West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 27 Sep 1906, p. 6

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24 â€" _ ie & .â€"'"fie wl;l‘i;!.l! it he carn make his wife beâ€" Heve he is getting only $15 a week." W Mt piat Not the Same. *"I don‘t see why he should speak so bitterly of that clairvoyant. . she told him he was born to be a leaders of men, didn‘t she?" £ "Oh, my, mot She said, ‘a leader of society." h her works. moment th every thing uniform gr leaf, every fl’ey: ours eatures, g sky. even t at How Many May Be Saved. (Houston Post.) "Can a married man save any money on W And when Thou givest dreams to men, Give dreams, O Lord to me; That even in visions of the brain 1 wander toward thee. A1d when my thought is all astray _ Yet think Thou on in me; sen M A y We bless Thee, our Fat) God, whose daylight leadeth down Into the sunless way, Lo with thy sweet repose doth crown The labor of the day. 1at with the new unsullied day My soul wake fresh and free. e, truly the beauty and the enchaat. :lamour of the carth are enhansed I this magnificeont outpouring of Naâ€" s enrichments. But those of old to n the privilege has been aceorded of »nentary vision of high heaven, all ar to have been overwhelmed with dazzling coruscations of seintiliart c owhich ever umine that supermal Jesus Said Unto Her, Mary! the "torrible erystal." the trass wold, the emerald rainbow, and wondrous hues probably unknown And a mansion is that Realm mised to all who serve their od, ho«e names, m virtne of the exâ€" n made for them by the Redsemer > (Cross for them. are written in ok of Life.â€"Byv a Banker. it se O Lord, and make it clean Thy forgiveness dear;, the thing that might have be ow may appea ese her gifts lowards . man ifications, and how richly has oned and bedecked thein in ind in vivid splendor, and m in multiform design and nd hbirds, many.arraved ‘n a ‘et thereon w y tint. 1 bird, or Ives, one PRAYER. PRAYER. is OmE e had ofter sat same Master w â€"George Macdonald autified tichness azure of 19 ‘"P‘ ind y been Mman / Nt3 tvcu. ‘ _ A pumber of womes who aunwl This t ipe €P EARARTT CCC ; m is very different toâ€"day. There are | women smokers in every class of the comâ€" | munity, students, society women, shopâ€"girls t and journalists, artists girls in . business and girls who stay at home, young girls and married women, says Elizabeth Sloan Chosâ€" i ser in the London Daily Chronicle. Evea } the grandmothers are not beyoud suspicion ‘ although the very word seems incompatible i with cigarettes. _ It is, perhaps, too much i to asesrt that most women smoke, but that s great many of them appreciate the soothâ€" | in« influence of what man has so lon: conâ€" ; sidered his pet luxury cannot be (denied. | Women smokers are increasing, and at the iumo time man is becoming more toleraot 4 and more accustomed to the sight of a woâ€" | man manipulating a cigarette. It seems as l" woman means to smoke in spite of the j fact that the habit has been condemned on moral, aesthetic and medical grounds. ! The chiet argument against women smokâ€" ing is thatâ€"it is always best to acknowâ€" ‘ledze a selfâ€"evident fact right awayâ€"woâ€" mn are more prone to the . extreme than l ah _ 1 MB 1 26.A 1+ +2 in al t ! men. _ When smoking is once acquired as & habit it is a difficult matter to keep it withâ€" ! in strict and sensible limits; and what may ! be very moderate smoking for a man is , dangerously near excess for a young girl. | A man may smoke a dozen cigarettes in !lwenty-four hours without any . apparent damage to the health; the girl who habitualâ€" )Iy disposes of six or eight cigarettes a day i is deliberately undermining ber constitution. One of the first duties of a woman is to ’oruerve her hbealth, because, in spit . of all the assertions and indignant denials of ltbo shrieking sisterbkood, the chief reason | of our very existence is to provide the motaâ€" ; ers of future generations. i I have often been told by women that ’they had started smoking more as a joke : and that the habit has brown upon them | until they could not imagine existence withâ€" | out their cigarette case. And there is no ' more pathetic figure than the heavy