Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 22 Apr 1910, p. 7

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Einsr PIMPLES AND ERUPTIONS In the Spring Most People Need a Tonic Medicine. If you want new health and new strength in the spring you must build up your blood with a tonic medicine. Following the long inâ€" door winter months most people feel depressed and easily tired. This means that the blood is impure and watery. It is this state of the blood that causes pimples and un- sightly eruptions. ' To this same condition is due attacks of rheuma- tism and lumbago; the sharp stab- bing. pains of sciatica and neural; gia; poor appetite, frequent head- aches and a desire to avoid exer- tion. You can’t. cure these troubles by the use-of purgatives; you need '21. tonic and a tonic only, and among all medicines there is none can equal Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for their tonic, life-giving, nerve re- storing powers. Every dose of this medicine makes new, rich blood,‘ which drives out impurities, sti; inulates every organ, and brings a feeling of new health and energy to weak, tired out, ailing men, we'- rnen'and children. If'y'o'uare feel- ing out of sorts give this medicine 'a'trial, it .will not disappoint you. Mr Paul Charbonneau, a young man well known in the‘ town of St. ailerome, Quei, is one of the host tvlio bear testimony to the value of 'Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills. He says: '-“When I left school I became a bookkeeper [in an important oflice. Probably due to confinement I be- an to suffer from indigestion and Tess of strength. I'became pale and seemingly bloodless and" was often ' seized ’wit'h palpitation'of the heart and violent headaches. I tried Sew oral remedies, .but they did not do me a bit of good. I was advised to try Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills and did so, and the use of eight boxes brought me back to perfect health and strength. I.have since enjoyed the; best of health and cannot'say too much in praise of this valuable medicine.” . - Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50Vcents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wilâ€" liams’ Medicine CO., Brockville, Ont *______ ASKING F00!) FROM SANTA. Pathetic Story Told iuLmulon Cor. oncr’s Court. “The child was standing on the fender, in front of a small fire, askâ€" ing Father Christmas to send down some food, as he was starving.” “Yes, he was asking Father Christ-mas for some bread and sugar and dates.” This was the pathetic dialogue between a coroner’s ofliccr and the another of little fourâ€"year-old Ed- ‘ward Brewer who 'as burned to death at his home in London, Eng- land. The case has some most pitiful features. Mrs. Brewer, the mother of the child, said at the inquest ,that her husbandâ€"a motor car drivenâ€"had deserted her eighteen months before, leaving her without .anv means of support. ' She had had to depend on her mother and brother to pay her rent and supply her from time to time with food. She had just gone over to her mother’s house to get some bread for the~1ittlc boy when a neighbor’s son ran in to say that be had fallen in the fire and been bady burned. Fruitâ€"Fame New Formula Cures Coughs, Colds Bronchitis and IIoai-scncss in Five Hours. Much is being done in these days to stop the ravages of consumption, but.probably nothing has been so effcctive. as teaching the public how to break up a cold and cure coughs, bronchitis, tonsilitis, etc., with simple home-mixed medicine.’ A laxative cough syrup, free from whiskey, is the prime need. A cough indicates iniiannnation and congestion and these in turn are duc‘to an excess of waste and poisâ€" on: in the system. A tonic laxa- tive cough syrup rids the system of congestion, while relieving the pain- ful coughing. Get the following and mix at l10mc:.One-lialt ounce llnid wild cherry bark. one ounce compound essence cardiol and} ihree ounces syrup white pine com- pound. Shake the bottle and take; twenty drops every half hour for" four hours. Then one-half to onei tenspoonful three or four times! daily. Give children less, accord- ing to ago. Out this out and save it for some friend. THE SMY 80110011 timed to Sufism RESCUE!) BY “ FHUITâ€"Aâ€"llVES”, INTERNATIONAL LESSON, APRIL 24. m Lesson IV. Warning and -Invila-- lion, Matt. 11. 