"A little moro ' than two years no hair was, restore a its color ind eeased talline out. occasional application his since kept the hair in good condition.' sa . BF. Fenwick, Digby, N. " Growth -- of Hair. * "Tieht years ago, L had the vario- previ- E ied loid, ait fost my Wis, Which ously was quite absmai a variety of pre on = ut beneficial r t, ti car I should be. pesmanes nity ix About six months ago, mr h brought home a bottie of Aver Hair Vigor, a and I began a once 10 use it. In a stort time, hair begin to anpen and ere. is NOW wespect Py ol Rs 1 ae hee ~ o- BS.!.6. AER & £9, L082, ASS.B FF. r Vise? dyer's Pilis cure Sich Ile 4 2, ws of the Norway PI ne are combin a in this medicine with Wild Cherry page 'other pectoral Herbs and make a true specific for all es of disease originating from co! asc. and one ji hn, OD O08. 38. OEM ODO OOS Yee Oe Vw eS OW We "WO 'SSS Uo Oe Ve eu ie i PYNY - PECTORAL Positively Cures COUGHS and COLDS in a surprisingly shart time. It's a sci. entific certainty, tr ruc, svothing and healing in its « feat ta, W.C »McComnarr &S sou mebet the, "Qua. zeport In ele etter that Pyuy- he al cies ates whtal tates, and aie cured G peered ie wa old. ] i : i ; d : long-standing } i a ll or: ntr, writes: Mr. J. nH. Berry, Ci Chemist, 8 Yonge St. 1 ayrerntn sy who ig acy "baviog earn | i me of the efits a tived from Ite use jn thuir fay jiles. 5 Ke be Falta tor ee net oe roe BK. _ dna piens+ unt to Ite With gee bat bore wine ware? 'We co tase & male bes Bal ies in rellabl te Media < Kotte, 25 Cts. DAVIS & LAWRENC# Co., Sole Proprictors Mowt.oaL pans - WILL, GURE'You et Brig hea Disease, Dia Ser Rhounatisn: beast Diswass Feet 'Troubles, Impure Te Blcod--or moncy refunded y alldeal.rs in medicine, or by m2!) og r Six boxes es $2.5, caceine Pot price, soc. box, o Be! L.A. SMITH & CO.. Terenta. For Twenty-six THECOOK'S SBEST! LARGEST SALE in Cr PSYCHI' | re 2 8K weUearrion, Len mo eget oo) heats Co Ltt... To ante, Con 'MRS. HENNE-PECYUE, |) AAYSe OF THE NEW WOMAN AS SHE SOON WILL Bee 4& Sunday ia Which the Tables Were However, Inducrd to D» His Best Un- der Trying Circumstances, "Huw many thousand times, Mr. Hinne-Pecque, have I told you 'that I will n not have the children meddling with my things ? 1 wish you'd keep them out of my study," growled Mrs, lienne-Pecque "They haven't been In here, Gear." "Yes, they oin"t fool' me, uncer that quartz paper weight Mrs. Ticgton ug me from Cripple u reek, and I can't find pide nor hair of them.' "} guess John put them under some ees! When We Were Cleaning in there "Clenning, Mr. Henne-Pecque!C:ean- toy im aay study ! Hiding my books tnd destroying my letters! 1 strictly furbade you to let a broom or brush ever come In here, I told you--" "Now, Mrs. HennPecque, that Is absurd. The room has got to be swept once in a while." 1ere's paper-welght don't need that now-- do, Where is it? con't you 7" "Come to think of it, dear, I did hear Jehn suy something about a dirty old Find it, eione on your table; here it is, he put It In the closet to----" "To carry off and gell, I suppose. Tle knew it was full of gold, Where did he put my new pen "It is in the tray right 'under your nose, just where it belongs. I go wish, Mis. Henne-Pecgue, that you would not choose gSunday morning to stir things up. ou know how I have to hurry to get the children ready for Sunday school and then dress my 'elf, end Soy: always-- those papers alone! I'll pick liam up when I've. finished reading them. Call nt and tell her to bring me my slipper "Aren't you going to church to-day, Henne-Pecque tired to death and my head aches. t to reat a littl so as to be fresh when Mrs. Scott comes." "Do you expect her this morning ?" "Expect her ? Certainly. Oh, by the way, perhaps I forgot to tell you, but I invited Mrs, Seott and her husband and her two sisters to dine with us to day "Why, Mrs. Henne-Pecque! Four extra people, almost strangers, and net a thing in the house to eat !" "Nonsense ! What is good enough for me is good enough for them. Just put s6Me more pla J "Oh, yes, plates! I've only one small turkey for dinner, and as It is Sunday IT can't get another. The pudding will not be large enough--well, all there Is tes-- to be done is for me to give up my church a Fo to making an entire, nother pud---" "Don't * pother me with details. I never come home and harass you with my business worrtes.' "Don't you, though ?" "You know well enough that I don't. Yet my anxicties-are serlous--" "Seems to me mine arte gerious, too, A pretty kettle of fish it would be if I were to allow three great hungry wimen, not to mention a sharp-eyed man who'd turn up his nose at things, to sit down to my table and not have half enough to eat." "How you threadbare ! to talk a subject could have made while you've been Henne- Pecque--" "That's enough ! f you were any hind of a housekeeper you would never be caught with an empty pantry. § It was always my father's boast that his \ife could bring sirangers In at any time and be sure of having a bount!