As selvesâ€"come .if they will, or fail to comeâ€"but goes on his way true to the truth simply because it is true, strongly loyal to the right for its pure righteonsness. I believe MINARD‘S LINIMENT will produce growth of hair. be sent post paid at 50 cents a box or sixr bores for $2.50 by addressing the Dr. Williams Medicine _ Co., Brockville, Ont. I bolieve MINARD‘S LINIMENT will cure every case of Diphtheria. C __ MRS. REUBEN BAKER, ‘_I believe MINARD‘3S LINIMENT is the best household remedy on earth. Ei4 t __ MATTHIAS FOLEY, "Hello©," the first deafâ€"mute‘s finâ€" gors signalled rapidly ; "did you get that job as officeâ€"boy ?" "No," replied the other deatâ€"mute, "the man srid ho didn‘t think d anâ€" awer." ‘ or weak nerves, take Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pllls at once and they will soon make you well. ‘These pills are sold by all dealers in medicines, or will Great is the condition of a man who lets rewards take care of themâ€" but surely increasing strength. _ I continued the use of the pills, and daily felt the weakness that had threatened to erd my life disappear, until finaKy I was again enjoying goo«l health, and now, as those who know me can see, I show no trace of the illnesg 1 passed through. I beâ€" lieve Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills saved my life, ami I hope my statement will Induco similar sufferers to try them." Dr. Williams‘ Pink Fills make new, rich, red bood. With every dose the blood is strengthened, the quantity increased, and thus the patient is enâ€" abied not only to resist the further Inroad of disease, but is soon reâ€" stored to active health and strength. If you are ill, or weak, or suffering from any disease due to poor blood or weak nerves, take Dr. Williams‘ on. Then I was attacked by a cough, and was told that I was in consump tion. Then the doctor who was atâ€" tending me _ ordered me to the Iaurentiar Mountains in the hope that the change of air would benefit me. Iremained there for some time, but did not improve, and â€" returned home feeling that I had not much longer to live. It was then that my parents decided thgt * shnould use Dr. Williams‘ Pink ! ilis, and I began takâ€" Ing them. After using several boxes my appetite began to return, and this seemed to mark the change which brought about my recovery, for with the Improved appetite came gradual curable, is Mr. Ildege 3t. George, of Bt. Jerome, Que. His story as reâ€" lated to a reporter of L/Avenir du Nord, will be of interest to similar sufferers. Mr. 8t. George says : "Up to the age of fifteen years I had always enjoyed the best of health, but at that ago I became greatly run down. I lost color, suffered conâ€" vtantly from headaches and pains in the siies; my appetite left me and I became very weak. For upwards of three yearsâ€"though I was having medical treatmentâ€"the trouble went Buti. better stiil, it is preventable. Sufâ€" ferers from _ weak lungs who will clothe themselves properiy, who will keep the biooi rich and red, not only nee«d! not dread consumption, but will ultimately become healthy, robust people. . Among those upon whom consumption bad fastened its fangs, and who have proved the disease is Oil City, Ont an untimely end. Why ? ‘There are itwo reasons, the insidious character ol the disease, and the all too prevaâ€" lent belief that those who inherit weak lungs are foredoomed to an early deain, and that the most that can be done is to give the loved ones temporary reliel in the journey toâ€" wards the grave. This is a great mistake. Medical science now knows that consumption, when it has not reached an acute stage, is curable. Riverdale Stanle y No Epidemic in the Last Quarter of a Century Has Carried Off as Many People as Annually Fall Victims to Consumption. (L‘Avenir du Nord, St. Jerome, Que.) Throughout Canada much alarm has been Telt during the past few moaths at the outbreak of smalipox titat has occurred in various localities and thousands of dollars have been exâ€" pendedâ€"and rightly soâ€"in suppressâ€" Ing it. And yet year in and year out this country suffers from & plague that claims more victims