, he replied, 'I have this score to pay off.' "I said, 'I am very sorry to hear that. We have had a difficult task to eure you, and now very shortly we shall have the same trouble with your uncle." He said, 'Oh, no, you need not be afraid of that, sahib. I am' a better shot than he is." We did not, get the uncle in, and we heard eventu- ally that he had killed him." Surrounded by Blacks. A thrilling tale @f five English offi- cers and a few native troops having been besieged for three months by «cannibal hordes comes from Obundu, Jin Southern Nigeria. The besieging Munchis are almost the only Nigerian tribe not subdaed by British advance. They are tall, powerful savages, and fight with poisoned arrows and a Jong 'native sword. The Britishers had with them a company of the Southern Ni- gerian Rifles and two Maxim guns. them spasmodically for three months yg and for two weeks the troops ad practically no rest. r- ters of the company were on out duty round the station, and the whole company were under arms every day from 3.30 a.m. till an hour after dark. One officer sat up every night and the rest slept in their clothes. On hearing of their straights a relief force of native troops was sent out from headquarters, which after a splendid forced march, covering 200 miles by river and 100 miles by road in 612 days, arrived in the belea- guered post. Africa's Color Problem. Replying to the toast of his health at a farewell banquet given by the Chamber of Mines at Johannesburg, Lord Belborne spoke about the color- ed races in South Africa who were not natives -- people of partly white and partly ble k origin. He believed the tendency to drive eolored people down to the position of Kaflirs was unjust and unwise; because they of. { ten had the thoughts and feeli of i the white man, a , one day we mighl have to face a grest concerted move ment of native races" lord Selborne prophesied that in the event of such a terrible catastrophe they would find the leader of the native races to be a colored man with the feelings, chor and superiority of the whits } yy they persizisd in the tendency to degrade the enlored peaple to the condition of the natives. ; * 'Germany's Aerial Navy. Germany's aerial navy already con tains fourteen vessels. \ mcg . Despite the fact that storms have destroyed two of his largest dirigible Count in is building i re-1. Pennell, a medical | ead | The Munchis have been attacking | am Career, . | The report is widely credited { Mr. E. H. Fitzhugh, of Montreal, is at present first vice-president of the | r, will shortly | | Grand Trunk Railw become general manager of that sys- tem. The latter title was jheld by Mr. C. M. Haye, who relin- quished the - title: when he became { president a short while back. The i post has not been filled, Mr. hugh has, however, been performing the duties involved. Mr. Fitzhugh, though a good Cana- dian, is like many men who created and developed the railway | business in Canada; a native of the United States. He was born February Ist, 1853, in Daawille, Montgomery { County, ssouri. He entered rail- | way service Kansas City and Northern Railway, at St. Louis, Mo. car accountant's office of th# same railway, and chief clerk to superine tendent, western division, Wabash Railroad until 1889, From 1889 to December 31st, 1896, was master of Grand Trunk Railway System, Montreal. On July 15th of the same | year he was appointed superintendent of the middle division of the Grand Trunk Railway Bysteth, with offices at Toronto. From May 1899 to March al manager, Central Vermont Railway System and allied railroads, and lived at St. Albans, Vt. In 1901, when Mr. C. M. Hays became president of the South&fn Pacific Railway, he .went to San Francisco, Cal, as his sssistant. In 1902 he returned to Canada with Mr. Hays and became vice-president Vermont Railway System. From Jan- unary lst, 1906 to January 6th, 1910, he was third vice-president of the Grand Trunk Railway System, and Railway System, with offices at Mont- pointed first vice-president of the Grand Trunk Railway System, retain. ing the vice-presidency of the Central Vermont Railway System, and the vice-presidency of the Detroit and Toledo Bhore Line Railroad. St. John's Exhibition. of Bt. John citizens, by their ener- getie lobbying at Ottawa, secured the $50,000 grant, which goes with a Dom- inion exhibition, the people ¢f that bustling city have been boosting their fair for all they are worth. The dates of exhibition are Sept. 6th to 15th, just at a season when New Brunswick, the Mecca of tourists and big game hunters, is in her most glorious attire and weather mood. The 8t. John Exhibition Association engaged the services of Mr. H. J. P Good, whose wide experience of seven- tion executive fit him amply for the conduct of a Dominion exhibition. In addition to the grant of the Dom- inion Government financial support 1a fortheoming from the New Brunswick As these funds are being largely de. voted to marked increases in prize moneys, it is assured that competition ly keen. Furthermore, the national character of the exhibition, the official tone lent it by Dominion gnd Provin- cial sanction, is inducing scores of manufacturing houses in widely sep- arated sections of Canada to exhibit their wares, as it were, Canadian and seruble, In the agricultural and live stock sections enormous displays will be made by eastern producers and by many in the middle west, Maritime Provinces of New Bruns. wick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island