West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 4 Nov 1909, p. 3

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YBrgm temt «l the exple c Beaudette mt re had his W 1/ of the acâ€" c men a¥¢ Serious‘y the hos & l"’.o- omeotive. Fireman . _ The 1 Grand An " Marvelous Recovery Montreal Man So 1!1 With Dyspepsia Thought He Would Die. Cured by Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills. No more convincing evidence _ was ever put on paper than the following letter from one of Montreal‘s weliâ€" known citizens, Mr. D. R. Larose, of 338 Joliette street. ‘"Permit me to write you a few words concerning Dr. Hamilton‘s Pills I sufâ€" fered from dyspepsia and indigestion for tive years. r suffered so much that I could hardly attend to my work. I was weak and lost all courage. I enjoyâ€" ed no rest until I decided to follow your treatment, after having read your adâ€" vertisement in the paper. To my great surprise I immediately began to feel betâ€" ter. I am now using the second box and I feel so well that I want to tell you that I owe this great change to your famous pills. I recommend them _ to every person who is suffering _ from dyspepsia. Your grateful servant, Dr. R. Larose, 338 Joliette street, Montreal, P. Let all who have weak stomachs, and | lars, the : those who suffer with indigestion, headâ€" mated ant aches, biliousness, know they can be per. | dent pests fectly cured by Dr. Hamilton‘s P?Jeh. Mr. Finl Successfully used for many years, mild | American, and safe, 25¢ per box, all dealers, or plumage 1 The Catarrhozone Co., Kington, Ont, _ | the use of The wriggly stillness of the study period was broken by a slamming door, and a thin boy in dirt;, sagged clothes slouched across the room. Halfâ€"way to the teacher‘s desk he drawled, ‘"Pa wants that you should let Jim go home right now."" As Miss Davis looked a litâ€" tle doubtful, he added: "He kin come back right away." L The permission given, the two badly soiled, halfâ€"starved _ sons of the most shiftless family in the district shuffled down the stairs. Very shortly Jim reâ€" turned, wearing a pleased and importâ€" ant smile on his pathetic little face. "LI come as soon‘s I could. Pa‘s brothâ€" er‘s dyin‘ to Poplar," he _ announced, cheerfully. ‘‘That‘s why Pa wanted me." ""But you weren‘t gone longâ€"you didâ€" n‘t stay home. I can‘t see why you went at all." answered the bewildered Miss ud R House of Memories There‘s a little house in a lit A little way from the sea, And, obh, when I‘m weary of world., It‘s there For the world is full of sorrow and care Aund the darkness lies before ; And the little house is full of the dreams That were ours, but are ourts no more. In the littlo street, in the long ago, In the little house by the . sew, We dreamed of the days that have had But you were youlg and I was young, Aud we dreamed and had no care, And dearer and better than life has been Were the dreams that came to . U# And â€" so Of its s0 I think of t Aund sigh In ‘Twere heaven enough if dreams And dreamed them aga In the little house in t A little way from the â€"Pall â€" MACISTRATE SPEAKS FOR ZAMâ€"BUK _ no dawn. Of the years that How to Make a Farmer THE FAMILY PAIR Magistrate Perry, of Goldfields, B.C., believes in making a sod thing known. Writing of Zamâ€"Buk, the great household Ealm, he says :â€"‘*After a very tair trial L have proved Zamâ€"Buk eminently satisfactory. In my case it cured a skin rash of five ‘ standing which no doctor had been able to do any good ‘:” I would certainly encourage ady person to kecE Zamâ€"Buk in his home." The m:sistnle is quite fifi: Every home needs Zamâ€"Buk! Unequall for w.Lutfl. ises, eczema, blood imâ€"Buk! _ UOEqURUC "" _ "_" ‘Alt stores and druggists sell it at ;.hu-bome " The istrale 18 qUS Zamâ€"Buk|! Uneqnaln:g for cnls,L poisoning and all skin discases. All 50 cents a box. Sure cure for piles. TBE F. F. DALLEY CO. LIMITED, Charge It to the Weather Little drove of water, Little flakes of snow Make an {nauguration Look like thirty cen Pa‘s goin‘," explained Jim. ut what has that to do with ced the teacher. 