smoker of the gentler sex. Thin, anaemic, highly strum, irritable, with cold, clammy hands and stained finger tips, she is one of the l least admirable products of the woman moveâ€" Sho is either a grave woman or she is igâ€" norant of the dangers she runs in smoking what she calls a harmless, nerve soothing cizarette. Thoe who argue that a woman should smoke to soothe her domestic worâ€" ries might as well say that a girl should take brandy or opium to counteract the deâ€" pressing offects of an unfortunate love afâ€" fair. Smoking in that sense is drugging, the tobacco is to be regarded as a narcotic, aud all narcotics are to be avoided unless ordered by a doctor. * When women bogin to smoke they like to do it thoroughly, and a visit to the smokâ€" ing@ room of any of the women‘s elubs is sufficient to prove to the observer that the dangerous habit of inhaling is far too comâ€" mon. Most people have a bazy glimmering of the fact that much smoking, especially accompanied by inhaling. is a bad thing. The physiological effects of tobacco are due to an alkaloid, nicotins, which acts chiofly upon the heart, causing frregular acâ€" tion and producing the condition known a+ smoker‘s heart. The girl who is an habâ€" itual smoker undermines her bealth and unâ€" fits herself for work. One cause of the prevalence of dyspepsia nowadays is smoking, and dyspepsia acts as a brake on an ambitious woman and a blot on a pretty one. And yet few women will believe that the red nose of dyspepsia is secondary to their habit of smoking. In strict modgration smoking is apparently harmless; but what is moderation? *"Four cigarettes a day cannot possibly be the cause of my ill bealth," plaintively asserts the martyr of palpitation and indigestion, but nicotine affects different people in varyâ€" inz degrees. Two cigarettes a day is exâ€" vess for the neurotic woman, whe should never smoke at all. A frequent complaint of the smoker is loss of mental tone and tnability to conâ€" centrate the attention. Nervous symptoms will be more apparent in a woman smoker than a man, because women‘s nervous orâ€" ganization is of a more delicate order and more easily upset. ‘That smoking, evem in moderation, is harmf@l to women is very probable. ‘There are many who assert that habitual «moking has a detoriating effoct on the race, and if parents of hboth sexes smoke it would follow that the children would be physically inferior to the childrem of nonâ€"smokers, other things equal. _ t This is mainly a personal consideration. It is not so much what we do that seems to matter, but how we do it, and this is true of smoking as of everything else. To smoke in a public place lays a woman open to the criticism of strangers, and although a girl is not necessarily "‘fast" because she enjoys an occasional cigarette, the true gentlewoman avoids doing anything. unconâ€" ventional in public. If a girl will smoke she would only do so among friends, in the privacy of her own house and, preferably, in a gatbering of women and of wonren who smoke themselves. ‘There are people who consider a girl peâ€" culiar if she smokes a cigarette. Then why shock their susceptibilitics by what is, ‘n their opinion, the brazen display of an unâ€" womanly act? Cthers are as much surâ€" prised at the woman who don‘t smoke:. "Only the middle class British watron is a nonâ€"smoker nowadays,"" I have been tol1, and can only reply that the opinion of the average middle class British matron is generally a very sound one. The modern young mother ‘and her cigarettes is someâ€" thing of a novelty even yet. If she pays proper attention to ber house and her nursery she will not have much time to waste in smoking. f 4 1 Wheatever he may say on the subject, in his heart of hearts the average man disâ€" approves of women smoking. It may be inherent selfishness, it may be association and a sensitive regard and desire to koop his womenfolk unspotted from the world; the fact remains that 90 per cent. of men prefer women nat to smoke. The few who do not mind have generally a sister, wite or women friends whom they particularly respect and who has succumbed to the fasâ€" cination of smoking. How often we hear & man declare, "I do not