20-30.-Goldcn Text, Matt. 11. 28. ' Verse 20. The cities condemned are Chorazin, Bethsaida,‘ and Ca- pernaum. The mighty Works done in those places and elsewhere con- . stituted the reply of Jesus to the anxious question of John, and to th: unstable, childish multitudes he had declared that theseN works were his vindication. ‘ ._ They repented nothost of them were Jews, who had no conception of a necessary change of heart be- fore they could belong to the king- dom of God. As children of Abra- ham, and therefore sons of God, they looked upon their membership in. the kingdom as a course. ~ ,. ' 2,! .' Chorazinâ€"Not mentioned else- where, either iu the Old Testament or theGospels.‘ It was a town about two miles from Capernaum, and passed very early into decay. . _ V , . .Bethsaida â€"- Some authorities _aT'YOgant. ;.1917€t‘3,nd91"5~ 'JGSUS asâ€" think there were" two places of this sum_eS an absolute ‘anWledgeDf the na-1ne.- According to this belief one 11.10t‘1V05 WlHCh PKOHUW'GOd t0 210- was Bethsaida Julia's, on'the'eastâ€" @1011. _' ern shore 0f the lake. Near it was 27. All things . . . delivered unto CHARLES BARRETT. Esta. -, Harbor an Bouche, March 24, 1909. “I suffered terribly from Biliousness and Dyspepsia for fifteen years, was treated by'pliysicians and took many' remedies but got no relief. Then I took “Fruit-a-tives", and .' this ~medicine completely cured me when everything else failed. To all suflerers' from ludi- matter. Of‘ ,gestion, Bilioiisness and Constipation, I strongly advise them. to. try this fruit medicine". Charles Barrett. “50c 21 box, ‘6‘ for $2.5oâ€"or'trial box, 25c. A't-all dealers or from Fruit-a-tivea ,Limited, Ottawa. the desert-place where the feeding incâ€"Tho authority whiCh the Father Other means 0f saying 50- 01 the multitllde OCCIII‘I‘Cd- 1}} W343 has in heaven and earth he commits raised to the rank_ of a elliy by to his Son. Jesus exercised that Philip-the tetrarch, and given the authority under the limitations of bowels; WhiCh would be speedily 1'6- name of Caesar’s daughter. ‘ T119 the flesh, but, “clothed in resur- other Bethsai-da was on the west- rection glory, he assumed it. in full em Shore 0f the lake, not far from and sent forth the disciples to re: Capernaum, and was known as present him among all nations BethSaida of Galilee.‘ Here lived (Matt. 28.. 1‘3). ' ‘ : _Simon, Andrew, and Philip' Thls , No one'knoweth the S01 â€"- Even '15 the Place “Pbl‘WdEd by Jesus- John had shown lliS-COIDDELI‘I).t‘lV0 libero are POW b1“? fe‘Y ruins to ignorance of the meaning of Christ’s mark the Site. Of the ailment ClW-Vl are, The unreasonable crowd who Tyre and Sidonâ€"â€"â€"Thcse two Phoe- _haid discarded the wailing of John nician towns are often coupled ’to- also rejected the piping of‘ Jesus. gether in ancient history, both be- The favored cities had remained ing of extreme antiquity. The for- stolidly unrepentant. Only'the 1’21: mer was sixty miles northwest of ther knew him. ' ' Capernaum, and Sidon, forty miles The Son, on the other hand, is nC'l'th- From both Places the alone in his knowledge of the Fa- crowds came to attend upon the ther _(an amazing assumption if ministry of Jesus (Luke 6. 17). The Jesus is less than the church has Revised _Vcrsion makes it plain always aflirmed). In a manner that (Mark 7. 24, 31) that Jesus visited is forever beyond others he knows these towns which belonged to the. God the» Father Almighty. A “way of the Gentiles.” He was k‘rowledgc' of the Father; also,‘ he apparently so impressed by the eag- claims to be able to reveal to those erness of these people, whose light whom he shall choose, who must and opportunities were so much he, as before, the simplelicartcd. less, in contrast to the unbelicf of 28-30. Those who are without this those who were his own kin, that he communicated knowledge of the believed it they had been given Father are plowing a hard furrow, equal opportunity, they would have and must labor without rest,’ and repented long ago. alone. - I If they will come unto 22. More tolerable for Tyre and Christ, and learn the Father’s will Sidonâ€"Teaching that judgment will from him who is alone able to teach proceed according to the advant- it, he will bear their heavy bur- ages which pebple have had, and den with them and make it, light. th) use they have made of them, The yoke is not an extra burden, guilt and condemnation being rcla- but only the implement by which tive. 23. Capcrnaumâ€"Thc headquar-‘is not. for One, but” for two, to ters~of Jesus during the G-alilaean wear. ' ministry~his “own- city” (Matt.