1 to have his suspenders,"" was tterâ€"ofâ€"fact reply. ndationâ€"stone of a nation‘s suC« vealed in an article in All Ireâ€" ow. A friend of the author was rk, and was astonished at the i wealth got out of so poor a y dairies and by farming. ubt." said he to a wellâ€"odiucatâ€" its sordid hopes and its pain, k of the little house that was OUrs, i sich to be there again. there world Makers of the ;'hat I fain would be when I‘m wear of all the children ° BA the them again, maybe, use in the little stréet, dairying an< the Weather Man, d the Dane, "but old Danish poemns That makes good IJdren. â€" and then shall never famous if we found our Mall Gazette little street, of all cents! Pille. ‘ Mr. Finley, accordin mild | American, deplored t s, or \ plumage birds, and h t, _ | the use of plumes by \in. | Devours Hundreds of Bugs and Inâ€" | sects in One Day. \ Epeaking on the conservation of wild | birds, William L. Finley, of Portland, i('rfi, lecturer of the National Associaâ€" \ tion of Audubon societies, declared at | the Conservation Congress at Seattle | that to destroy the wild bird was to deâ€" . â€" HAMILTON, Ost. atroy the forests, and he ofered figures to show the important part they took in protecting the agriculturist and the horâ€" ticultutist from the ravages of insects. Te cited the robin, which has ben found go devour 175 caterpilars in a day, and intanced the finindg of over 100 t‘hota- to bugs in the crop of one Bob White and two spoomfuls of chinch bugs in anâ€" other. _A mother sparrow, he said, had fed seventeen grasshoppers and two spiâ€" ders to its sevenâ€"dayâ€"old fledglings in 67 minutes. f In Nebraska there once existed multiâ€" tudes of blackbirds, and the farmers, being convinced they were damaging the crops, poison was set for them, and they, | with the wild game birds, were destroyâ€" ed in vast numbers. With this disapâ€" | eparance of the birds came the locusts, | and whole sections of the country were | devastated. Eight hundred million dolâ€" |hrs, the speaker declared, is the estiâ€" | mated annual loss from insects and roâ€" tho Shoe Polish. 20 thus adds more than one WOTIC 17 the discomforts of the hot weather As to the waistcoat, the garme bad enough at any time, but durin hot weather it is an abomination. gratifyving to note that most wellâ€"d1 men discard the waistcoat during Rnuspenders are during the sunmer cither then or at : the suspenders ar Snuspenders are happily little worn during the summer, Nor should they be, either then or at any other season. For the suspenders are incomfortable . and infurious.in many ways. They are unâ€" comfontable because, of all the appliâ€" arees worn by men, they produce the most incessant, strong and unrelenting pressume. Air can mu through the cont, the shirt, even t waistcoat; but urder the place where the suspenders sling about the chest, back and shoulders no air can get. As every man knows, the suspenders are the hottest thing he can possibly wear. Amd why wear them at allt "Well," Lava some one. "if you don‘t wear sus Amd why wear them Al @Hi. . "YMM‘s says some one, ‘"if you don‘t wear sus penders you must wear a tight belt, and that is nearly as bad." True, a tight belt is nearly as bad, but it is mat necessary bo wear a tight boit ROBIN‘S3 APPETITE. â€"â€"or a belt at all, unless you Wish O U" so for appearance sake, How, then, are we to keep the trow sers in placet Very easily. _ Have the trousors out so as to fit snugly over the hips; â€" have the buckles at the sides just over the hip bones, instead of at the back, and you will have not the slightest discomfort or difficulty in keepâ€" ing the trousers up. ‘The pressure is distributed over the heéne ans the sacred region so that it is . tss wuak mg yae WEmny C cE The pressure is distributed over the l? uns the sacred region so that it is felt hardly at all,. There is perfect freeâ€" dom of the trunk and shoulders _ and thero is no need for the tightlyâ€"drawn belt that is not only ugly and uncomâ€" fortable, but actually injurious, n my own case I have not wotn either susâ€" penders or belt for twenty years, but have worn trousers which, being cut uit sp c daed n e o iire MV 4 ddiGGsiet stnp t is i E P own case I have nol worn either eus~ penders or belt for twenty years, but have worn trousers which, being cut with a closely fitting body, have kept themselves in place without the slightâ€" est discomfort or annoyance. Tailors call trousers cut in this way "hip trousers," and any good practical eutter can draft the pattern so that the trousers shall be, as they ought to be, very fulil across the 1oÂ¥c~r part of the seat ana the thighs falling 'm‘ artistle ' re mt BND ty °P + 09 Oe . "I understand, | married a wealthy Farr, the eminent from the stage". July. _ "Yos. His wifé make him cut hi goatee." es ana the thighs falling to the ankle, and