mind girls smoking at all, but I should not like my wife to smoke cigarettes."" A masculine inconsistâ€" eney which has no reason behind it! There are women who smoke not beâ€" eause they care for it but under the misâ€" taken impression that it ts smart, and there are girls who smoke only because their friends enjoy it and consider them old fashioned if they don‘t. These types never smoke to excess, and generally give up the habit when they attain years of disretion, Some women smoke because they honestly enjor not so much the smoking itself, but the foeling of good fellowship which smokâ€" Ing in congenial society produces. Smoking is something of a fad among women at present, and thore are many who will give it up when it ceases to be a novâ€" elty. ‘The vast majority of women will not «moke. Minard‘s Liniment for sale everywhere The loss of the firsticlass battleship Monâ€" tagu on Lundy Islaad in the Bristol channel bas started in the English papers a discusâ€" sion of the wellâ€"known fact that a foggy weather sound signals can not be relied upon with any degree of certainty. Whereâ€" ever a complete study has been made of fox signals it bhas been found that atmosâ€" wheric conditions, the direction of the wind and the density of the fog make a great ditâ€" ference in the distance over "Wwhich sound 46c cond ds diP +o Corae: will carry. It bas been shown that a vessel approaching a fog signal after bearing It Ing it for a while may _ miss . it, although gradually growing nearer to the A pumber of womes who have adopted the habit of cigarette smoking has increasâ€" ed enormously in late years. Ten or rifteen years ago smoking among women in this country was more or less contined to isoâ€" lated cases of young girls who thought it clever or amusng and elderiy females . of the tramp class who found solace for an uncomfortable existence in sucking on aged pipe of unclean description. It is very different toâ€"day. ‘There are > C BR OBR C t a edot Anabin s Ladios to do home, wholo of sent any distan for full particy "9., â€" Mentreal. source of the sound Signals Fail in Foggy Woeather, WANTED plain and light sewing at spare time, good pay; work c, charges paid; send stamp irs. National Mapufacturing So far as it bas been figured up at Tokyo the total money cost of the war with Russia amounts to $1,100,000,000 This does not inâ€" clude the interest on the war debt to lip paid hereafter. It cost Great Britain little, if any. less than that to conquer the small Boer republics of South Africaâ€"some $700,â€" 000,00) beinz added to the principal of Engâ€" land‘s public debt alone. Little less amazing than Japan‘s overwhelming of Russizn power in eastern Asia is the comparative smmallness of the money cost. The liver is composed of thousands of tiny cells, and in these cells the bile is secreted, and the blood is purified. Summer‘s heat has _ weakened themâ€" made them feel limp like you did. Winâ€" ter has some heavy work for them to do if your health is to be preserved. Bileans are a vegetable helpâ€"not a mineral poison like so many liver "medicines." Bileans tone up the liver, strengthen and enâ€" rich the secretory glands and strengthen the walls of the intestines. They thus cure indigestion, liver disorder and conâ€" stipation, and in females, various irreguâ€" larites,â€"all these mean that the body is run down and out of _ order â€"needs Bileans. _ All druggists _ supply them at 50 cents a box. Ask any friénd who has used them what Bileans can do. Perhaps the finest of bird dancers is the South American cock o‘ the rock. Theso birds have regnlar dancing plac:, level spots which they keep clear ot sticks and stones. Man is the victim of bad habits in his sleep as well as in his waking hours. So distressing are gome of these bad habits of sleep that they oblige wife and husâ€" band to occupy separate rooms, even, at times, causing divoree. A writer in the Strand says that dane ing is the prineipal play of many birds If the thermometer jumped from 80 in the shade one day to 20 below zero the next, how few people would escape a terrible chill. Why? Because the body could not adapt itself to the change quickly enough. But from Sepâ€" tember