- ful meonl--a well-cooked weal, Mr, Henne-Ps feque--without any nonsensi- cal apologies "Yes, your father kept chickens and a cow, and-- "My father was a credit to his sex, he attended to his home datics. If you had been here yesterday afternoon tn- stead of gadding off shopping--" "T wasn't shopping, and you know it. You Ve me matinee tickets and esked me to take-- "Well, the matinee didn't last all day, did it? Matinees usually com- mcnce at 2 o'clock or after; we had breakfast at 8, that gave hours. Why, in six hours, fresh morn- ing hours, my father would have made pies, cake, "That's all you al work. The idea of making pickles in the middle of the winter !" "Well, maybe not pickles, but he--" "If your father was such a wonderful man and ke well, it is a creat pity you ever left him to marry such a wretched housekceper as I am. For my part, I wish you never had. I dare say I should have married some ine who could apprecinte me and not keep throwing up- his father at me." Mr. Henne-Peeque cried sige as he hastened out of the roo little man is hopping mad y." Mrs. Henne-Pecque soliquized as she stretched herself out on the lounge and began to read the stock reports In the morning paper. "He will fly 'round and give us a tip-top dinner just to silence me about father's cook- ing."--New York Recorder. He Knew Them. Erastus (seeing snowshoe prints)-- Well, ddm looks laik Miss Lillie's feet- steps, sho'. Guess she dis a-way. 'Turned on the "Man"=How He Was, | HOW SHE was: EN@BLED TO ti WITHOUT GETTING INTO DEBTy & sSolntion ef the Question of Economy ~ Over with Profit--Pra:ticnt Hints for the \Wise and Practica' Mousewlfe. The other day I asked a eep wholesomely supplicd, to keep the boys in school and neatly c'othed, ts keep band content; to keep fully furnished and st.li have encugh left from her husband's not large sal- ary, to buy book and keep on the sitting rcom table several of the best magazines, to pay her pew rent and her club dues--in short, to live the proper life of a middle class family, and not get in debi. And she told me her secret--a very simple one, but one that the average weman may ponder with one She said: "i study advertisements, and I know where and when the household supplies. My used to laugh at me for reading adver- tisements so carefully, but he has long since learned that { save many dollars cvery month. I know of no better way lo practice economy, and do you know, that it Is a wonder how soon you learn to detect th= real from the false, in- tuitively, ¢ ost? I do not think I ¢n 'taken in' by an adver- there is always something false ones that repeis m.. You hear a great deal nowadays about the 'practical' pages of magazines and newspapers, but for me the practical pages are those containing the business announcements of reputable business houses. The housekeyper who takes advantages of the practical hints tn those pages shows a great deal more common sense than does the one who tries to furnish a seven-room cottare with a lot of soap boxes covered with denim worked In fancy stitch, and to feed her growing family with never ending reminiscences of the meal that went before. To the economical house- keeper the advertisements are the most important part of any pubilcation." HINTS TO MOI mens. Useful Sugcestions ns to the Care and. Training of Chilcre T o be very careful of the skin of an fatant in cold weather. Gentle fric- tion applied with the hand to back, stomach and limbs after each bath, will aid a good, healthy circulation, Try some other method of exercising the bables than the harmful one of catching up by the arm pits and tossing in the air. There is not only the dan- ger of falling in this practice, but a That the Average Wonnn May Ponder" direct tendency to produce a rush of. blood = the brain. Try to teach a child, very early in -- ana like proper food at regular ours. The indicestion from which . children euifer is sometimes he- reditary, sometimes the result of feeble health, but more often it is the moth- er's fault, because she is not particular in regard to the regularity in giving the food. 4 em ~ & = mA 3 iz iad S t } one pint of hot water and boil twenty