yet mue gri%':em the hi Latson in Outing 1 ding to the Baltimore L the destruction of i his denunciation of by women was scathâ€" THE END (Puck.) m at allt "Well," u_ don‘t wear sus at & t|ght belt, and fe declares she will his hair and raise a 3 now that ho has ; widow, that Walker nt sctor, will retire DON‘T NECLECT THAT SORE! A Chicago man has just died from blood poisonâ€" ing arising from neglect of a small sore. Don‘t neglect a cut, a g‘atch of eczema, or an open sore of any kind. he air is full of poison germs, waiting to start up their evil results in neglected sores, wounds, etc. In Zamâ€"Buk is lafelg. Zamâ€" Buk is so highly antiseptic that applied to any skindisease or injury it makes blood poisoninghhn- possible. _ In using Zamâ€"Buk you have three processes going on at once for Zamâ€"Buk is healing soothing and antiseptic. Try it without delay, vou wish to do ing in artistle yet holding & ; hips.â€"Dr. W. the CORNS PUTNAM‘S PAINLESS CORN EXTRACTOR "THRICE ARMED Is SHE." Justice is of course loudiy demanded by every litigant in a court of law, but it is a frequent infirmity of the human mind to coufuse justice with one‘s own cause. The late Thomas B. Reed, acâ€" cording to a writer in Law Notes, used to tell an amusing story to illustrate this tendency. He was once retained by an enterprisâ€" ing client to prosecute an action. On talking with the planitiff‘s witnesses Mr. Reed found that their stories were far from consistent, so he reported the fact to his client, and advised that the suit be dropped. The client was someâ€" what perturbed, but told the attorney he would have a talk with the witnesses and let him know the next _ morning what he had decided to do. True to his word, he dropped in bright and early, wearing the cheerful look of one who has fought the good fight. "I‘ve seen those witnesses," he exâ€" plained, "and they say they must have heen mistaken when they talked with you. They all see it alike now. I‘ve also seen some of the jurymen, and they think I‘ll win. Now, if there‘s such a thing as justice in law, we can‘t lose." You can painlessly remove Stimulating the Appetite by Cheerfulâ€" ness and Freedom From Worry. It is astonishing to one who has not studied the subject thoughtfully to leatn how completely under the conâ€" trol of the nervous system, or rather‘ of the emotions, the entire digestive apparatus is. 1t is a matter of everyday .xgerienoe that the appetite is under the subâ€" jection of the feelings, although not of the will. The impulse to celebrate any good news by a dinner is foundâ€" ed upon the fact that when one is pleased and elated hunger is ecited. In early times this hunger was gratiâ€" fied on the moment, just as the acâ€" companying thirst too often is now, but the modern m usually defers his eating to a suitable occasion. The loss of appetite caused by bad news or misfortune of any kind is too well known to need more than menâ€" tion. Worry or Physical fatigue will often act in the same way. T?\e samo causes that destroy the appetite will arrest or greatly retard the process of digestion. It is a matiter of comâ€" mon experience that any disagreeable occurrence during or just after a meal will stop digestion and may bring on a bilious attack with headache, nause& and a coated tongue. Concentration of the mind or anxiety will act in the same way. ’ 1 & ut UBs SW .\ mustem" C L graved or set with pr your name and address will send gon. postâ€"paid rinl which are to give 8 he pills. We do pnot & the pills are sold and w e e 10 14 Karats Bolid Froe! * doid Shell Rings cannot sell BOnMU TCLY On the other hand, as the appé: tite is stimulated by good news and mental elation, so digz=stion is ia.'; ored by bigh spirits Pn Eie uit P‘Lnugh and grow fat,"‘ like so many | popular sayings, is an | eX ression which contains much truth. lf)yspep- sia is a malady that will seldom be ftound in the family where the dinner gives occasion for cheerful talk and nirth and where all worry and "disâ€" gruntlement," and especially quarrelâ€" lixlxg. are under a ban. very member of the family should make it an absolute rule to put worty and all thoughts of business or study | aside for the moment and to come to the table prepared to be light hearted and gay. This is not only as a moral duty, but rests upon the very physical reason that his appetite will be betâ€" ter and his food will taste better and will be better digested. In this connection it goes without saying that bills and â€"disagreeable leiters should never be the accompaniâ€" ment of the morning meal, because a day started with c agrin is a very hard day to straighten out.