annually than have been carried off by any epidemic during the past quarter of & century. Consumptionâ€"the great white plague of the northâ€"is more to be dreaded than any epidemic. Its victims throughout Canada are numâ€" bered by the thousands annually, and through its ravages bright young lives lu_every quarter are brought to P. 0. Box 225. (Canadian Branch.) NORTH AMERICAN SCHOOL OF PALMISTRY The Line of Fate, BOOKLET More to be Dreaded Than an Outbreak of Smallpox. They tell you many interesting and useful things. Properly read they are alds to success in every walk in life. If you wish to learn something about yourself, write for FREE OKLET, giving full information on this interesting subject. Address A MODERN SCOURGE. Every line in your hand has a regular positior, with a name and meaning The Line of Head, MRS. CHAS. ANDERSON, And many other equally important marks and signs. PALMISTRY But by far the larger proportion of women have children, and the quesâ€" tion arises, which is it to be? Is she to consider her own inclinations, or the happiness of her offspring? It is often a great tussle ; but someâ€" how, when one looks round among one‘s acquaintances, one sees that the ordinary young widow often #acâ€" rilices her own life to her children. Is Sshe Right ? Children are thrust into the world nolens volens ; they are given life and expected to live it. Is it not the duty, therefore, of the parent, to do the bast he or she possibly can for their children‘s sakes ? SEuppose a woman be left with two Take Larative Bromo Quinine Tablets Al dn‘yl-ta refund the money if it fails to cure, KE W. Grove‘s signature is on cark box. fa. Of course one may say, "uo woman is meant to sacrifice her own happiâ€" ness for her children. They â€" will grow up and leave her." That is true, but who influences the child‘s life? What has every great man written again and again in his bioâ€" graphy : "I owe everything to my mother." If such b> the case, the woman who eacrific»s her own life for her child is amply repaid, if that son can feel and write such sentiâ€" ments. Was it not worth sacrificing much for such words as J. M. Barrie wrote of Margaret Ogilvy ? Thus it is that the young widow has so many chances of marrying again. Does she do it ? Looking Abead. She lifts the vail and looks ahead. Suppose she reâ€"marries and her son goes to the dogs, or her daughter turns out badly, would she not blame herself for taking other ties, and leaving those she had, incompleted ? The widow‘s horizon is unbounded. She has made many friends during her married setate. She has had men to dinner, they have stayed with her in the country, she has been at the theatre parties in town; she knows men, she is not afraid of them. They have called upon her and chatâ€" ted upon every conceivable subject over the teacups; ridden or cycled with her, and they one and all look upon her as a "rattling good sort," or a "regvlar chum," andâ€"they proâ€" pose. Let us look at the young widow. Every proposal she had as a girl is multiplied by ten when she is free again. At first sight this seems strange, but in reality it is not so. As a girl her horizon was small ; she only went to partics with a chaperâ€" one; ehe had to make her young friends. The boys of her own ageâ€"her brotherg‘ school chumsaeâ€"were too young and too penniless to marry ; therefore a suitable husband only presented h‘msel{ now and again. Her choice was limited. Five or ten years later all is changed. Her husâ€" band‘s friends are older than herself; they are probably in a position to marry. They have ssoen what a good wife sho made, what an excellent mother she is They know how charmingly she runs her house, how smart she looks at the head of her table, what sort of a home she has built up around her, and naturallyâ€" quite naturallyâ€"fall in love with the fascinations of the young widow, and propose, .