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Durham Review (1897), 7 Jun 1900, p. 6

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O 0o A practical _ ilust: symptoms and torture furnished by the case bonte, who lives in Btadacona, Quebxc. W D Never wear a shoe with a sole narâ€" rower than the outline of the foot traced with a pencil clos> under the rounding edge. _ Never wear a shoo that pinches the heel. Never wear a boot or shoe so jlarge in the heel that the foot is not kept in place. Never wear a boot or shoe tight any where. f system resp Never wear a shoe or boot that has depressions in any part of the sole to drop any joint below the level plane. a Never wear a shoe with turning up very much at as this causes the cords on part of the foot to contract _ Never wear a shoe that presses up into the hollow of the foot. Never wear one pair of shoes all the time, unless obliged to do so. Two pairs of boots worn a day at a time alternately last longer and are much more healthful. Never wear a short stocking or one which, after being washed. is not at least oneâ€"halfâ€"inch longer than the foot. Bear in mind that stockings shrink. Be sure that they will allow your toes to spread out at the exâ€" treme ends, as this keeps the joints in place and makes a strong and atâ€" tractive foot. Never think that the feet will grow large from wearing proper shoes. Pinching and distorting them makes them grow not only large, but unâ€" gightly. A proper, natural use of all the muscles makes them compact and The Cause of the Trouble and How : to Overcoms it. i (From the Telegraph, Quebec.) "The primary cause of indigestion or dyspepsia is lagk of vitality ; the abâ€" gence of nerve force; the loss of the lifeâ€"sustaining elements in the blood, No organ can properly perform its functions when the source of nutriâ€" ment fails When the stomach is robbed of the nutriment demanded by nature. assimilation coases, unnatural Never come from high heels to low heels at one juamp. attractive. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills cure by going to the root of the disease. They renew and build up the blood, and strengthen the nerves, . thus driving disease from the system. Avoid imitations by insisting that every box you purchase is enclosed In a wrapper bearing the full trade mark Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for Pale People. If your dealer does not keep them they will be sent postâ€" rkl at 50 cents a box, or six boxes or $2.50, by addressing the Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co.. _ Brockvilie, Sprains and bruises can be cured up in short order when Polson‘s Nerviline is applied. Its action is soothing, but very penetrating, and no pain or ache whatsoever can withstand it. No other pain remedy gives the results that Nerviline does. It is ten times stronf:r than any other, but very pleasant to take inwardly or to rub on. Try it. It Frequently Produces Headache, Meartburn, Dizziness and Other Distressing Symptomsâ€"A Victim Tells of Her Release. I again felt perfectly well. My stomach was as healthy as ever it had been. I could sleep well and my head was clear and free from the dirziness and aches that so long helped make me miserable. It is more than a year since I stopped taking the pills, and health has continued better than it was for years beâ€" fore." Mrs. Labonte added that she will always feel grateful to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills for the misery they have released her from, _ and she always advises friends who are ailing to use them. 9 Cured Just as Quickly as Cramps and Toothache by | _ _ Polson‘s Nerviline.___ | When a Chinaman issues invitations to dinner he sends out one or two days beforchand a tiny card of inâ€" vitation contained in a huge envelâ€" ope. If you accept the invitation you &re supposed to keep the card ; if you have not timeâ€"that is, if you deâ€" clineâ€"you are expected to send it back. If the banquet is appointed for 12 o‘clock your need not go before 2 Miller‘s Worm Powders for sallow sakin ; old or young. 