â€"From | Youth‘s Companion. annot # 11 Address The Dr. Maturin Medioine 60. Ring Dopt 493, Toronts, On HIS NOT TO REASON WHY. His But to Do as He â€" Was Told Though Profits Dwindled. a «torvy is told of Rothschild to ilustrate TVA us Cat all HIMAR Cc ny? A story is told of Rothschild to illustrate the strict obedience which they at all times exacted from their employees, high and low. They once had an agent in New Orleans, a youns aud alert tellow who kept his eyes and ears open. According to System, they un onanhed him to sell their cotton hold« MECWTER CC s They once had an R@ent iD ARM M C oock a youns aud alert tellow who kept his eyes and ears open. According to System, they telepgraphed him to sell their cotton hold« lazs on & specified day. Believing that he had better information on the local market than his employers he hold the sale over four days and netted an extra profit of $40,000. He promptly notified the Rothschilds of his achivement and forâ€" warded the bonus. The Rothschilds returned the amount intact with a cold note that ran. "The 340,000 you made by dnobeyln‘ our instructions is not ours but yours. Také It. Your successor sails for New Orieans toâ€" day FUN AT THE TABLE. wl wUo, CEP DC aF 4 jJowels, for the sale of 4 boxes only. at 25¢. a box, of Dr. Maturin‘s Famous Vegetable Pills. They are the greatest remody for indigestion, constipt tion, rhoumndlm. weak or impure blood catamh, diseases of the liver and kidneys, When you have sold these & boxes of pills ons send us the money $1 md M the size of the ring desired CS and we will send gon. e c ourcho!cho{ one (i:i ose $s ilndswn. ings, plain onâ€" t set with precious stones. ‘?and e and address immediately and We gon, postâ€"paid, the Pills and fancy h are to give away to purchasers of We do pot ask any money betore va sold and we take back what yOA OB ie SE oi c e‘ whatever promotes gayety and We will give you your choice of oneof those beauâ€" Lo N e Adhv tz dobt d PV i tiful rin usranteed 14 karats gilg gold shell, plain, engraved, or set with elegant lil!lltlll‘llmi & 24 HOVRE ra 'Jn‘y com, G?tbe.’ CUREZ We appreciate the position taken by the man or woman who says :â€"** If your preparation is what ‘you claim, you should have no objection to letting us try it before spending our money on it." To every person taking this view we say, send one cent stamp (to pay return postage) and name and date of this paper to Zamâ€"Buk Co., Toronto, and we will mail you a free trial box of Zamâ€"Buk. â€"Zamâ€"Buk is purely herbal, suitable for the delicate skin of little children, yet Xoufl“‘ enough to heal chronic sores of long years‘ standing. . All druggists and stores, 50c. per box, 3 for §l.25. * x h. tm Accomplishments _ of Aviatm| Have Been Remarkable. 1 The following from the Daily Sketch, of London, England, although a little late, is worthy of reproduction. It should set a train of thought in motion. _ It was published on September 11: Some people there are who disturb themselves greatly about the future, and try to imagine what new things there may be for the world in the years which are to come. They examine the past carefully, and from that they try to forecast the eyents of the coming years. They even ‘write books about it, bstri\‘ing to form some picture of the | world as it will be. It is an interesting and quite harmâ€" less occupation. 1t is indeed one of the most fascinating of all the games at which men can playâ€"but it is not much more than a game. For the doings of the world are so many and varied that no one man can decide which of them are significant, and which are of no acâ€" count. ' . 1 4 C e G it EIIITC This reflectionâ€"it is stale enough, in all conscienceâ€"is in the present instance produced by nothing more or less than a consideration of September 12, 1906â€" three years ago toâ€"morrow. It does not seem an extraordinary day, and probâ€" ably there is not one of us all who reâ€" members that it was in any way A day to be marked out among the other days of that year. Certainly very few of us thuught‘ much of it at the time. Cast your mind backâ€"do you remember anything about it? Does September 12 stand in your mind as a date to be remembered? Can you recollect anything to mark it in any way from the days which came beâ€" fore and followed it? It