- 9. becomes easy and the burdenlilight. 1). So completely have the traces _____~,I, - - . of Capernaum ’ een obliterated ' since its destruction that a long and HOW TO G-E'l‘ THIN. ~ as yet unsettled controversy nas ‘ â€" » -' been waged over the question ‘of Don’t Mean Starvation, but the it's locatiml- ' Replacing of Certain Foods. Exalted unto heavenâ€"An adap- ' tation of the prophecy in Isa. 14. '-3-15. Was ever city more highly lfavored? It was the only place where Jescs was said to be “at home” (Mark 2. 1, margin). , , 7 .u ‘ , ' . .Hdd‘25_mc “Am emploi 0d. ,1“ the make thin unless you could chanrre how Testament to describe the H,,-, ,1, u _t _ 0.1- , ,1, “D abode of departed spirits. LiteraL “Ln -L.-m'hu'.C" 3191mm} 3 le . I u . ,, supervrsion ot a phvsrcran is necesâ€" ly, 1t means the hidden place. a t I _ y _ at I , fa Here it is used, symbolically, to “‘m": mete? m? QF?.S‘1.‘.l‘nd 01 picture the desolation and humilia- (’nSLI’EI-dvgéngtn' {mi Idlfifl‘lp 1,“.0' I tion to which the once proud and 15’ m e “0'” to use mule th‘m left-v citv shall be subjected. two Don-“(IS w week‘ or twenty 1‘; the" miflhtv wm‘kg Ina pounds in three lllOlltllS.‘ If you .. :3 L . s (' _ , , been have more than this to lose, say done in Sodom. the people, instead fifty pounds, the], it is better to 0E i’jlllflaudmg 4’15 mu'aCleS and fol‘ bring its loss about intermittent- lowing after him as a hero, would 1,, iml'c “Signed t0 his message and V”It doesn‘t mean starvation, or {tallied him _asltlimrf (lell‘i‘friil'f It necessarily less food, but a choice E-‘Qiiailil‘ottlelil fill: (its 9f new foodé‘ f0}. inst‘lnce’ replac' ' ‘ _ _ ~ ’ , mg of roast boot by chicken thickâ€" grcat should be the condemnation cued sou.” I“. 0103‘”. .( l q. ’ 1; I. of Capernaum! I 1' ' I ‘ M11)". 00(5 95-30. In "all the GOSDCIS the“) is classes, strong, medium and light, no pllSSllgC IIIOI‘C Cf‘l'tfllllly 3.11 iLll‘ according t0 their values. thc-ntic utterance of Jesus than this “The Strung foods are olive m‘], {3.130. imd ."fit' 15‘ 00"(‘1'3 (3"91'5'thlflg butter-nuts, chocolate, cheese. suâ€" Ellilll. .JOhn 5 (1091791 01311118 for gar. cake, ice cream, roast beef, Ull'lst- ham, pork chops, bacon, gravies, Lord of heaven and earth â€"â€" cream, candy, puddings, pic‘s, cere- Bccausc the Father is such, it is als, .macaroni, bread, ‘ligs possible for him to make known his dates. will unto whom he will. He has no connnuni'cations for‘thosc who are cream, soups, thickened soups, complacently wise in their own un- fowl, beef round, veal, sal- dcrstanding. bube tllosc‘who are mon, shad, mackerel, halibut simple-hearted as babes, and there- beans, grapes and bavpauas. -, fore ready to- receive the- truth on “The light foods are inilk,’ butter- good soil, he is ready to reveal-it. milk, clear soups, beef tea, broiled 20. For so it was wellâ€"pleasing- chicken, perch, cod. oysters, lob- The motive that prompted God in sic-rs, potatoes,» beets,’green peas, this method of revelation was that radish, cabbage. celery, lettuce, he preferred to have in his kingâ€" spinach, apples, peaches, cherries, dcm teachable children rather than oranges and melons." ,“How to get fat or thin,” was told by Dr. George White in a lec- ture at the Harvard" Medical School, 'Bo'ston, the other- day. Among other thingsihe said :H “Some persons you could never the old burden is made, light. "It! In the double pull theyoke’ may be roughly divided into thrch “Foods of medium fat value arel g Work is Done by Regular I‘nblic p l l I l l l and l , V- _._....-_ N“ '- - TAKING ENGLISH CENSUS. Officials, Costs Nothing. In England a census is taken ev- ery seven years. In the United States the work costs some $5,000,- 000; in England with a population) of 42,000,000, the wgrk is done byl the regular public officials. without '5 extra cost. There the census is taken on a certain day at a certain '- hour, usually Saturdayat 11 p.m‘.