first to the coming winter the body has to prepare for kuch a change. Generally it needs a little help and Bileans provide that help. The liver, stomach and bowels are the organs which suffer most from change in temperature. ¢ whall Snoring is, of course, the commonest, if not the worst, of sleep‘s bad habits. Snoring may be remedied. There are a dozer patented devices that, hkolding the mouth shut tight, prevent the enore. (irinding the teeth is a disagreeable habit in the same room with anyone who emits, at regular intervals, this hideous sound. The trick is said to be incurable but a rubber cap worn on the teeth renâ€" ders the grinding almost moiseless. BIJLEANS AND CHANGE OF SEASON Nervous persons _ sometimes leap in their sleep a foot or more in the air, shaking the bed an dthe whole room. The man"who gives eight or nine of these leaps in the course of the night soon becomes an intolerable bedâ€"fellow. Nerve tonics and excreise should be prescribed for him. e Nasal whistling is a habit less easy to cure than snoring. The sleeper keeps his mouth closed, but breathes with a disâ€" tressing sound through his nose. _ The sound resembles a low whistle, and, heard in the small hours, is guaranteed to madâ€" den The Crime of the Ages. (Cor. N. Y. Herald.) We laugh at the idicrous blunders of the statesmen of the mediaeval times, with their emargoes, drawbacks and other binderances to commerce, but the evil effects of their economic ignorance were trivial compared with out own tariff. The protective tariff, so long in practice in this country, is the most monstrous economic crime of all hbisâ€" tory. and, in view of the seeming enlightâ€" ment of the age and the nominally high standard of education in the United States, causes one to almost despair of the auccess of popular government did we not see older of popular government did we not see older and despotic zovernments equally guilty. HOW â€"THISâ€" â€"VEGETABLE REMEDY AID$ THE BoODY BIRDS AS DANCERS. Cost of Little and Big Wars. We have unequalled facilities,. tos, for the designing and manufacturing of special articles in Jewelry,, Silverâ€" ware, Lodge Regalia, Insignia,. Etc: We send upon request free of chauge our large illustrated catalogue. kinds. _ A special mailing Box in which to forward your watch to us will be sent you free on request. Promptly and wellâ€"and at reasonâ€" able pricesâ€"we attend to the repair»â€" We buy old Gold Jewelryâ€"achighâ€" est prices. Taking and Mending at Diamond Rall ing of Watches and Jewelry of all Bad Sleeping Habits. yig Bros Gmika ps «C 1 MAEONLITMY G TORONTO Five Million Tons Turned Out Yearlyâ€" $509,000,000 in the Business, Few American trades bave grown as rapidly in recent years a@# artificial ice making. The conditions of ice supply and the number of factories requiring ice in enormous quantities seem to proâ€" mise a further extension of the busiâ€" ness. It is limited to no particular State, but bas been most generally and most largely developed in the: south. In 1870 there were four artificial ice making plants in the United States. In 1880 there were thirtyâ€"five: In 1890 there were 200. In 1900 there were 800. There are now considerably more thar 1,000. The capital invested in them is more than $50,000,000, and the amount of ice they turn out in a year is in excess of 5,000,00M,tons, of which 1,500,000 tans is manufactured in the Southerm States. The original artificial ice plant esâ€" tablished in the United States was in New OQrleans in 1866, and the imtention of its propectors was declared to be to supply artificial ice in the territary south of the ice line, which is south of the North Atlantic, New England, Middle and Northwestern States, By degrees fee Outfit which won the CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE WORLD against 21 American, British and Canadian manufacturers, after a two months‘ thorough trial. Mades by GOOLD, SHAPLEY ® MUIR CO. LIMITED, "*IMPERIAL‘ PYMPING WINDMILL plants have been established in the terriâ€" tory supplied with natural ice, breweries, hotels, restaurants, packing houses and hospitals having refrigerating plants. Another War on Mosquitoes. "Ha‘s got a new plan to exterminate