3 . SPRAINS, BRUISES, i ture ises ar DYSPEPSIA‘$ VICTIMS, CATARRHOZONE cures Catarrh Chinese Etiquette. similati Shoe Hints. erated, and Is to the disc illustration the â€" sole the toes, the upper rd entire "This," he continued, with a feroâ€" clous grin, "is the ‘trial cake‘ she was talking about." He tasted it. +/ 1 * a« YO m !n ks It was all he said. And then Mr. MceSwat took that jJar of buckwheat batter, carried it out Jnto the alley and emptied it into the garbage box." e a .ts O " I don‘t believe it needs any cookâ€" ing on that side," he said, scraping it off the griddle and slapping it on a plate. "How do I thin the batter ?" "1 hadn‘t forgotten that. You take a cup of warm waterâ€"not hot, reâ€" memberâ€"stir in a small teaspoon{al @©f soda, about the same quantity of salt, pour it in the batter, stir it slowly a minute or two, add the moâ€" lassesâ€"that‘s in a fruit jar in the pantryâ€"and then bake a trial cake. 14 it lacks anything you can tell what it is from the way it tastes. Can you remember all that ?t" "Remember all that !" sa‘id Mr. Mcâ€" Swat, with crashing disdain. "Do you call that anything to remenber ?" "There‘s one thing more. You‘ll need the cake turner. It is in the drawer of the kitchen table. Now do you think you can manage it f" His oniy reply was a soft snore. About 6.30 the next morning Mr. Billinger McSwat might bhave been seen in his great act of getting the break{fast. He lighted the gas range, hunted up the griddle, pat it over the fire and approached the jar of baiter. Rolling up his slseves he contemâ€" plated it in silence a moment, and then began business. The first thing bhe did, after huntâ€" ing up the necessary groceries in ihe pantry and greasing the gridd‘le, was to fill a teacup with water from the boiler, which, providentially, was still warm, and stir in a neaping teaspoonful of soda. "I think that‘s the quantity she prescribed," he said cheerfully. "If it isn‘t enough I can put in imore." Then he added a teaspoonful of salt, a teaspoonful of New Orleans molâ€" asses, and poured the mixture into "he batter Jjar.: _ °. > > . T io. He sitrred the batter fiercely. It foamed up at once and ran over the ‘mp of the jar. "She imixed up too much of the blamed stuff," be muttered, stirring it still more vigorously. By this time the kitchen was filling with amoke. Concluding that the griddle was hot enough, he hastily lifted the jar, carâ€" ried it to the stove and poured a quantity of the batter out on the smoking griddle through the spout on the side of the jar. ‘There was a tremendous sizzle. " You bet it‘s hot enough," he exâ€" claimed. " Now where‘s th> blooming cake turner ?" He could not find it. " Never mind," he said. "I‘ve seen my mother use a caseknife." When he had secured a caseknife it appeared to be high time to turn the cake. On the upper side it looked dry and yellowish. But the cake stuck,. He sawed the knife under it with des perate haste, however, and finally got it overâ€"in sectionsâ€"a blackened, friz zled, â€" discouraging semblance of a buckwheat cake. 3 _ Five minutbs later he appeared at the foot of the stairway rurning up from the front hall, _ _ ~ _ is " Lobelia," he yelled, "that batter of yours got spo‘led last night! I‘m going to the meat market for a steak !"