\ Now ag regards the widow. There aro two kinds of widows. The onea who is young an4 attractive, the other who dons a widow‘s bonnet and cufis, and never puts them off again, taking a chilly air of miserable reâ€" gignation in her wake. TO CURE A COLV IN ONE DAaY Ought She to Marry a Second Time *? this, l o 4e How could she bear this loneliness ? year. Sho picke up the garments here and there, Thrown down in careloss haste, And triew to think how it would seem If nothing were displaced. _ _ _ If the house were always as still as How can she keep herself busy all With the little hindering thing away? Another basket to fill with lunch, Another "goodâ€"bye" to say, And mother stands at the door to see Her baby march away ; And tl}"tn with a gigh that is half reâ€" ef, And half a something akin to grief. She thinks of a possible future morn, When the children, one by one, Will go from their homes to the disâ€" tant world, To battle with life alone ; And not even baby be left to cheer The scattered home of that future The baby has gone to school ; What will the mother do, With never a call to button Or tie a little ahoe ? The Line of Life, Baby Has Gone to School. WOM, THE YOUNG WIDOW. The Line of Heart HAMILTON, CAN. IMANS BE ALM ah, me ! or pin The Most Precious Phinginthe World to a Motherâ€"How to Care for the Little Ones. No price would be too great to pay for the preservation of the perâ€" fect, romy, sturdy health of a baby, No price would be too great ; but, as a matter of fact, the price is very _smallâ€"simply precaution and the exâ€" erciso of good judgment. ere who have used this medicine for their little ones speak of it in the most enthusiastic termsâ€"that is the best proof of its eflicacy. Mre. Alonzo Feltmate, Whitehead, N. &., says: "In my opinion Baby‘s Own Tablet@ are unequalled for children. They take it readily, and it régulates the bowels, cures them of peevishâ€" nes#s, and is a great helper in teethâ€" ing. I would not think of being without the Tablets." Sold by drugâ€" gists or sent post paid on receipt of price, 25 cents a box, by addressing the Ir. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockvilie, Ont. Not many years ago the presont Archbishop of Canterbury, then Bishop of London, went down to Exeter to make a speech on temâ€" perance. In the course of his obâ€" servations he happened to remark, "I was never drunk in my life!" and the next morning all the plaâ€" cards of the Exeter papers came out with the words, "Startling statement by a bishop!" It is not good judgment to give the tender, little infant remedica containing opiates, and the soâ€"called "soothing" medicines always conâ€" tain opiates ; they ao not cure. they only drug and estupify the little ones. _ Baby‘s Own Tablois are gusrâ€" anteed to contain no opiates and no harmful drugs. It is the best mediâ€" cine for iittle ones, because it is prompily effective and _ absolutely harmless,. _ For nervousness, sleepâ€" lessnegss, constipation, colic, stomach troubles, the irritation accompanyâ€" ing the cutting of teeth and other inâ€" fantile troubles, Baby‘s Own Tablets is beyond question the best medicine in the world. The Tablets are sweet and pleasant to take, and dissolved in water can be given with absolute aafety to the youngest infant. Mothâ€" Bhould widows marry again ? Ceorâ€" tainly, if they have no one else to consult but themselves. If â€" they have, let them pause and think beâ€" fore they take a step which may bring unhappiness to so many." as far as they h:;vevkxvlg‘;le:l;f'â€"é’. they must be praised, not blamed, if the issmp_ turns out wrongly. Women are often sacrificed in life! After all, if they do their duty Lhat thoe childlees widow should marry again is surely only right. Why waste a good life when it is at its very best? That the widow with children should reâ€"marry is really a necessity; but that the young widow with children should marry again, alas, often means unâ€" happiness to all, and misunderstandâ€" ings in several lives. 