mosâ€" quitoes." "Coal oil, I suppose*" "No: his idea is to cross them with HNehtâ€" ning bugs so that you may see them coming and thns swat them casily in the dark." f Mormns in England. (London: Daily Times.) It is some seventy years since the first Mormon missionariesâ€"Brigham Young was one of the numberâ€"preached their tenets in England, and: it is clitmed that they have in the interita converted over 125,000 But there bas been little thought in the minds of the adventurers or in that of the public of the delimitation of international boundaries in the realms of paleocrystic ice and ternal snow, But now the Canadian government brings that thougbt to mind the intimation that the Dominion extends clear to the north pole and that all the lands which have been discovered and explored in those regions, no matter by whom, are under the British flag. ( f Academically the question is somewhat complicated and might form the subject of interminable argument. There are those who bold that discovery and exploration give title to new lands, while others insist that title is not perfected without actual occupation and permanent settlement. But how if the lands in question are not fit for or susceptible of settlement?â€"New York Tribune. Mr. Jones (savagely)â€"Why, it‘s herâ€" edity, of courseâ€"this is what comes of your sitting up at nigh#s waiting for me. â€"Stpray Stories, Lands Hitherto Unknown Discovered and | gays Results are "Truly Marvelious." s Named by :’P:“"- Mrs, L. Hunter, of 111 n s .Tna verage ot ie Cnation goversment| MR Ragian Road, Kingston, The voyage of the Canadian government cruiser Arctic to the far north suggests for consideration the question of the ownership of some far northern lands. For many years explorers of various nationalitiesâ€"British, American, Scandinavian and others â€" have ventured into the frozen wilderness lying beâ€" tween the dominion of Canada and the north pole and have there discovered lands thitherâ€" to unknown and have named them and plant» ad flags upon them. There has been much international rivalry in the work of elaboâ€" ratinx the arctic map and of pushing on toward the pole. Mrs. Jonesâ€"I wonder what it is that makes baby so wakeful?t ___ _ > _ in this country T hroat Coughs are features of a throat cough. They‘re very deâ€" ceptive and a cough mixâ€" ture won‘t cure them. You want something that will heal the inflamed membranes, enrich the blood and tone up the system) .. .. .. .. , & Scott s Emuilsion Snd for free sample SCOTT &# BOW NE, Chemibst TITLES TO ARCTIC LANDS. ARTIFICIAL ICE MAKING. A tickling in the throat; hoarseness at times; adeep breath irritates it;â€"these is just such a remedy. It {tas wonderful healing and nourishing power. Removes the cause of the cough and the whole system is given new strength and vigor .. .% Toronte, Oni. goc. and $1.00. _ All druggim« Blame Easily Piaced. e Brantford. Canada. tMRS. MUNTER‘S STORY | | gays Results are "Truiy Marvelious." Mrs, L. Hunter, of 111 t A Raglan Road, Kingston, r 1 Ont _ says: Mr. Thompson presents is compliâ€" ments ¢o Mr. Simtson, and begs to reâ€" ques that hliewpigkeshiods.#the _ i. J quest that he will keep his dogs from trespassing on his grounds, A Neighborly Correspondence Tilt Beâ€" tween Two Britons. The following correspondence which recently passed between neighbors in the north of England, may not exactly rank with ts famous Shuekbrugh leters, but it is certainly worth reproducing in this eolumn: Mr. Simpson presents his compliments to Mr. Thompson, and begs to suggest that in future he should not spell "dogs" with two gees. Mr. Tho;\peon‘s respects to Mr. Simpâ€" son, and will feel obliged if he will add the letter %e" to the last word in the note received, so as to represent Mr. Simpson and lady. ht L 5 Mr. Simpson returns Mr. Thompson‘s note unopened, the impertinence it eonâ€" tains being only equaled by its vulgarity. â€"London Mail. Who Pays for It? (Brooklyn Eagle.) Mr. Gompers is said to have a $20,000 autoâ€" mobiHle on the way from Paris. It probably cost only half that, but there are some marchâ€" weary feeling nei‘rly all the time. Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont. ers in his army who wonder if they aren‘t going to have even bicyclees. It is easy to be prosperous, if you know how. w____ 222222222222 7 As a Favor. A SENSIBLE MERCHANT, [ (.4 2 uns( on oc uion Th whas very Bear Island, Aug. 26, 1903 c oooie ho us ahe Teat ol Sviehadie: R re! AnI, Ang. 0, Hilds _| nervons and as the fear of some! disâ€" ML\ARD".S LINIMENT CO., IIMITED!] arrangement of his hair laid hold of y DenrdSns.â€"\our traveler is here toâ€"| pim he suddenly turned to the sexton ay and we are getting a large quantity ; ; t a chi * of" your MINARDS LINIMENT. Wed ';mfl,',f.t",‘;,’frf se hispered, .. *Could find it t.he best Linignont §|| the marâ€"} Th; sexton stflm.;i to be not a little ket making no exception. We have been} surprised but he returned presently with in business 13 years and have handled | smething under his coat, which proved all k’mds, but have dropped them all but | to. be a‘bottk o o your‘s; that sells itself; the others have! «"pP‘3e pit it, meenister; but ye must "I‘tried almost every medicine, was treated by doctors and druggists, with little or no benefit. "I tried Dr. Leonhardt‘s Antiâ€"Pill, and the results have been truly wonderful. I am so much better. Antiâ€"Pill is a most wonderful remedy." All dealers, or ghe,\"i‘kon-Fylo (_Jg._. Little Leland and Jeanette are cous ins and live in the same house, says the Chicago News. Jeanette went to Wauâ€" kesha on a visit. _ On her return Leâ€" land asked her if she had been to Sunday School. w“7‘7Yertxr." she answered, "and‘a little boy there winked at me, but I didn‘t wink back." i o £ _ "Huh!" said Lelard. "I know why, It was ‘cause you didn‘t know him." to be pushed to get "This," remarked Mr. Softe, "s my photograph with my two Fregth poodles. You recognize me, eh?" â€" [ "I think so," said Miss Caine» "You are the one with the hat on, are: yow mot *"â€"Cassel‘s Journal. "Ring the Bell Softly."" (By Dexter Smith.) Some ons bas sone from. this, strang@ world of ours No iuv.~ ip gather its thorns. with. its tlowâ€" ersi No mored to linger where sunbeams must fade, Where on all beauty death‘s fingers‘ are 1077 Weary with mingling life‘s bitter and sweet, Weary with parting, and. never to meet, some omwe hbas gone to the bright goiden shore. Rinx iue bell softly, there‘s crape on the Some one is resting from sorrow and sin, Happy where earth‘s conflicts enter not in, Joyous as birds when the morning is bright, When the sweet suntoeams have brought us Mrs. I. Hunter. __â€" their light: Weary of sowing, and never to reap, Weary with labor, and welcoming sleep, Some hone's departed to Heaven‘s bright shore, Ring the bell softly, there‘s crape on the is an association of Ontario Chemits, formed t» make pure, safe, thoroughty reliable remedies.. _ Each remedy is made ::om carcfullyâ€"sele@edt formula, on Aritly scientific principles. For skin troubles and buras their Mira Ointment is quick in cure. While Niira Tablets and Mira Blood Tonic ftrergthen tha nerves and cleanse the blood. Ointment and Tablets, each, 50c. Blood Tonic, $1.00. At drugzzietsâ€"or fromâ€" The Chemi#s‘ Co. of Canada, Limited, Hamilton=â€" Toronto. Look for the trademark;, Angels were anxiously longingly to meet One who walks with them in Heaven‘s bright street‘ Loved ones have whispered that some one is blest, 4 Free from earth‘s trials, and taking sweet Yes! there is one more in angelic bliss, One less to cherish, and one less to kiss, One more departed to Heaven‘s bright shore. Rinz the bell softly, there‘s crape on the The Life of Bells, (Korea Daily News.) Comparatively few people know that ringing & bell ruins it. ‘That it, a be!l has a definits length of life, and after so many blows will break. A 900 pound bell, struck blows of 178 foot pourds of forcee, broke after 11000 blows. _A 4,000 pound bell broke after 18,â€" 000 blows of 350 foot pounds forse. A steal composition bell weighing 1.0%) pounds bro«» after twentyâ€"four blows of 150 foot pounds, but its maker ssid it was calculated for a lighter blow, . T Ring the The Chemists Company __ door! Ring the bell softly, there‘s crape on the door! Ring the laid; door THOMPSON VS. SIMPSON. TRADE MARK REGISTERED, bell .softly,. there‘s crape on the bell softly, there‘s