â€"Chicago ‘Tribune. The Disastrous Experiment of the Man of the House. TRYING TO BAKE GRIDDLE CAKES MSWAT TRIES T0 GOOL. The MceSwat family was thrown into temporary confusion by the sudden adjournment, sine die, of the kitchen lady, a young woman _ of great force of character, who had learned of a place where the hours of work were shorter and the afâ€" ternoons out longer and more freâ€" quent, and had gone to fill it. * Now, Lobelia," said Mr. MeSwat, as they were preparing to retire for the night, "if your headache your hand at to promise one exactly what 1 " Well, I‘ve fixed it for morning. All you will | will be to thin it put soda, salt and New Orle "I guppose,‘"‘ he said, as they unduâ€" lated round the hall, " that my mother would be awfully worried if she knew I was here. She thinks it is a terrible thing to dance." stup.d. ll‘)on "Have your griddle You‘:l find the greaser saucedish by the batt use too much greaseâ€"‘ ing, don‘t we? Well, you teil me to manage them, and if I turn out as good an article cef wheat cake as you ever took your system, I‘ll eat the gI What is the first thing vou d "Of course I will. What . take me for ?" "‘Then the first thing you ter you have got your fire al is to prepare the batter. the stone jar on the kitchen There‘s always some left o ter break{ast, and it leave batter for the next morning derstand that ?" " Anvybody can understand "Oh, never mind," the giri . said; "she woulda‘t know you were daneâ€" ing even if «she saw you."â€"Stray Stories. The Bible is a window in this priâ€" son of hope through which we look Into eternity.â€"Dwight. o J . 4 x0 on " We What is the molasses To make the cakes br We It Was Terribleâ€"â€"to Her. ystem, I‘ll eat the gril is the first thing you do I, if you are bound to hand at itâ€"but vou‘ve call namss, madam. Wha itâ€"but thing. tell yo will. Y 1 it for toâ€"morrow will have to dc it, put in a jittle ler‘? Oover dail it leavens the What do you on Will n ins molas Jad +084 . wn nicely e dire. e little .. Don‘t do af 1 ready OrNâ€" how on‘t uckâ€" il 1d try d t( 10 The first royal guest to visit the Paris Exposition of 1900 is the Queen of Saxony, who, accompanied by a chamberlain and two ladies in wait ing, made ber appearance rather unâ€" expectedly in the Rue des Nagions on The natural coral formation, toâ€" gether with good workmanship, has made the roads of Bermuda famous in the cycling world, and enthusiasts of the wheel who have been so fortunate as to visit this island have called it the Cycler‘s Paradise. Always insist on your advertisement being in black type. It doesn‘t cost any more, and makes up for what you didn‘t tell. Never take a white piece of paper and write your advertisements legâ€" iblyâ€"it is time thrown away. The {ylruinwr is hired to read any _ old hing. * 6 As it is Displayed by Some Persons We Meet Witk. If possible, get in a little dig at your competitor. _ That shows that you have respect for yoursel{â€" and his goods. Yokes are tabooed on the newest shirt walsts, but every variety of plait, tuck, insertion and shirring is used to render effective this very necessary adjunct to the wardrobe of the summer girl. Mull, chiffon or rib bon is the most approved material for the neck finishing, but a linen collar and fourâ€"inâ€"hands made of black velâ€" vet ribbon are favored by some who affect tailorâ€"made costumes of the severest type. While gold is found almost everyâ€" where, even in the waters of the sea, vastly the greater part of the world‘s production is confined to small areas and few countries. South Africa, Australasia and the United stiates conmtribute more than 70 per cent. of the world‘s output. The Diâ€" rector of the Mint has estimated that for 1898 the world‘s production of golid was $288,000,000, of which the countries named produced $208,â€" 000,000 as follows: South Africa, $80,000,000 ; the United States, $64,â€" 000,000, and Australasia $64,000,â€" 000. If Russia be added to this list, with a production last year exâ€" ce>»ding $25,000,000, then four counâ€" triee coutributed more than 80 per cent. of the world‘s supply in 1898. Until the Boer war upset all calâ€" culation, the indications were that the c@ffrent year would record a world‘s profjuction, exceeding considâ€" erably $300,000,000. Indeed, it is not improbable this great sum â€" may be reached, for there are wellâ€"defined rumors &f marve‘lous discoveries at Cap»e Nome, which have been characâ€" terized the geological surprise of the Wednesday last. Minard‘s â€" Liniment Friend. Creeping Rails on the Eads Bridge Bermuda the Wneelman‘s Paradise. The Eads bridge across the Misâ€" sissippi river at St. Louis has alâ€" ways been subject to the phenomenâ€" on known as "creeping rails." _ The creeping occurs always in the direcâ€" tion of the traffic and varies with the amount of tonnage passing over the rails. t real. TLight is the task where many share the <oil.