4 Children are a grave and sgerious responsibility, and, alas, few parâ€" ents of either sex comprehend how grave or how serious until the childâ€" ren are actually there; nor do they realize how utterly unfitted they often are to become parents until it is too lato. But the widow and the widower have bought their exâ€" perience and have no right to make a second blunder. If the woman, after weighing the cireumstances of both sides of the caso in the scales, decides to give her life to her children, is she not right? If unkind fate ordain that those children do not turn out well, she cannot blame herself. If, on the other hand, she marry, it is uniikely the new husband has any real syniâ€" pathy with her children, if graduâ€" ally they drift away from her, and she finally loses her influence over them. well, she has herself to blame. remorse is bitter. ance. a svt:r;:::l’%:‘::old | Good agents wanted in this district mgag ize T * cera | Hon. Jno. Dryden, _ Geo. B. Woods, ut day, We thew Rs Hor en fare a cold President. General Manager. Bhe knows men are proud) of hayâ€" ing children, and she feels f The Second Husband‘s Children would hold his heart, and supplant any little love he might have tried to acquire for herg. She knows that it she really loves te man, and he i‘ she really loves the man, and he hersel{ wholly to him, and how can she when she has other and pressing calle ? She hourly realizes her responsibiliâ€" ties, she feels the loss of the strong man‘s aid, the loneliness and worry of her life; but she feels the chilâ€" dren ought to be her first care, that she must bring them up to take their position in life, help them to work their way to honorable sucâ€" cess. The first year goes by and then some man comes forward . and proposes, others quickly follow suit. The question of reâ€"marriage faces her. Bhall she do it? She looks around and gradually realizes that a step{ather is even a more doubtâ€" ful success than a stepmother. to begin to cut down expenses, utâ€" terally alone without the helpmate on whom she has learnt to rely, the first year or two of her widowâ€" hood are days, weeks, and â€" months of trial indeed. or perhaps three childrenâ€"civilized families do not go beyond that numâ€" ber nowadaysâ€"and she is barely thirty years of age. The responsiâ€" bility on her shoulders is enormous. Her income is usually about a quarâ€" ter of what it was in her husband‘s M#{etimeâ€"perhaps an eighth â€" and that at a time when erpenses are weally only beginning, when the serâ€" lougness of school bills are facing her for the first time. Is her posiâ€" tion an enviable one ? Crowded with responsibility, worried at which end «* Startied " Them. BABYVY‘S HEALTH. TORONTO HEAD OFFICE, TORONTO. Authorized Capital â€" $1,500,000 The policies of this company e brace every good feature of Life In surance contracts, and guarantee thâ€" highest benefits in regard to loans, cash surrenders, and extended insurâ€" We buy Butter, Eggs, Poultry and all kinds of Farm Produce. Write us when you have any to sell. Check sent as soon as we receive the goods. Samusi L. Lewis & 60. The Continental Life Insurance Company Just then the professor rushed on the stage all out of breath. "Ladies and gentlemen," continued the chairâ€" man, "allow me to introduce to you the late Professor Smythe, who will now address us on ‘The Inferno.‘" " Ladies and gentlemen," he said, "I regret this delay, and am unable to account for the absence of Professor Smythe, who was tolecture here toâ€" night. He told me that he would be on time if he was alive, and, as he is not here, we must conclude that he is dead." in The chairman of the lecture comâ€" mittee of a literary society sat restlessly on the stage before a large and walting audience, wondering why the expected lecturer did not arrive. Finally, he felt that some sort of an excuse was necessary, and stepped to the footlights. There is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few yeare was supposed to be incurable. For a froat many years doctors proâ€" nounced it a local disease, and prescribed local remedies,and by consmndy fa.lllnf to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Science has proven Catarrh to be a constituâ€" tional dizease and therefore requires constituâ€" tional treatment. _ Hall‘s Catarrh Cure, manuâ€" factured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the onlty constitutional cure on the market. It is taken internally in doses from 10 drops to a teaspoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. When he had set her down at her own gate she thanked him, and he politely answered "Don‘t mention it." _ "No, I won‘t," said the matterâ€"of. fact lady in an obliging tone. e en t de. Drawing up his horse, he asked the woman if he could give her a lift. The woman got in and they drove along for some distance. A wellâ€"known clergyman â€" tells of driving along a country road one winter‘s night, when just ahead of him he noticed a woman walking. We o p e ie ies s cce & - 2 T i oBathinnint Tiaiitiee ts itc +A se / ons Jnt ent remedy is polygamy. Who will refuge to drop a sympathetic tear over thig monstrous procession of English maidens, preâ€"doomed by Naâ€" ture itg#elf to the doom of lean and unfruitful spinsterhood ! There is a melanchioly petticoated procession of 1,082,610 women in Great Britain who can never hope to become brides, says the Melbourne Argus. There are not enough husâ€" bandg to go around ! The only apparâ€" w4 CacicBe s 1 L> I Address F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. Sold by druggists, T5c. _ _ Hall‘s Family Pills are the best. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Garget Minard‘s Liniment Cures Distemâ€" WI: lI‘I. tho‘C!l_l_tg!: of Bright‘s Disease Grants Full Permission to U His Name in B:half of Dodd‘s Kidney Pills, QTTAWA MAN WH0 WRITES THIS TIME Promised Not to Mention it NP VBDAvtralisdeticca ds 10A & Cz CODC â€"Suffered all the Symp.toln o;- This Kearful Malady â€" But He Took Dodd‘s Kidney rills in Time. WANTFD CGommission Merchants LONDON i Late Indeed. CURSE OF DRINK FRUIT FARM FOR SALEâ€"ONK OF THE finest in the Ni?lfl Peninsula, at Winona, 10 miles from Hamilton on two railâ€" ways, 130 acres in nl{h“ of which is in fruit, mostly peaches. Will be sold in one parcel or divided into lote of 15 to 20 mcres to suit parâ€" chasers. Thisis a decided bargain Address Mn.ghm Carpenter, P. 0. box 409, Winona 4076, YEIN@ioOw s Soolhing gzrup should alâ€" ways be used for children tee ing. It soothes the child, softens the gums, cures wind colic and is the best remedy for diarrhcos a. T wentyâ€" five cents a boitle. Bmytheâ€"So you‘ra in favor of womâ€" an euffrage? But how would you feel if your wife ghould vote in opposition to you ? y acain d Tompkinsâ€"Oh, go ‘long! Haven‘t been mapried fifteen years? Tessâ€"Did you notice how that man stared at me ? Jessâ€"Yep, he‘s a reporter. Tessâ€"But why should he staro at me 80 ? Jessâ€"He was probably watching your nose, He‘s gupposed to keep his eye on everything that turne up.â€" PhiladeIphia Press, i "A broker, and a fine fellow. Good day !" i "So much for the verb "break." Minard‘s Liniment Cures theria. _"It is hard to understand. That young man, her son, is a fine young fellow ; a breaker, I think." ‘"He merel-{ broke the news; no preposition this time." ""Ah, I had heard that." "She is very sorry about it. Her son only broke the news down to her last week. Am I rlï¬ht? I am anxious to speak English well." a few weeks." "Will she leave her house alone?" "No, she is afraid it will be broken â€"brokenâ€"how do I say that ?" "Broken into." a "Cortainly, it is what I meant to .ay." "I# her son to be married soon ?" "No, that engagement is brokenâ€" broken"â€"â€" t "Broken off." ; "Yes, broken off." a Mrs. Winslow‘s Soothing 8: "Broker down? Oh, yes, And, inâ€" deed, since fever has broken up in town"â€"â€" her school." * "Why does she do that?" I asked. "Because her health is broken into." Â¥ "‘Broken down." Minard‘s Liniment Cures Colds, etec A Language Full of Pitfalis for Forâ€" cigpers. "I begin to understand your lan guage better," said my Frepch friepd, Monsieur Dubois, to me; "but your vyerbe trouble me still; you mix them up so with prepositions. "I saw your friend, Mre. Murkeâ€" ton, just now," he continued. *" She says she intends to break down her school earlier than usual. Am I right there?" "Break up her school, she must PAILS "Efipys CREELMAN BROS. TUB8 "gb;“tlâ€"xln'iâ€"' she will leave It for "Oh, yes, I remember ; Pio V at® A y Pu® Rubgers BBER _THE _ CANADIAN RusBBER Co. For sale by all first clase dealers. A Complete FAMILY KNITTING MACRINE. 