have settled down to united ef- fort in safeguarding the prestige of the East against the velopment of the West. representative en- Canada's Convicts. There are six penitentiaries in the Dominion, and the population of these institutions in the fiscal year 1908.09 wag 1,765. Their nationality, as in- dicated by country of birth, is as fol. lows: Canada, 1,046; England, 199; Scot land, 64; Ireland, 54; other British, 23; United States, 181; Italy, 71; Rus- sia, 31; Germany, 27; Frange, 19; Denmark, 15; China, 16; other countries, 26 The Canadian-born constitute 59 per cent. ; the British-born outside of Can ada, 18 per cent.; per cent, Ten per cent. are under 20 years of age; 7/4 dare between 20 and 30 years; and 447 are between 30 and 40 years of age. Fifteen per cent. gre unable to read or write. Bevente®n ate. In civil condition, 1,196 are sin- average daily population was 1625 The criminal record shows that 13% second terms; 656 a third term; and there is one and fifteenth terms. sentence, 66 are serving life terms, but two, tions shows that 603 registered as lab- ihe two largest single classes. Canadian Critic of Bjornson. wegian literature is a Canadian, Prof. W. H. Schofield, of Harvard. He is a graduate of Toronto University and as a poet is of interest In pure lyric verse, says Prof. Scho. field, no Norw the meadow, jubilant and dancing, full of* fancy and fire, of earnestness, tenderness > pathos, Bjornson's verses respond to of his people. There is something bao in his wegians i wusic. 20d melancholy. For Nor. and direct castings wes made with eleetricity in fons plants an the Usit- ad States in 1908 : worked himself out of a steady job. =» only purwe deep. forinerly | Fite- | vice-president of the Central Vermont, real. On Januvary Tth, 1910 he was ap- | teen years with the Toronto Exhibi- | Government and the city of 8t. John. | in all departments will be exceeding. ' in a truly | and the. wonderful de- | Austria, 23; | and foreigners, 23 | gle, 512 married ,and 57 widowed. The | offenders are serving first terms; 233 | case each of tenth, twelfth | In duration of | the majority are serving periods of | ee, five or seven years respec- | tively. The classification by oceupa- | orers and 129 as farmers--these being The most noted authority en Nor |SPECIA his summary of Bjornson's standing | has equalled | Bjornson. Beneficent like the sun in | { Rubber Tires on your £ § { { {| 1 Be | on shortest notice the varying moods | j done tis, something of trolldom, both i ot Gress | JAMES LATURNEY, More than 13,000 tons of steel ingots | By discovering the Norih Pole Prary | { ABLE-RAILROADER. "3 Jealous Natives Cut Off Their Wives' | E. H. Fitzhugh Mas Had a Brilliant | i ERE CHAFED PLACES, BLISTERS 8 Are feet, . bono stds If so, try Zam Buk. As soon as is have | { in 1873, as clerk in the |} office of the Master Car Builder, of | He served in the |} transportation for lines west of the | § Mississippi River un the Wabash Rail- | road, with office at Moberly, Mo. On | January 1st, 1806, he became secre- | tary to the general manager of the ' J} at | 8 1901, he was vice-president and gener | and general manager of the Central | -- YOUR GROCER FOR Ever since a persistent delegation | housewifé's The dulight If you'll use it once, ¥ ne GH use it always MANUFACTURED BY Maple Leaf Milling Co. ONTARIO ST. % | Had Given Up All Hope of Living. | Heart Troubis Cured by Mil | burn"s Hears and Nerve Pils, Mr. Andrew Savoy, Cmttan's, NB, | writea:--* In the year 1005, | was taken sick and did not think 1 sould live any length of time. My trouble wae with my | mears and peaple told me that nekting ecould be done for &. case like mine | ponsulted the very best doctors, but they | sould do.me no good. For seven weeks {1 eould hardly cross the floor. 1 had no | palo, but was so wea k nobody in the world | ram heliove how 1 felt. 1 had given up ell hopes of liviug and bad given my little gil to my sistecindaw. . | "One day a friend cime to nee me, and calling me by name, said, * Lizsip, if | were | you I would try a dows of Milburn's Heart { and Nerve Filly as they are good for heart grouble.! My husband gol me a box, but | for two days I was not feblinz any Letter | but on the fourth day my busbar i= *1 believe those pills are doir ¥ 7 | 1 wasable tomy, Yes, I feel a goo | better this morning.' He nic | will get you arother bax right : | took two Boxes and three doses out of the third one, and 1 was periectly well and | have not heent sick since then, i "1 will never be without them in my | home for God knows if it had not been for 1 Milbura's Heart and Nerve Pills, 1 would aot have been aiive now." i Price, 50 cents per bor, 3 boxes for | $1.25, at all dealers or mailed direct on | reoeipt of price by The T. Mibu Ce. Limited, Toronto, Out per cent. have been total abstainers, | and 40 per cent. have been intemper- | rn Se ----_---- { { BUILDERS I { ALL KINDS OF LUMBER LOW PRICES ASBESTIC PLASTER SALE. ALSO COAL AND ALL OF WOOD. 'S. Bennett & Co. | Cer, Bagot and Barenck Sts. "Phone 9471. a AT! { Foi) KINDS { lo Me argain § Recnnd- i ond-batd Hunasoul » 4 New Waggars of every 4 pie Habber Tires 8 Specialty, Mathers w are i ed to put rriage | Send your carriage Repairs snd Painting kinds Give ur a esl The Carriage Maker, 390 PVIRCESS STREVT. Blandaes romady Tor Wied, Bonorrhaps sod Nontincs WAZ HOURS. Cures Kid Bey 308 Piucder Troubles

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy