Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 2 Dec 1904, p. 3

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be}. live saint needs to wear no sym- 1. Love usually tries to hide its noblest deeds. 'A white life preaches louder than 'a black tie. Things that are almost right are )ltogether wrong. No man finds himself until he is willing to be lost. A little elbow grease is worth a lot of oily phrases. Most moral infection comes from apparently small vices. The peroration of a sermon often prevents its application. The rightness 01 a thing does no depend on its wryness. 'A man is not firm in faith because he is fossilizml in mind. Living in the past only puts headlight on the rear platform. A man is never happy Ceased to care whether he is or not. One does not have to be crusty in FOR THREE YEARS _.....- PAIN-RACKED WOMAN CURED BY DODD’S KIDNEY PILLS: Strong Statement by Mrs. Jas. Hughes, of Morley, Ont.â€"â€"She’s Strong and Healthy Once More. Morley, Gnt.. Nov. 28â€"(Special).â€"â€" t What Dodd’s Kidney Pills are doing for the suffering women of Canada will never be fully known. It is only when some courageous woman breaks tho the secrecy that covers woman and her troubles that a. passing glimpse until he has of their great work is given. For this reason a statement made by Mrs. Jas. Hughes, of this place, is nature to give a crust to the needy. of more than passing intetest. You cannot atone for stealing the bakery by giving away a few bisâ€" cuits. An honest laugh may have more religion in it than the most pious logic. _'______+-â€"â€"'-â€"â€" “WIâ€"IACKS .” And What They Mean. When Old Mother Nature gives you a “whack” remember “there's a :eas-on" so try and say “thank you" then set about finding what you have done to demand the rebuke, and try and get back into line, for that's the happy place after all. Curious how many highly organized people fail to appreciate and heed the first little, gentle “whacks” of the good old Dame, but go right along with the habit whatever it may be, that causes lllCl‘ disapproval.‘ Whiskey, Tobacco, Coffee, Tea. or other unnatural treatment of the body, until serious illness sets in or some chronic disease. Some people seem to get on very Well with those things for awhile, and Mother Nature apparently cares but little what they (10. Perhaps she has no particular plans for them and thinks it little use to waste time in their training. There are people, however, who seem to be selected by Nature to "do things.” The old Mother ex- pects them to carry out some depart- ment of her great work." A portion of these selected ones oft and again Seek to stimulate and then deaden the tool (the body) by some one or more of the drugsâ€"Whiskey, Tobacâ€" co, Collee, Tea, Morphine, etc. You know all of these throw down the same class of alkaloids in Chemiâ€" cal analysis. They stimulate and then depress. They take from mam or woman the power to do his or her best Work. ' After these people have drugged for a time, they get a hint, or mild “whack” to remind them that they have work to do, a. mission to per- form, and should be about the busiâ€" ness, but are loafing along the way- ‘side and become unfitted for the lfame anld fortune' that waits for them if they b‘ut stick to the course 'and keep the body clear of obstruc- tions so it can carry out the bdhests of the mind. Sickness is a, call to "come up higher." These hints come in variâ€" ous forms. It may be stomach trouble or bourels, heart, eyes, kidâ€" neys or general nervous prostration. You may depend upon it when a “whack” comes it’s a warning to (Quit some abuse and do the right and fair thing with the body. Perhaps it is coffee drinking that officials. That is one of the greatest "causes of human disorder among 'Americans. -- Now then if MotliervNature is gen- tle with you and only gives light, little "whacks" at first to attract attention, don’t abuse her considera- tion, or she will soon hit yon litrder, sure. And you may also be sure she will hit you very, very hard if you insist on following the way you have been going. It seems hard work to give up a habit, and we try all sorts of plans to charge our ill feelings to some other cause than the real one. Coffee drinkers when ill will attri- bute the trouble to bad food, ma- laria, overwork and what not, but they keep on being sick and gradual- 1y getting worsa until they are final- ly forced to quit entirely, even the “only one cup a day." Then they begin to get better, and unless they have gone long enough to set up some fixed organic disease, they gen- erally get entirely well. It is easy to quit coffee at once and for all, by having well made Postum, with its rich, deep, seal lbrOWn color which comes to ’02 beautiful golden brOWn when good cream is added, and the crisp snap of good, mild Java is there if the Postum has been boiled long enorfigh to bring it out. It pays to be Well and happy for good old Mother Nature then sends ‘us her blessings of many and various kinds and helps us to gain fag-3,3 and fortune. Strip off the handicaps. leave out the deadening habits, heed Mother Nature’s hints, quit being a loser and become a winner. She will help you sure if you cut out the things that keep you back. “There's a reason" and a profound one. Look in each package for a copy of ‘tho famous little book, “The Road to Weili'llle.” “I was a great sufferer for four years," says Mrs. Hughes, “I was treated by five doctors and a speciâ€" alist from the U. S. I tried nearly every kind of medicine I could hear of, but none seemed to do me any good. “I was in bed for nearly three years. I had pains up my spinal column, in my head, over my eyes, across my back and through my left side. I took fourteen boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills, and now I am strong and able to do a good day’s work, thanks to Dodd’s Kidney Pills.’ ' PERSONAL POINTERS, Notes of Interest About Some Prominent People. The Queen of Boumania, who is preparing an opera in conjunction with a small heyâ€"the latest musical prodigyâ€"is both a. poetess and a writer of stories. She took to all- thorship,in order to drown her sore row. Her Majesty is supposed to have a better head of hair than any other woman in Europe. She is an accomplished linguist, speaking no fewer than seven languages. The Duke of Fife is one of the few great landowners in Great Britain who do not believe in the accumula- tion of vast estates. His Grace for some years has steadily parted with his land as opportonity afford- ed, iolding that one man cannot control large tracts of territory to the best advantage of the communâ€" ity. He is probably the only total abstainer among the dukes in the House of Lords. The Prince of Waldenburg, a wealthy Viennese nobleman, and his newlyâ€"wedded bride are spending their honeymoon in an original man- ner. Accompanied by a white mule which carries a small travelling outâ€" fit, they are making a walking tour through Italy. ‘A large staff of ser- vants with heavy luggage travels ahead of the bridal pair, to arrange for their reception at the best hotels of the towns visited. The Emperor Francis Joseph is a man of simple, frugal habits, and a hard worker. He is an early riser, and for many years after ascending the throne he was up at five o’clock in the morning to begin his day’s work, after a breakfast of coffee and bread and butter. The amount of work he is able to get through is amazing. For recreation he goes to one of his shooting-boxes for a few days, wearing the Tyrolese .cos- tume and devoting himself entirely to the chase. In the Crown Prince of Japan the Emperor Mutsuhito has an heirâ€"ap- parent ai’ter his own heart. Alâ€" though he has never travelled beâ€" yond his father’s dominions, Prince Yoshihito is a remarkably enlighten- ed young nian, and one who has never been pampered. 