‘,-‘“ because most people :are then- at: home. Printed circulars have been- sent bythe police toevery family and to the owners of all lodgings and hotels. These circulars con- tain blanks, which must be filled. The police round up passers in the streets. Sometimes acranky Englishman, who, for reasons of his. own, does not want to figure in the census. tries to evade the Govern- ment by ridirig around all night in a cab. Ten chances to one he will not succeed in his' purpose. Cabs are stopped as unhesitating- ly as are street- cars or pedestri- ,Thero'aaaafiafncfioniuapedectly paintedhouse similar to when ones body , v .. ‘ V i v u , . , _ . am. The gm e1 nmcnt _u ants to is protected by good stout dammit, kn ow. The Government Will not" be min-6°ntrtt03'cwgang 3mm” bf“; ' ' ' h eonaore rorraer domed. The work 15 done snnnl- .13 ,fififlzcgamg 15 Yorg‘ifio‘wn aerate . . . . . . . Y ‘ bare woo e no gran or n gsrm n a taneously thi oughout the L nlte d wow down to the mum » Kingdom. Martin-Senour , Paint 1000/0 Pure - ’ protects your property so that it emerzes ' . from winter as hardy. rugged and strong as it entered. Quality does it. It with- stands the rigors of winter storms. tempests. rapid changes or temperature, humidity and the disintegrating effects of sun. wind. cold, raln. hull-and gnaw. ' - Everything that count: is put mâ€" Every- ._ , thing that doesn't 1‘: [g]? am. That's why ' the quality lusts. . ’ If your dealer cannot supply you. notlfy us and we will gladly direct you to where our paints ure to be bad. Decline all Substitutes - Write for illustrated “Home , and interesting color - card. Free for the asking. ' h - Martin-50mm Co. LIIITIB , . Montreal > ion: an Pain! v..v-x' _nuâ€"uâ€"a- I’$â€"-_’â€"-l â€"‘ HOW TO MAKE BABY SLEEP The. baby that cries half the night does not cry for nothing. It cries because it is not well, and has no The chances are the trouble is due to some upsetting of the stomach or moved if- the child were ,given a dose of Baby’s Own Tablets. These Tablets make children sleep sound- ly and naturally because they re- move the cause of the erossness and wakefulness. They are a bless- ing to children and a relief to wor- ried mothers. Mrs-John Sicklcs, Douglastown, N. B., says: “If any- thing ails my little ones the first thing I give them is a dose of Baby’s Own Tabletsand they are soon 'well again.” * Sold by medi- cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. 'Williams’ Me- dicine CO., Breckville, Ont. __.._.... “a ’ “ USEFUL CHARITY. “She is ver ' liberal in her cliab- itics,” said one woman. “Yes,” answered the other; “lib era], but not always practical. to! instance, she wanted to send alarm clocks to Africa ’to aid sufferer! When a man goes to church and hears a sermon that hits him on all sides, somehow he doesn’t seem to enjoy it. ' i from the sleepingâ€"sicknessV - A flavoringyus’evd therein: as lemme I ' I ~ B3, glxssolvzng. granulated rs'uxar iu‘wliitvazi'niiiiii a ding Maplelne, a dciicious syrup is made an a syrup better than maple. .anfeine is sold by grocers. If not semi 60c for 2 "0'2. bottle and recipe book. Crescent Mfg. CO., Scuttle. Wu, is. mle {of you; Viltlwill pay you lo . see about it. lt has. been. .made in ‘ Comma {or nearly seventyyears with the greatest skill.‘ ilt'is-known as ' AMSAY’S audit means gain to you when vou use it.'.»' Remember tlinl‘ yon-get (lie high .. ‘ standing.durability test and bouillon!~ . lone warm” can't get in other. paints, ' and the price is alivays"rcasonul)|c-- ' impossible to he in the low grade â€"-but never‘ too high. “Q: issue a lovely booklet on house painting. Do vou want it? \Vrite for Booklet “W”. \Ve mail it {roof 1 ‘ VA; RAMSA-Y & sou ca, . ": Established ISl‘J, v - " T‘hie' F’iai-nt‘.’M-ake_r;s, .1 x. .. Montreal. FAIRBAuKs-L- . Mouse f_ f~_:$I-‘zes a. 3-,” 4,6 H.P'. S.F'E¢|1AILIL'Y DESIGNED ,F'OR GEN ERAL .23: " j‘f'.,'i=ARIM.wdRK. ‘ They‘iare.so'ysiinplethat the average farm hand can run» them, and are practically Fool Proof-and Frost Proof. ' Send ,to-day for catalogue G.E.~roz’~, VV.‘P;- CO., showing“ full , line'ofvenjgine‘s for term use. ' It means I. money'saviedifor you. ' i 1. lfl'IER'M-‘isuSpecial Terms to Farrfior‘ag v The cinema FAIRBANKS CoMPANV. .4 *~' Branches zâ€"Torcnto, Limited, MONTREII. St. John, N.B.. WInnlpeg, Calgary. Vancouvu Q Nun: - Aonnuss -v '7. .1 v.‘ ; «um-1.. \'_’J~ .‘flysh - .lfl‘fi

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