is doubtful if one in ten thousand knows any reason why that date should be remembered. The papers of the next It is doubtful if one in ten thousand knows any reason why that date should be remembered. The papers of the next day hardly mentioned the matter which will in the years to come make it inâ€" creasingly famous. There are so many things happening in the world, and some of them seem so importantâ€"at the time. Tt is only after years that one is able to realize what that importance really amounts to. 1 ys Poronicua® tha The Future Consort Is Relieved of Taking the Initiative. When a reigning queen is to be marâ€" ried she must broach the subject first to ber future consort. ‘The same rule holds good with regard to all royal ladies who marry commoners. HOW ROYAL LADIES PROPOSE Queen Victoria has told how she manâ€" aged to "put the question" to Prince Albertâ€"how she first showed him Windâ€" sor and its beauties and the distant landscape and then said: "All this may be yours." The Queen of Holland, on & like occasion, simply sent a sprig of white heather, begging Prince Henry to look out its meaning in a book of flowers and their meaning. The Duchess of Argyle took the following means of proposing to the Marquis of Lorne. She was about to attend a state ball and gave it out that she would choose as her partner for the first dance the man she intended to honor. She selected the marquis, who subsequently became her husband. ; But perhaps the most interesting of all ways chosen was that of the Duchess of Fife. She took the earl, as he then was, to a drawer and showed him its conâ€" tents. There he saw a number of trifles he had given her at different times, inâ€" cluding sprigs of several kinds of flowâ€" ers, now dead, he pleked for her at different times. He was much impressed at the sight, nor did it require words on her part to make her meaning plain. â€"Western Scot. "Sit, m{ wi staring at her fi;nf wn apology." "Oertainly. ofyma id 200 Mhcss PB drtcns T “Oeruuinlr. flmay have been looking :;xour wii:e. but I was in a deep study did not see her at all." "Gee!t â€"When she hears that she‘ll be "Gee! When sh« madder than ever." GENnNvuINE OFFER. â€"BUK AT OUR EXPENSE! THE QUEER SEX. (Boston Transeript.) _wite m{s that you have been her for the last 10 minutes. 1 of â€" Aviators is ies cooiimeia 1. REBUILDING THE WHOLE BODY That is the Constant Busiâ€" ness of the Blood. And That is Why a Blood Making Tonic Will Make the Body Well and Keep it So. Pure, red blood is the vital principle of life, for upou it the tissues of the hbody live. Jt goes practically to every part of the body, carrying nourishment and oxygen, taking up the wastes and so changing them that they can be cast out of the body. As our _ every act results in the breaking down of some of the tissues and the formation of waste materials, the body is in a conâ€" stant state of change. ‘To maintain health, strength and life the blood must be pure in order to replace these tissues 7 Ns L620 L on l aulh carmul t girls. These Pills are sold bY cine dealers or sent by mail at a box or six boxes for $2,50 by L13 â€" mLd.s k‘flliams' Medicine How They Escaped from an Islandâ€" Ruse to Obtain Food. The three survivors of the five conviets who escaped recentiy from the Andaâ€" mans told the following remarkable story of their escape and the adventures | which followed it : On the morning of May 28 six comviets â€"Bissan Singh, under sentence of fiftcen years; a Bengalo (term of seven years), and four Burmans, Nga Naing, Nga Tun, Nga Pya, and Nga Po Lu, all "hfâ€" ers," under the chur%e of two military policemen with two Martiniâ€"Henry rifles «nd one hundred rounds of ammunmition, were sent in a forest boat to a small island in the Middle Andamans with seven days‘ rations for each conviet and } the policemen. y P L uc cndzee sE Snelean o4 C Copie in Ceaane id On_ reaching the island Bissan Singh, NXga Naing, Nga Pya and Nga Tun were set to work, while the two policemen with Nga Po Lu and the Bengali went up hill in search of a "golden" %‘ird that is highly prized in Port Blair and has a ready sale. The policemen, before leavâ€" ing, took off (the recaptured convicts state), their bandoliers of cartridges and laid them with the rifles in the botâ€" tom of the boat, which had been hauled up on the beach and made fast, Po Im, who was the convict overseer, g:o(elied to know where birds were to found in plent{, and led the policemen and the Bengali