'As a small boy he was sent away to school, where he was treated in much the same way as his companions. He .is fond of athletics, is a. line long- distance walker, and is, or rather was until recently, something of a wrestler. Very few know that the present Pope was once arrested. He had vis- ited a poor man dying and stretched on the bare ground. In retiring to bed the thonght oi the poor man without a mattress came back to the prelate. This was too much for his fatherly heart, and without more ado he rolled his own up as well as he could and slipped out with it on his shoulders. But he had not bar- gained for the watchful police, and he was presently in the custody of two Venetian gendarmes. As soon as they recognised him, however, they took charge of the bundle them- selves and carried it to where the good cardinal directed. Some of the peers in the ll‘ousc of Lords have peculiar mannerisms. Lord Lansdowne will probably never mlget out of the habit of twirling his folders round his fingers when- ad< dressing the Ilouse. Lord Spencer, who sits on the opposite side of the table, most often lays his hand on his breast. The Duke of Devonshire always puts one of his hands into his trousers pockets when making a, speech. ’Among the younger 1nem~ bers of the House, Lord Ilenoughâ€" more, the Umlerâ€"Secretary of State for .War, always ends his periods by slapping a file of notes in front of him. He has also the trick of turn- ing upon their lordships with an expression of bland surprise and ex- tending both hands palms upwards. In presenting the handsome sum of $50,000 to the United. Free Church Emergency Fund, Lord Overtoun has again performed one of these acts of generosity for which he is famous. 'A man of great wealth and sincerely More than half the battle in cleaning greasy dishes is in the soap you use. If it's Sunlight Soap it’s the besti GB religious, Lord Overtoun has essen- tially practical views about the possession of great riches. He is of opinion that the advantage of havâ€" ing wealth is to use it for the best ends and not heard it. He makes it a rule of his life to give a certain sum away every year. Nothing if not consistent, his lordship has, in years during which he had lost money in business, taken the amount of his charitable gifts from his capital. Lord Overtoun’s chief recreatiofis are shooting, fishing, and golfing“ When Lord Goschen makes a speech he sometimes throws his arms about and gesticulates in the wildest fashâ€" ion, and at the end of a sentence, overcome by the irresistible charac- ter of his own argument or the scorn which he is casting on that of another, he now and then places himself in an attitude of pretended collapse, when his arms are crossed limply before his chest and his head inclined to hang in sheer exhaustion. + Gallantâ€"Miss Moneybags to Chum --This pocketbook is fearfully heavy. Foot-pad, suddenly looming upm- Madam, allow me to relieve you. Lever's Y-Z (Wise Head) Disinfecâ€" ant Soap Powder dusted in the bath, softens the water and disin- fects. Little Claraâ€"Mother, tell me a fairy story. Mrs. Gayboy (glancing at the clock)â€"â€"Wait until your father comes home, dear, and he will tell us both one. A Casket 0F Pearls.â€"Dr. Von Stan's Pineapple Tablets would prove a great solace to the dis- heartened dyspeptic if he would but test their potency. They’re verita- ble gems in preventing the seating of stomach disorders, by aiding and stimulating digestionâ€"60 of these helath “pearls” in a box, and they sost 35 cents. Recommended by most eminent physiciansâ€"64: Towneâ€"I thought your pastor was opposed to lotteries in the church. Browneâ€"So he is. Towneâ€"But I understand your church gave an oysâ€" ter supper and that the one who got the oyster received a prize. Browne â€"Of course. The oyster was the prize. __,___._____.______â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"-â€"- I Believe MINARD’S LINIMENT will cure every case of Diphtheria. liverdale. MRS. REUBEN BAKER. I Believe MINARD’S LINIMENT will produce growth of hair. MRS. CHAS. ANDERSON. Stanley, P. E. I. I Believe MINARD’S LINIMENT is the best household remedy on earth. . MATTI-IIAS FOLEY. Oil City, Ont. W Lylesâ€"Did you ever come across a more conceited fellow than Bulger? They say he is an atheist, and I beâ€" lieve he is. Bonterâ€"I wouldn't like to go so far as that; but I do know that he doesn’t recognize the exisâ€" tence of a superior being. Kidney Experimentâ€"There’s no time for experimenting when you’ve discover- ed that you are a. victim of some one form or' another of kidney disease. Lay hold of the treatment that thou- sands havc pinned their faith to and has cured quickly and permanently. South American Kidney Cure stands pro-emi- nent in the world of medicine as the kidney suil‘erer's truest friend-62 . “a,â€" Old Gentlemanâ€""What has been the cause of your downfall?" Tramp --“Well, yer see, I used to be a music teacher: but I've bin out uv work ever since dey had dese here autermatic pianncr-players.” For Over Sixty Years Mas.\me ow’sSoormNo SYRUP has been 315d). millions of mothers for their children while teething. Itsoothesthe child, softens the nine. allayapnin, cures \vindcolic. regulates theflmmuc l and bowels, midis the bcstreiuedyfor Diarrhoea. Twenty-[He cents a. bottle Sold b’druxgiats throughout the world. Be sure and dealer" Mk4. Wmunow’sSoorumoSriwr." 22â€"01 “Your daughter’s music is improvâ€" ing/"said the professor, “but when she runs the scales I have to watch her pretty closely.” “Just like her father," said Mrs. Nuritch. “Tâ€"Io made his money in the grocery busi- mess."- Dr. Agnew’s Ointment Cures Piles.-â€"Itching, Bleeding and Blind Piles. Comfort in one application. It cures in- three to six nights. It cures all skin diseases in young and old. 'A» remedy beyond compare, and it never fails. 35 cents.â€"â€"63 lieâ€"“Dearest, I want you to know that I hold you tenderly in my heart of hearts." Sheâ€"â€""But what are you 'doing with your arms?”- ..____. lmaru's lmlmem cures camel In con. physiOIOgieal; late in everything, and the results, fes-ted chiefly in our progeny.” This was the conclusion at which Dr. "1‘. B. Hyslop, senior physician to‘ the Bethlehem Royal hospital and to ently. We can handle your poultry either \. alive or dressed to best advantage. Also your butter, eggs, honey and other produce. THE BAWSON COMMISSION 00.. Limited Cor. West Market and Colborne Sta, TORONTO. "â€"5â€" MENTAL VIGOR 0N WANE. Prominent Physician Sees Gain in Lunacy. "Our daily habits of life are un- We are tWO hours though not apparent in us, are moni- King Edward’s schools, arrived in a lecture to the Childhood society rec- Starting with the axiom that pre- vention is better than cure, Dr. Hy- slop declared that the rapid increase of lunacy among civilized races deâ€" manded serious iniquiry into the pres- ent systems of mental and physical education. He said this is an age of too early, 1'00 rapid, and too seâ€" vere taxation on mental faculties. It is an age of increased capacity for remembering, but diminished capa- city for thought. The mental state of the majority of the civilized world, he Contended, is one of difuse consciousness, and an ill assortment of barren facts, instead of ideas, with a lack of continuity of thought closeâ€" ly allied to and easily passing into states of insanity. '“With the apparent advance of civilization,” added Dr. Hyslop, "there's in reality a dinim'ution in intellectual vigor, mainly due to the faulty management in economy of brain power.” _â€"-â€"â€"+J.â€"'â€"_._â€" lec Tearing the Heart Strings -â€"”It is not within the conception of man to measure my great sufferings from heart disease. 1001“ years I endur- ed‘alniost constant cutting and tearing pains about my heart, and many a. time would have welcomed death. Or. 5 Agncw’s Cure for the Heart has work- ' .2 0d a. veritable miracle."-â€"’1‘hos. Hicks, j, ,1 -W‘- M .;e~. ~-.>‘.«~~.-. ..~-.._..__., .. ‘. o wywl-rp‘fi-i‘ '4'! - :3 “a. . w I’erth, Ont.