â€"Homer. century. Truly th‘s is a new golden cra. Only a little over twenty years ago Suess, the eminent Austrian geo.ogist, estimated _ that threeâ€" fourths of the world‘s gold producâ€" t‘ou was from placer mines, and from this supposed fact ho concluded that, gince the working of such mines is limited to short perlods, the future Sizing Him Up. Heâ€"What a splendid girl you Do you really think there is other person in this world as as you are? of gold mining was by no means enâ€" couraging. Yet of the total of $288,. 000,000 gold brought to light by last year‘s operations, not more than 15 per cent. was the product of placer mines, while approximately 60 per cert. was derived from those stubâ€" born fields which, at the time of Suâ€" ess pessimistic prediction, could not be worked with profit, and so were abandoned.â€"Bankers‘ Monthiv. Many persons suffering from rheu matism have been permanently cur ed by Miller‘s Compound Iron Pills Sheâ€"Oh! I don‘t know. I may be a jolly individual, but I think you‘re & jollier.â€"Philadelphia Press. The best physicians speak well of Miller‘s Compound Iron Pills. . Teacherâ€"You should be very care ful what you say, Johnny. Do you know what will become of you if you keep on telling storles?"* Johnny (who reads the papers)â€"Yes‘m; I‘ll get inâ€" vitations to all the big dinners when I grow un and boecome a United States Senator from. New York." Cholly (who is up in art)â€"Ya‘asâ€" the color work is fair, but the handâ€" ling of the calf is bad. _ . Ethel (who isn‘t)â€"But calves are such difficult little things to handle. Why, up at the farm last summer, Uncle Silas nearly had his neck broken by one! Miller‘s Worm Powders for rest lessness and peevishness. Ask for Minard‘s and take no other crematory is to be built at Mont T ADVERTISING ABILITY The First Royal Guest. Phe Geography of Gold. Shirt Waists. #498, <t l e aiet ulthg it t that _ you ire of money y fold as that the publisher { it, it might ant.â€"Tradesâ€" Lumberman‘s are! anâ€" jolly Minard‘s Liniment is used by ‘physi cha ns. is washing his face, but one has to go a long way to find a man who, having lost one eye by such clumsiâ€" ness, pushes in the other. A grocer‘s assistant in London, 41 years old, while washing his face put his finâ€" ger into his right eye. The eyeball became inflamed and was taken out. This was in 1896. Four years iater he ran a fingernail into the other eye in the same manner, causing an even more serious wound. The surâ€" geons, who seemed to haye had no hesitation about taking out the other eye, wanted to save this one if possible, and so they postponed the operation to see if sight even in a «mall degree couldn‘t be retained. There was an element of luck in the matter for the grocer for he was insured in an accident company, and the corporation agreed to pay the claim at once without waiting to gsee if the eye eventually could be sa ved. f "But when,." exclaimed the Ladies‘ Aid Society, "shall we hoid our oys ter socials and beanâ€"bag parties ?" Ah, here was an unforeseen embarâ€" rassment. * Occasionally, a man, if he is exâ€" tremely careless and awkward, will jJab his finger into his eye when he is washing his face, but one has to go a long way to find a man who, having lost one eve by such clumsiâ€" The strenuous efforts of the church had been crowned with success. The promise of the ages was fulfilled. Every day was Sunday, now, in other words. Putnam‘s Painless Corn and Wart Extractor. If you are a sufferer from corns and want to be cured immediately and without pain, proâ€" cure a bottle of Putnam‘s Painless Corn and Wart Extractor. _ ys e ‘The more we study the more wa discover our ignorance.â€"Shelley. A Painiess and Reliable Gure for Gorns of Every Desoripâ€" Being entirely vegetable in composition it does not irritate or corrode, but acts without the slightest pain, and occasions no discomfort to the user. _ _ C We offer One Hundred any case of Catarrh that Hall‘s Catarrh Cure. F. J.CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, 0 We, the undersigned, have known F. J Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transacâ€" tions and financially able to carry out any obliâ€" gations made by their firm, Westr & Traux, W holesale Dmc{;tfi. Toledo, 0. WaALDPING, KINNAN & Marvyi®, W holesale Drungi-tri. Toledo, 0. Rall‘s Catarrh Cure is taken internally, actâ€" ing directly upon the blood and mucous surâ€" faces of the system._ Price Tic per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. Testimonials free. Hall‘s Family Pills are the best. How Are _ Putnam‘s (;'(;Eri Extractor has been tested for thirty years and more. JIts action is perfect, and if you use it you won‘t be disappointed. _ An Odd Ad. Gyerâ€"They must have qucer cattle dlown in old Missouri. Myerâ€"Why do you think so ? Gyerâ€"IL saw an advertisement in the want columns of a St. Louis paper the other day for a woman to wash, iron and milk two cows.â€"Chicago New& Â¥ Every bottle is guarantced to Clm or {our money will be refunded. Sold by dea eri, or sent for 25 cents to auy address by POLSO AND CO., Kingston, Ont. BaRigHt‘s | DisEaseEe DODD‘S “ KIDNEY " PILLS "Do you know anything at all about drilling ?" asked the sergeant. "Faith, I know all about it," reâ€" plied the raw recruit. "I worked in a quarry for monny years before I jined th‘ army." Are you not well? Are you pale, weakly, depressed in spirits, melanâ€" choly, tired, nervous, and irritable? Try Miller‘s Compound Iron Pills. Mississippi expects its . new tol, so long desired, to be re; occupancy when the State 1 ture meets in January, 190:; million dollars . has been appr ed for its erection. Catarrhozone cures Catarrh Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house Miller‘s Grip Powders cure tlon. Do they Stin%? Do they ever Bleed ? Do they make you Lame? Cleanliness Cost HMHis Night Mississippi‘s New Capitol. is the deadliest and most painful malady to which mankind is subject. Dodd‘s Kidney Pilis will cure any case of Bright‘s Discase. They have never failed in one single case, â€" They are the only remedy that ever has cured it, and they are the only remedy that can. There are imitations of Dodd‘s Kidney Pillsâ€"pill, box and nameâ€"but imitaâ€" tions are dangerous, The original and only genuine cure for Bright‘s Disease is Dodd‘s Kidney Pills are fifty cents a box at all druggists. Your Corns ? Embarrassment. y3 v%-\z How‘s This Qualified Its new _ Capiâ€" to be ready for > State Legisiaâ€" ary, ‘1902. One been appropriatâ€" I he | every _ Sunday ; to | time of adverti vho, | room adjoining msi. | modate the o er‘s | evening at lea olq, | people were u fin. | tance to the bu 6 room Adjoining was us modate the overflow, evening at least over people were unable to tance to the builling. Th lutely _ nothing . sensati advertisements or in the "‘The Pastor," in the C mist. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druxgstn refund the money if it fails to cure. 25¢. E W.Grove‘ssignature is on each box. Take care of the liver and ; will take care of itself. No man ever wanted to p arms around a woman with a day skirt on. No woman believes her husband halft appreciates the way she marâ€" tyrs herself for his sake. Every woman has a black silk dres« which she is saving to wear out some time when she has got thinner.