crape on the The Reason. Identified. "I have suffered with kidney and liver trouâ€" ble and chromic constiâ€" pation for some time, I was subject to dizziâ€" ness, bilious headache, nervousness, _ drowsi ness, pains in the and side, and a M. A. HAGERMAN rid of Sweet Peas Freshly EICR®® """"" Destroy the Annoying ""“‘m lover of flowers, hAS NZO TP""" O 0 Listy bunches of sweet peas Of & variety grow" orlginally in California. Each morning after opening up the store be has found collected around the base of the vessel containing the peas quite an accumulation of dead flies. For the first day or 80 he regarded the mass of defunct dipterous insects as &N accidenal gathering in the neighborhood of flowers, but curiosity prompted him later to watch the conduct of the few flies left in the store. It was observed when the peas Were freshly picked that immediately after their being placed in the vases those flies in the vicinty swarmed upon the petals ard proceeded t0o fasten themselves there. Sbortly afterward they fell from their positions dead. (MECH PC 2UD L» ho nonk atâ€" PaBIERN UDERRWEORNEE MMCCEOCOOOG, they fell from their positions dead. It is presumed that the odor of the peas atâ€" tracted them first and that afterward they absorbed some poisono®s exudation that the flowers possess and died in conequence. Eo far as known the peas possess No sni'c 02:‘;! upon the hyman Physical deteriation is alarming all Engâ€" land and health committees are rupning. around seeking the causes and then warning people about their manner of living. Qne: of the dangers they find to be guarded against is the teanot. Excessive use of strongly brewed tea having been proved to be fatal to the best physical condition; . t reduce this danger to a minimum the tha should not be made strong and should be €ruok within two minutes. But how pre« vent the working woman, for instance, from ‘ L t Ls P0 vuas od ow For Family Colds VEHl Hew mm Cmestt nor c keeping the deadly teapot on the kitchon stove and "drawing a cup‘" whenever she feels so inclined? The climate is really first cause, the cheering poi«on but the second. Oue has to be comforted by tea im London‘s fog and chill and a health com» mittee is powerless to change the climate. Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Neuralgia, say naethin‘ aboot it, or ‘twould be the ruim of me. I only got it as a special favor, an‘ they warna hae gi‘ it me at a@" if T harna told them ‘twase for the new meenister. "Ye‘ll be vera carefu‘ aboot it, I hope. These is awfu‘ folk for talkin‘ aboot meenisters an‘ _ sexâ€" toms. Minard‘s Liniment Cures Dandruff. moi;vero mhuéried?" * *‘No. t he says she was. very, recommxled to him." ’| "You see it was very late, and downstairs tm the parior ber elder sister was entertainâ€" ing a young man. She naturally felt a deep interest in the entertainment. She was< waitâ€" ing to hear how it would terminate. "Ard at last there wa sa sound in the hall, a crash of the closing door, and: it was lain to the impatient girl that the young man had gone. . e C C "There was no immediate reply> to her @uestion. There was a silence, a peculiar silence, a silence with a certain:> strained * ‘She did.‘ " District Agent Wanted THE CANADA PFIRST MAGAZINE, now in its | iadian MONTHLY Magazine. Devoted to CANADIANX ST()R! ES. "{'bg__n_l_lfigf}_ifl of the Canadian Preference (Detroit Free Press.)> "DId Stiffieigh know his wife long. WE WANT YOUR subscription. If you send your subscription at ome dollar, we will mail you the : e ue n d e i ance of this year. Farmers and Dairymen Tub, Pail, Wash Basin or Milk Pan FIBRE WARE 2â€"ncass Well, Maude,‘ she said, ‘did. you: land Areli.bkentl:eo“amw be always in the ready for use the n}flp&flhfiuwm tis always casict, better hdncklcou'-&:‘;mfli' k’..“.“ Shiloh‘s Consumptiom Cure, the Lung ‘Tonmic, has been tested for thirtyâ€"three y.n.andmold\ound'dbon-'l Canada and the United States toâ€"day are . A dealer writes: ** Shiloh® iow Cure is without doubt d:oln-tu-:gm.‘ Colds on the market, _Once used,. my customers will buy no other. â€"L.. Elsley, Nascagaweya,Ont." l('nm-_llythingbdllhhtwd‘ this be so > Try it in your own family. l(idouuum{ucdhd-u" cost vou. We take all the chances. Neither @HILOH never without it. 