-â€"â€"59 ~_â€"___. Used in H.B.K. Mitts, Gloves . and Moccasinsâ€"tough as whale-j-4 3‘ bone, flexible, soft, pliable, scorch- proof, wind-proof, boil-proof, , crack-proof, tear-proof, rip-proof, cold-proof, almost wear-proofâ€" ’ certainly the greatest leather ever used in mitts and gloves. I Seedy Strangerâ€"Excuse me, sir, but can you change a dollar for me? Humanitarianâ€"Why, yes. Seedy Strangerâ€"Thanks. 'And now will you kindly tell me where I can get the dollar? [Miami's Llnlmenl lures fields. etc. K'ifl' :v. 2-: n 2.1 m w .,,. m... I M Teacher of Physiologyâ€"“Now we will dissect this odd little animal. . Like buckskin it is tanned But first Jimmy Phalig’ “’11! you 1 without oil, unlike buckskin it is tell me what we have here?” J linmy ' .â€" -â€""Faith, and it’s called a bat, sir.”« “E Porous: it is Wind‘l3l'00f”“'l’i‘1 Teacherâ€"“Very well. Now, how ' outwear three buckskins_ ‘ many kinds of bats are there?” J im~ . . “Pinto” Mitts and Gloves nayâ€"«“Tliere are foive. The black , never crack or harden, never get bat, the red bat, the acrobat, the cricket bat, and the brickbat, sir.” , _ sodden, are always warm, pliable, ' soft and comfortable. , , - Sold at all dealers but never with- nieritorious a. remedy for Indigestion, Dyspepsia and Nervousness as South out this brand :â€" American Nervine. They realize that ., it is a step in advance in medical ' -’ science and a sure and permanent cure for diseases of the stomach. It will cure you.â€"-60 Whore Doctors do agree lâ€"Pliysicians no longer consider it_catering to "quac- kery" in recommending in practice so â€".,r._ emu-mnm.‘ ,. w. u .. . ~' ’3 5m“:- , for ;;,; â€"â€" The young lawyer is a necessity, but frequently, like necessity,“ he knows no law. to. v . . . x}. u >4 ‘zflll" I. a I. u. V~ _, HUDSON BA KNITTING co. Montreal Winnipeg Dawson 2 e Mlnard's Linlmeni‘lures lllslempcl. r --:~..a:.‘.'.x;;.â€".-.x - m “a. n M unzfi‘ .9 Patâ€"“Well, here’s where ye live, f‘He’s ,boasztins that he’s got a Milka. What shall I do now?” Mike ‘smecure. What does that mean? ..sze_hic__ring the (1001-13011 first, asked Mrs. Browne. “Oh!” replied and thinâ€"hiCâ€"d‘ing‘ for th’ ambu- MHS- M'flkIDI‘OD,’ that ' means .he lance/L ' v thinks everybody s lookin at him.- Didn’t you ever hear tell of a per- son bein’ ‘the sinecure of all eyes?” Minard’s Llnimenl lures Diphtheria. part! by the Improved Blower. """' Heal: the ulcers, elm. them Doctorâ€"I suppose when you go to Passages”?! dmwln lnlhl work you ride. Patientâ€"Yes, sir: I throat and ananey cum _ , , . . v Calmh and ayFever. Blower “(10 up and thfztfiggâ€"Ag'f . free. All dealers, or on. w. on... lthought so. “admin C°-- 70mm" "1d Build. your trouble. Scdentary habits. Patientâ€"But I’d never m Stop riding. ,be at work if I didn’t ride up and down. I’m an elevator man. -_._.â€"â€"â€"â€"- on. A. w. cunsrs 0mm cunE lg sent direct to the aimed JO LONGER ON THE MA D. “What makes you so late?” asked Tim’s father, who in the boy’s ab- W"M*w~“‘~“ sence had had to see to the evening chores himself. ‘ _ Most peo 16 think too lightly of a “'1‘96101101' kept me 111-"' cough. tis ascrious matter and “What for?! needs prompt attention. 1 -"’Cause I couldn’t find Moscow on Take ' the map." . 9 "1‘ ' “Couldn’t find Moscow? And I’d S like to know who could, then! Why, ' 1 u . “ v 1 l, . .hz" 1 remembei healing tell 0 Moscow being burned when I was a boy! It’s an outrage to put such nonsensical C The Lun questions to children what’s there . Tank: 3 .\_ to learn something useful. I'll look : when the first Sign of a oomph or into that, and let yer teacher know i cold appears, 1:; win cum-:1.b you I ain’t been elected on the school ’ easily and quickly then-later it board for nothing!" will be harder to cure. . ' â€"‘-â€"' Prices, 25s., 5i)c.. and $1.00. 311 A landlord says a month’s rent in u. ' hand is better than a dozen promis- es to pay. ISSUE NO. 48â€"04 i .u. = W hump.- 0.4%.". II? 5 «as 4’ .53" ‘fi

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