minutes. Add, when taken up, one Pint of milk. If the stomach seems Gelicate and irritable, strain out the bran, but in ordinary cases retain it. Try giving more careful protection from the cold air to a child of delicate constitution than is desirable for one more vigorous. It is true that cold air 's a healthy tonic for the skin when it not produce an uncomfortable chilliness, but many little t ious to "harden" the little chaps; keep them, warmly clad. paying special attention to the poses a children when standing. The ey sould not be allowed to rest exclu- sively upon one foot, as is a common habit, for this position throws the spine to one side. Teach them to carry book upon e head occasionally when waiking and standing, to j eee erect, How te Roll Potato: "Ke n a bulletin issued by Prof. Snyder > Minnesota State Agricultural . he makes a point of Interest to the housewife. He shows that where potatoes are peeled and started boil- ing in cold water there is a loss of 80 per cent. of the total albumen, and where they are not pevled started In hot water, this loss Is duced to 2 per cent. A bushel of pota- toes, welghing sixty pounds, contains about two pounds of total] nitrogenious compounds. When improperly cooked one-half of a pound is lost, containing six-tenths of a pound of the most val- uable proteids. It requircs all of t protein from nearly two pounds o% round beefsteak to replace the loss of protein Sis Ail boiling a bush- el of pota Lack of Care Ruins lothes. It is not wear, but lack of care, that makes a bedraggled mass of one's best gown in couple of months, and often It suffers most when not being voern, The way shopkeepers care for ready-made garments is an excellent object lesson. Coat hangers are cheap, but half a barrel hoop, walsts and jackets. frow stringy. These should be folded _ light paper stuffed in sleeves and OWS. Baked Liver and Brecon. Have the liver sliced thin, pour boll- over it, let it stand a few rain. Lay a layer of liver in a bake pan, then flour it well, Pepper and ralt, then a layer of thinly- cut Lacon, and so on Ull all the liver ie in, put*a layer of bacon on top, a cup of boiling water over, and bake: | parm of the Ferk, Two- pronged forks were made at Shemela. in 1608. Three-pronged forks were manufactured in England and on the continent in 1760, and silver forks did not come either in England or in France until 1814 the following for infantile con- une COMMEDIANS |. FHAND STYLE. -Par.iqalary Good and Meadiig--The Passing WH That Sparkles tn : Mehr. with you," says But- nan Joe," to Powers. p it to yourself." ve been married four times," Weber, etty near enough," says i replies Weber. "I'm go- the Fourth next July." particularly spirited aoc al _ove r Lewis rubs his 3 a ehas I've been going to long time." td on eat the fatal apple?" 7 y.. the bananas were not ripe," olds, "Bentleman Joe: sad ™m ros are gg ium nes I'm m Gentl man Joe--No, I'm not a mis- take. ™m Joe Myrtle. In his Monologue Sam Bernard keeps the orchestra waiting, and finally the leader becomes impatient and, rapping his batonlon the stage, says: "I am waiting on you sir." "Is 50?" says Bernard. "Well, bring me s0me sturgeon and ice- erecam." "If you don't leave at once," says Reynolds, "lll call Jack." "That's your brother?" "No, it's my dog." "The same thing." "Yes, Cohen is a very frank man," remarks George Thatcher. "I asked him how' business - and he «ail here was liable to fire in his -- ee if 'atime did not pick up. "So you've been flirting with a com- Mrs. Carr to Em- n Joe." 'Beg pardon," replies Emma, hansom cabman, and an han'som' abman, too."'--New World. "he's a uncommon York They Figured on 1, He had been knocking on the kitoh- en door for ten minutes when the wo- of the next house on the left opened hg side door and queried. "Can't you see that the house is am," he replied. "As only see the outside of it I know ing -- the inside. Then the is Vaca "Yes, c é "Family nared out?" "Tas I can noth- house yo "Oh, no." "Bill collector?" "Noap. You see, ma'am, on mipcoay 2 and asked for an old pair of s A ay pal did?" . "The lady told me to call acain, and I calied here she'd hunt me up a pair," here." "Well, they moved yesterday." "Yes, they moved yesterday. evidently figured on cheaper to move than to give me the That's why ~ ly correct. what save which bank book."'"