'E ..o,g.,.r dealer can lose.. Ten‘t that ir 2 25c. is the price. All dealers in You will find they give you satieâ€" . â€" Te / faction every time. THERE IS NO SUBSTITUTE Address, Canada First Publishing Co,, Room 19, 43 Scott Streetâ€"â€"TORONTO 1 To Much Teadrinking. Had Good References; To Secure Subscriptions on a Commission Basis. No one but a LIVE Agent need apply. Insist on being supplied with EDDY*S every time She Landed Him. . B. EDDYS pese PPTCCTT 2M 30 C Gmeul being. â€"Springfield Journal e new agent fof a% 5°3 h::fi.... o for B *40""""" Wlooang 256. 0 Lc and #0c; 1,00 foreigh ‘mue w. w . Mflfflorn& Ont. better than this. _ JD°Yy #*"" 6" " /.. far in opposing the killing of these small ereatures that they have motices put up in every rural community in France. One of these billâ€"boards eontains the following exhortation and recitation of facts: F LCC _, _03 Sistar the DrOâ€" JVon‘t Ki CORRE. "Moles destroy wireworms, larvae and insects ‘i:gnriou- to the farmer, No trace of vegetables is ever found in his stomâ€" ach; does more good than harm. Don‘t kill moles. "Rirdsâ€"Each department . of France Toses yearly many millions of france by the injury done by insects. Birds are the only enemies capable of battling with them vigomll({; they are great hel to farmers. Children, don‘t take mur:' nests."â€"Selected. facls: "This board is placed under the proâ€" tection of the common sense and honesty of the public. "Hedgehogs live upon mice,. snafte and wireâ€"worms, animals injurious to agriculâ€" ture. Don‘t kill a hedgehog. "Toads help agriculture. Eack one deâ€" troys twenty to , thirty insects hourly. Don‘t kill toads. SnE Fo h To o nilipnhrsicas ts td BETTER THAN SPANKING her successful home treatment, with full instructions. Send no money, but write ber toâ€"day if your children trouble you in this way. Don‘t blame the child; the chances are it can‘t help it. ‘This treatment also cures adults and aged people troubled with urine difficulties by night or day. The Bad Boy‘s Quotation. The Sunday school class had been: asked to bring a donation of five cents each, and to study up an appropriate quotation, to be repeated to the pastor as each one should go up to his desk to tlace his contribution in the Eoor basâ€" cot. First hi'it.lropping his nickel) said: "Cast thy d upon the waters and it shall be returned to thee an hundredâ€" fold."" Pastorâ€"*Very good, Master Tom." Seeond boyâ€""What you give to the Spanking Goes not ©ure ©EMRNII® AT 2"" wetting. ‘There is a constitutional cause for this trowble. Mrs,. 8. M. Summers, Box 8, Windsor, Ont., will send free to any mother poor yow lend to the Lord." Pasterâ€"*"Good, my son." And‘ so on, each boy recited becomâ€" ingly until the bad boy‘s turn arrived, and he said as he threw in his nickle: "A fool and his money are soon parted." FAlL FXCRUSION TO NFW YORK. 4th.. Tickets good 10 days. Good on regular express trains leaving Suspenâ€" sion Bridge 3.50 and 7:15 a. m., 7.15 and B43 p. u.. r e turn, from Suspension Bridge, via Leâ€" high Valley Railroad, Thursday, October call om or write Robt. 8. Lewis, Passenâ€" ger Agent, 10 King street east, Toronto. Ket Worthy of Notice. (London ‘Tattler.) Maudâ€"I have just received an offer of marriage which came by post this morning. lHe said that his love for me was great but that his imcome was small, Marieâ€"What a plt‘y! Whoewas it from*? M‘:u‘:â€"l really didn‘t notice: ‘That was enough. the other girls did. * Minard‘s Liniment Cures Burns, etc. Sheâ€"I don‘t believe yow wien you say I am the only girl you ever loved. l&â€"l._don‘t_a_»‘v‘s:_hy you shouliin‘t, AJt ,IU'UK“ .. Mn cdbccthed , uurne;-ur.c:-onr-c:.ua- *~‘%. 0. s assorted; Lofl_n‘v‘.up: Tickets only $9.00 to New York and reâ€" For tickets, and further particulars, ts second year, is an all Canâ€" MANX SVBJECTS ard SHORT rence LTeague. Of interest to all. your name in now for one year‘s the magazine FREE for the balâ€" guennotmehluuno! bedâ€" There is a constitutional cause for gecond 1 7t pt that two suit mii! and ').fi awwhi 1017 € 61 D m Agreement Addresses Dr. Suth L0 ti D m

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