into dense underbrush, then gave them the slip, and made his way quickly back to the other men. _ n The men got the boat into the water and, raising the sail, started in the diâ€" rection of the Rurma coast . A strong wind. almost a gaie, was blowing when they left the island, but the boat, which had both sail and oars, proved seaworâ€" thy, and after seven days‘ heavyy weather they reached the Tenasserim coast only to have the boat dashed to pieces on the rocks. T convIcts As HUNTERS Cenett ) Ree en in C O I firing at deer, the three convicts left beâ€" hind thought nothing of it until some little time afterward four Burman poâ€" licemen entered the hut. _ The three conâ€" viets then learned thnat Po Lu and Nga Pya had been shot and were themselves aftrested. The headman appears to have been in communication with the police from the beginning.â€"From the Englishâ€" man. TTILIZED HIS OPPORTUNITY. (Pittsburg Gazette). A Cleveland _ cvangelist preached â€" 6 hours, 8 minutes and 45 seconds. He eviâ€" dently has no desire to be called to the pulpit of a fashionable church. TORONTO $250 by The Dr â€" Brockville: Ont 0 cents When cakes do the most trying thing to the bakerâ€"burn on the sides and botâ€" ton â€"instead of moaning over your loss, seek to repair it. F 1 - _ E T: PW D: TUnless the burn is deep it will not alâ€" ter the taste of the cake, though perâ€" haps it will be a little dryer in conseâ€" quence. It is so unsightly that is must be covered up at any cost. Instead of cutting off the edges of Instead of cmtii:f off the edges of the cake with a knife, as is usnal, try removing the black with a fine grater, This removes all the darker portions and leaves a smooth surface for icing. Clean, fine sandpaper can be used in the same way. The cake must be handled delicately and not until cold or it will fall and turn soggy. _ Ice on the brown side and if burnt on the edges as well as bottom, particularly in small cakes, cover the sides as well as top with icing. KEEP BOILER FROM RUSTINXG. Nothing is more annoying than a rusâ€" ty boiler. It not only is bad for the boiler, causing it to wear out in loss than half its natural life, but it is ruinâ€" ous to clothes that must be washed in it. One housekeeper has discovered a way in which this rusting may be prevented. After the clothes are out of the boiler and it has been carefully washed and dried it is returned to the stove for a winute or two to get hot. It then is rubbed quite thickly over inside and esâ€" veelally along the seams with soap that }.»ednlly along the seams with soap Lhal s used for laundry purposes. The boiler lasts much longer, nevet rusts, and the soup, if not allowed to get dusty during the week by leaving off the lid, is dissolved at the next week‘s boiling. TO KEEP JELLIES FROM MOULDING Keep a box or bunches of thyme where the jellies are kept, which should be in ‘ 1 . . 1 omm E0W ma Stockings should be washed in the same way as other flannels, first on | the right and then on the wrong side. Black stockings soon lose their color unless they are washed and dried quick â€" ly. When stockings are quite dry they should be ironed and left turned on the wrong side ready for mending. Stockâ€" ings should never be washed in water after other flannels, as they become covered with woolly fluff. TO WASH WOOLLEXN®. _ Turn inside out and shake well to remove all dust. Wash in warm #oap lather, using serap jelly. Knead and squeeze the garâ€" ment, well washing both sides, only rubbing the soup on the most zoiled parts, as rubbing tends to harden the fabric. ;md:;l-\'â€";l;(:s-, and you will have no mould. Rinse several times in warimn water | to remove the soap. Add a small porâ€" | tion of soup to last rinsing water, as ; this makes the flannel softer. Wring as dry as possible and hang up | to dry at once, shaking the garment | and pulling it into shape once or twice during the day. This raises the pile and softens the material. In order to avoid the shrinking of woollen _ materials, _ lukewarm water | should be used for washing and ironing. | Flannels require quick washing nm‘li drying, and when possible dried ont of doors if fine, as they are liable to steam | of hung before a fire, as this shrinks lthem. For new flannels use ammonia | * _ _ Lates flawnal« maÂ¥ be ironed when | or';,â€"&fm-i'c;. and then the en heal «orences. XERVOUSNESS HELP 1f vou are suffering from ne If you are sulfenng do not overlook the va ing. â€" Many persons mcute