â€"New York Press. "Goodness !" exclaimed the kind lady ; "you eat as if you had never seen a square meal before." "I guess I do, ma‘am. Square meals don‘t come ‘round ter me often, and I git outer practice a bit." Second Ciubmanâ€"Yes: if his faâ€" ther knew it he would turn in his cell in the penitentiary !"â€"Simpliâ€" cissimus. Milier‘s Worm children healthy First Clubmanâ€"Just see how young Oppenheimer is playing the swell! New life for a ¢ Compound Iron Pills To Cure A WIDEAWAKE CHURCH. Reflections of a B A Family Skeleton Out of a Cold in One Day St. Lawrence Sugar Refinery. in the streets and in ios. Universalist literâ€" xi for and thousands, usands, of pages were he church was filled evening during the ing, the Sunday school Powders make the Practice liver and the quarter; Miller‘s Will You Accept it ? it is 100 per cent. Pure and Obtainable of all Good Grocers. tional in he preact Church 3 M C We Offer You Sugar, The Best Made in the World. helor was a | in husband| PRAIRIE WEED Heave Powder she marâ€"| Is composed of the Prairie Weed " which has been found so effectual in curi Heaves," ack â€" silk ‘ combined with other valuable romuhl g&- Oe :. and will prove an effectua) remedy for veoa tln WeAr | and Coughs in Horses and Cattie. 1A8 EOt | 25 cents per at all or mal l oo by tL T. #6YÂ¥eEhemit, Port Ergin, on Ck _ S11k to wear has got ut m.,f It is a well â€"known fact that Horses troubled ‘ . _\ __| with Heaves, if placed on Prairie pasture, are 1 rAINy> | soon cured of the heaves. im Ono lred the m â€"The man who writes hat ads. is alâ€" wayse trying to get a head. It is the condition of humasity to design what never will be done, and to hope what never will be attained. â€"Johnson. You learn all about Virginia lands, soil, water, climate, resources, products, fruits, berries, mede of cultivation, prices, etc., b reading the Vircixia Faruzx. Send 10c., for three montbs‘ subscription to PERMANENTLY CURED BY DR FITS Kline‘s Great Nerve Restorer. Ne fits or nervousness after flm’fl: use. Send to 931 Arch street, delphia, Pa., for treatise and free $2 trial botile For sale by J. A. Harte, 1780 Notro Dame street Montreal, Que. See our new "Iline«s" and ‘*Keturn Premium plans. Agents (Men or Women). even without experience, wanted ln.{onrloc-]lty. Insurance in force over Kighty Million. Star Life Assurâ€" ance Society. Toronto. the child, softens the gums, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for Diarrhosa." I wonly . LIVE AGENTA Seek PROGRBS8IVE COMPANIE®L® Secure us 10 club members. _ Do it in half an hour and get an upâ€"toâ€"date 1900 bicycle hur'your trouble, Send a post card to 8. Lewis, 527, B., Richmond street. London. Ont. M W inslow‘s Boo(Mn’ Syrup should alâ€" ways be used for Children Feething, it soothes WANTED= Â¥YMIWN T LV good addressâ€"to travel and appoint agents; $50 a mounth and expen=es. BUTLER AND ALGER, 114 Confederation five cents a bottle. BOYS ! A BICYCLE FREE. ISSUE NO 23. ife building, Toront« Mrs, Winslow‘s Soothin VIRGINIA HOMES. Farmer Co,, Children A child‘s life may be blighted by the diseases of youth, such as Rickets, which is characterized by weak bones or crooked spine, and inability to stand or walk steadily, or Marasâ€" mus, that wasting disease characterized by Elcncss and emaciation, or la, a constitutional disease of the glands and neck. olpweCod-ljverOiIvM!\IIypo- prevent and cure these discases. Itmppliaiustthzmwhlmded to form strong bones, rich red blood and solid fiesh. It will also reach the infant through the mothâ€" er‘s milk, and be of the greatest benefit to both. Scott‘s Emulsion NOTICE TO HORSE OQOWNERS. â€" _ _ Atall druggists ; goc. and $1.00 $COTT & BOW NE, Chemists, Toromto, The Future of MEX AND WOMEN OF Emporia, Va, i last three m ‘ome employ Christian dut whom they e to say to you face and tho may come th: the preac ploye have empl}c the IY this s DBR. TX he be ned 2aYV

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