20A At a low and special price. Address CANT BREAK THEM â€" gâ€"BRâ€"Co» AND ENGLISH ODDITIES. His Business. â€" mm IF ANT MEMBER oF YOoUR FaAYMTEL the_mst’e_ for liquor can be remove% n.n!.l.)flli‘s' are vastly superior to the ordinary Woodenware articles for domestic use. INDURATED FIBREWAREF up FOR SALKâ€"200 ACRES8, NEAR BURâ€" lington, all cultivated; 70 meres fruit railway, postoffice, blacksmith shop, buk:.b factory and school, half mile ; will seli in wh or in part on easy terms. Geo. K. Fisher Freeman, Ont. Â¥Y _effective system for collecting debts in Canuda, United States and Europe, without using offensive methods to your debtors ; reâ€" mittance on day of collection flnunmï¬.; reasonable charges ; call, write or phone M 2027, and One of our representatives will call on you. The International Mercantile Ageney, JTBIIlOI t‘!:ulh‘llzw. corner Yonge and King sts., oron ‘VE HAVE THE MOST PERFECT AND effective system for collecting debts in free sample, its aâ€" MVE J greeable taste will ,25 1 surgrlu you. ie=~ SCOTT & BOWNE 4 Chemists, ~eule \|| MEX Toronto. *E % €0c. and $1.00; all druggiste. â€FX‘& have not tried It, send for The genuine has this picture on it, take no other. % Scott‘s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil is the readiest cure for "can‘t cat," unless it comes of Tour doing no workâ€"â€"you can‘t ong be well and strong, without some sort of activity. There are many causes of getâ€" ting too thin; they all come under thee two heads: overâ€" work and underâ€"digestion. Stop overâ€"work, if you can; but, whether you can or not, take Scott‘s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil, to balance yourself with your work. You can‘t live on itâ€"trueâ€"but, by it, you can. â€" There‘s a limit, however; you‘ll pay for it. Fat, enough for your habit, is healthy; a little more, or less, is no great harm. Too fat, consult a doctor; too thin, persistently thin, no matter what cause, take Scott‘s Emulsion of Cod Liver is all right, if you are too fat and all wrong, if too thin‘al_rudy. ISSUE NO. 47, 1901. Getting T hin TRY THEM. Write &A va hy Write SAMARIA Georg'etoWn' On t. COLLECTING AGENCIE®. ‘cretly in sam ple, x CURED NO HOOPS, NO JOINTS, NO SEaAMms, NO LEAKS. SECRETLY Jezebei, +i - Bibleâ€"Shak es Macbeth from : Beth because =»« 4 5 @arth. «ivine in the cirous: back to u that God : A&round w) tims of i; frem tha Ourge!ves a@fter the s# exbumed ; 88 not going e ewinging &round . to known â€" so Pompeii. Progressing Plete cireui times th« into the you find i saw in th English city | Romans 1,8600 â€" Keoâ€"day as © which it was : #he brick and “ hundreds « mRdvance to tha If the wor! we may ha awhile, per centuries, 1 glass go « some cent: thing equ: York mins year 1280. hind those must keep make the c« up to the s} If the wo: in masonry Pomolog: achievem e es the wor equal to t of gardenir and after â€" of the wor the far f Will come The histo: olrale, . W) in our day A scientific cause men spects . whs the old mo: earth wer passen ger kind of 1 thousands time make :« back to th« the hand o t really eount giv years ago @o of His right ) throw it in a Â¥ilinear, with ing it so as t The world ® pure and 1 on through distemper. in a circle, emotion ro! than in str Ragonal, . These been made by rul| ery â€" artist has c-'e he may m chooses one «l mll others. I wi Giant‘s causewa molding room, 1 m great many fi have selected the "It is He that of the earth." _ " the moon in a «< eércle, the unive the throne of Go ircle. _ ~ Appreciation of the architecture ghape is oiten a suggestion. \Whe they ought to im Great Architect, : 'od or ev or blast us is He that the earth." There A: straight . | «ircle dominant then the curve, died young. I enough it wo: orb, a periphery cle pressed . a the sides. GAant‘s cause what God t 4s the circ on a plan grams, . diagona these vidently these evidently find Him geom While yet peor world was flat gyears before the was round, lsai mated the shu;: upon the circle. most beautiful f to in They T ‘ashington, N se Dr. 'I\lml ba d _ are â€"0ctag Go si n H the Te te