nervous | in deep breaths during the day. One cupful of pineapple cut in amal {wou, one cupful of currants, on6 CUp ul of raspberries, one cupful _ 0 blackberrics, six rachu, cut up 4 small picces, oneâ€"half pound of figs, cu P s frbe ns cmd‘ seb :0 small pieces, oneâ€"ha up, one lemon, one both, oneâ€"fourth po monds, three and 0 and a halt cupful 0 PME . PRspen en s Wl l blackberries, six _ peaches, . cut uUp in | small pieces, oneâ€"half pound of figs, out | | up, one lemon, one orange and rind of l both, oneâ€"fourth pound of blanched alâ€" | monds, three and oneâ€"half cupfuls sugar | and a half cupful of boiling water. Boil from twenty minutes to oneâ€"half hour. | : Fine with cold meats. ' INK SPOTsS. | To remove ink spots from table linen | and white goods place the stained artiâ€" | cle over a steaming kettle of water, at | the same time squeezing the juice of a | lemon on the spot. It will instantly reâ€" move the stain, but be sure the water is steaming. This has been tried sucâ€" | cessfully upon one colored garment withâ€" | out injuring the color. | sHOULDER HELP, | I have found that some women do not | know the laundryman‘s trick of ironing | the shoulders of a shirtwaist over the | small end of the ironing board, ha ing . the waist on with end of board px::?-et- | ing into the sleeve. TO IRON _ NAPEIN®S. Wring every third napkin out of hot water; lay flat, one wet, two dry, one wet, etc., until all are used. Roll tightâ€" ly and in a short time they are ready to be ironed. Always irou along with the hem, first on the right . then the wrong side, lastly on the right side again, folding as desired. Your linen will be perfectly dry and have a beautiâ€" ful gloss. L BURNT CAKES STOCKINGS TUPITL FRUTTI Antiei A, "tvs h " the value of deep breathâ€" ersons have warnded off prostration by drawing s at frequent intervals out in emall nervousness in | Mare Antony turned mp&uUCNnV the energetice young . man who touched his elbow. "Mr. Antony," said the young "can you tell me how much money sar left his family ?" Arrested, and Consumption Cured Mr. G. D.Colwell, of Walkerville, Ont. wum:h.downwnfil.-(‘.:z:m and it left him in very bad condition. HMe says : I was allrun down and bordering on Ew PBmR mRT TUUIOE : "I cannot," said Mare, abruptly, "% came to bury Caesar, mot to appraise him!" & says: 1 was ht eAE TT Consumption. 1 could notsleep atnig u.fidwu-.ndmtf‘n"!*' whole time. This is how 1 was when 1 began to take Peychine, in a low nervous state ; butfrom the first bottle 1 began to improve. It did marvels for me and brought nofuiemen nomes man of me. t “ the attacks of L-Gfimwliu--mo ventative. . 1 always take Psychine if 1 feel a cold coming on and it puts me right im Parisian Milliner Invents One That Can be Moditied to Suit. A leading Parisiau milliner bas just invented a hat which may be -darhil for various occamiouns at will, declares the London Chromicle. ht ) SPECIAL VALUE AT $25.00 It can be taken to pieces When its removable brim is packed away under the brow it becomes a close fitting togue suitable for motoring, railway travelling r for walks in rough weather, 1/ its owner finds herself unexpectediy called to appear in evening dress she has «imply to readjust her crown and she is ready for any function demanding THIS watch is one of the best values we bave ever shown. . Th; ;;..c..'; made in heavy 14k gold and contains a fully guerenteed 15 jewel movement. Engraved with any monogram and delivered post paid to epy address in Canadaâ€"except the Yukonâ€"for $25.00. | last winter | apartment | heat. SEND FOR CATALOGUE R Our handsomely {Mustrated 144 n.' cate > |o|u;.:‘ Diamonds, Jow-lfl. verware , Leather, Arts Goode and Novelties, free I RYRIE BROS., Limited oi carver and sworn weigher, According to a Paris contemporary, these "tran cheurs jures" are to be seen in the kitâ€" chens with carving knife in one hand and scales in the other, weighing OU! with mathematical precision the por tions of meat.â€"London Giobe. HIJS TNSPIRATION. (Philadelphia Record.) Bcribblerâ€"How did you get the inspi: ation for the poem about watching the dying embers * Scrawlerâ€"I wrote it one cold night HAT FOR EVERY NEED greatest elegance Sworn Carvers and Weighers x ThHosE DaAys. (8t. Paul Dispatch.) ntony turned impatiently to vatie ‘voung mam who head 134â€"138 Yonge Street TORONTO when the janitor .« house turned off the SIâ€"KEEN Miab Efi'* L9 oo

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