--M, Quad. makes a fat Homemade Humidit+. To the large number of stories of the "meanest man" He was attacked by inflammatory rheumatism, and was very carefully nursed by his wife, who was very devoted to him, in spite of his fault-finding disposition. His suffering caused her to burst int times as she sat by his bedside. One day a friend of this invalid came in and asked how he was getting on. "Badly, badly," he exclaimed, "ond it's all my wife's f. "Is it possible?" asked his friend In surprise. "Yes; the doctor toid me that humid- moist in the room.""--Pearson's Weekly. "mf. n Tort (to Highland Farmer) yd will get only £7 for that "Why, man, * you took it to don YOu would get £20! a ay, fery metre the Loch doo take Place she would get a i for it. ¢ poecamecte of the geen, an' one of own ' up to it.--Cincin- spiit it," replies the _ ZILLIAX & SARV IS are selling their stock of HALL, PARLOR AND BRASS LAMPS AWAY DOWN IN PRICE. 'Call and see their stock of STOVES, TINWARE ETC. before purchasing elsewhere ZILLIAX & SARVIS. Brands of Coal, Machine and Lubricating Oils for sale. Sexual Debdility, A has been used cuccessfull hat had been _treated by tho most "talested phrsi- Wood's Phosphodine,--z%e creat English Remedy. |Is the result of over [5 years treating thousands of cases with all known aprom Abuse or ne toy Nervous Weakuest, Emissions, Mental Worry, Excessive Use of Opium, Tobacco, er Alcoholic Stimulants, all of which soon lead to Insanity, mare sree and an early _ Wood's Phosphodine y by hundreds of ca Clans--cases thut were on the ver the gravo--but with the continued and persevering uso of cases that had been given up todic, were to manly vigor and health--Reader you need not despair--no mat- ter who has gi¥en you up as idcurablo--the remedy is now within your reach, by {ts use you can be restored toa Lfe of usefulness and ha;,piness. poorer package, $l; six packages, $3; by mail free of postage. . Pamphlet tottering o "Wood's Phosphodine, theso 'The Wood Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. let free to any address. Wood's Phosphodine Is sold by responsible wholesale and retail druggists in the Dominion, =e @ @ 8 6 22282828828 VWVD TDF TSVFs22eF fl BOON Th ALL alti WES Cures When Other Medicines and Doctors Have Failed RESTORES THE SiCK TQ HEALTH. ee | Can Attribute My Restoration. to Health Solely to South American Nervine." Says C. J. Curtis, of Windsor. yi Ae ih DNs Cc J. CURTIS, WINDSOR, ONT. When one has climbed a high moun- tain it is not difficult to mount the ordin- ary hill A medicine that will cure when the case is a desperate one, may be safely taken as a good all round medicine in ordinary cases, and it 1s not alone the very sick who need medicine. The statement is borne out by a multi! ' tude of facts, thousands of testimonials from reputable citizens, that South American Nervine cures, after what are considered the best medicines in the country have failed, and where the skill of the ablest physicians has come to naught. The acknowledged scientific principle of disease is weakness and. disorganisza- tion at the nerve centers These nerve center: are the main spring of the whole systern. When tho stomach is out of or- der the certain remody is toset thé nerve eenters in right condition :,-in, so with every other trouble Thusit is that it may be liver c-mplaint, nervousness, in- digestion, heartbarn, sour stomach, loss of a ite, impoverished blood, con- sumption of the lungs, catarrh of the stomach, sick or nervons headache, sleep- lessness, pains in -the kidneys, cr other ailments from which o person is suffering Séuth American Nervine will cure, and | cure quickly. and best of all cure effeo tively and lastingly in every such case Much as we were disrosed to langh at La Grippe as a trifling complaint when it first made itself known in this country, later developments have proved that it is aseriousin-lady. The atter effects are such that very thorough méasures need to be taken toensure perfect restoration to health. South American Nertine has proven wonderfully efficacious in giving back health to the victims of La Grippe, Mr. & J. Curtis, a wealthy and well known farmer near Windsor, Ont, suf- fered from a severe attack of this malady, leaving him exceedingly weak and with no appetite. No medicine seemed to de him any good until he was influenced te try South American Nervine and hw testimony is this: " After taking one bottle I found very great benefit from it, my appetite improved wonderfully, and I felt ary strength returning very fast." Mr. Curtis then purchased five bottles, but after waking only tkree ous ef the five, to use his own words: '3 am feeling us nearly well to-day as I eves did, and I can attribute'my restoration to health and strength solely to South American Nervine™ Sold by J.J. Livingstone, Druggist, Listowel.