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The Olds Gazette 1907-05-04 - 1909-12-31
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Date
1909-11-12
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London . Beptember were very ' largest READ WHAT HE OWES TO Mr. R. C. Blurton, eer vation worker, eyed roud position of Deputy Band mony to the the great healing power of Zam-Buk balm. He says : ** Pimples and sores broke out all over 4 my face and neck and notwithstanding all -I-did to try and-cure them they spread. In places the skin was inflamed over bi itches and caused -me great. pain an mvenience, I was advised to try Zam- Buk and for several days I sept ied it to the sores anointing it often with the bealing balm. It soon began to sooth the pain, an Spratt pase Whtprereer tne ani it verance a Buk h completely and made my skin as sm and clase as possible. LT strongly recommend Zam-Buk to all who sufter from unsightly skin troubles, sores, ulcers, ete. It is a wonderful healer - Zam-Buk cures eczema, itch, blood jon, festering, chronic and suppurat- sores, burns, cuts, barber s rash, fistula all skin injuries and diseases. It isailsoa Specific for piles, All d ists and stores 5oc. a box a 1.25. 1d re. stamp to Zam-Buk Co., Toronto for sample box. Americans In London. * t is estimated that at least 60,000 - Americans-invade London duriug the gummer months, an invasion for which the west end shopkeeper is deeply grateful, stated a recent issve of a- paper. Before the days of American invasion July, August and months for the trade. Now all this is change? , and the army of Americans spend in Ton- on about a million and a half ster- lng. While hotels and boarding houses get the lion's share of American gold, there are other businesses which bene- fit largely. These are principally jew- elers, sellers of antiques .and curlos,7, rapers, dressmakers and tailors. West : efid tailors and dressmakers are espe- clally grateful: to these visitors, who keep them busy during what used to be the slackest season of the year. : yt my Green. : Now that the widening of London's Blackfriars bridge is approaching com- pletion the painters. are getting fo work, and the structure is belug coat: ed in its old familiar green. color, pick- ed out with gold. The choice of color, 1 may say, is the result of a misappre- hension. Years ago when the painter who had the contract for the bridge approached the authorities he was met by a high official, who said loftily: Color? Oh, see Green, meaning see another high official. : But the painter took it for seagreen the color, and sea green the bridge bas been painted ever since. London Scraps. e lt; sed A Bankrupt Prince. Prince Hermann of. Saxe-Welmar- Bisenach. the eir presumptive to the grand duchy of Weimar, has te- nounced the succession of himself or his -heirs, if any, to the throne of the: grand duchy or its property. The prince's extravagance: already has transferred him from: the culrassiers of the guard in Berlin to a ublan regi- ment and later to compulsory retire- ment from the army, after which he was placed under a guardianship. The prince has been given the title of Count Ostheim, but he is totally bank- rupt'and remains under the ot Bis guardians. fe A Great Horse. Jumbo, a horse owned by a Savin Rock shipbuilder, is said to be the horse in Connecticut and it would no doubt be safe to say the largest in New England. He is nearly seven feet. high and weighs 1.700 pounds. He is a most powerful api: maf and bas dragged with apparent ease a two ton load. With the chil- rep be is a great favorite.: It costs a good deal to feed him, as be has the almost ineredible odantity of eight pecks of oats at each meal and makes away with-over 200 pounds of hay every week. His shoes ate of un- usual size and weigh four pounds each. Boston Budget. s lt; The Price of Peace. The announcement that France is going to: spend three milliards of francs for new ships of war that is to say. for peace reminds us how prices have gone up since 1871, In that year France bought peace of Bis marck for one miiliard. And a mil- Hard, furthermore, was deemed tn that day a fairly stiff figure the thrifty French more than hinted that Bis- ggarck had driven a sbarp bargain, whereas on the occasion of the pres- ent purchase the nation is reported as quite in a glow of delight. Puck. Vulcan. Vulcan was.discovered in 1859, only to be effectiv ly obliterated from the planetary system fifty years later. verrier, who acted as godfather to the new addition, calculated path and found that the planet revoired around the sun in about twenty days, Yet: other observers failed ever to see. the planet, and. now . Professor Camp bell announcs.that the eclipse observa. tions of recent years prove almost con clusively that the existence of such a body ts a practical impostibiity. Ar gouaut, NO DROUGHT IN NORTH. Nature of the Country Keeps Moisture In Clay Belt. There are no droughts up in On- tario s new clay, belt. The forests and streams forbid that, and the irriga- tion problems. of Western Canada will never trouble this northern Ontario land. The wild flowing Abitibi passes out of the lake eight miles to: the eastward and upon its waters a canoe could. pass northward 170 miles to Jame Bay. To the west seven miles is the Frederick House. All along the line are streams -or rivers. The rainfall has been abundant throughout the season that is near its end. Frost comes early but even the frost s approach has been driven back for days around Englehart and New Liskeard by the extensive clear- ings and the drainage. At these and other places where cultivation has been progressing for a few years the temperature is several degrees higher than in the woods that fringe them. This new land has advantages that neither the West of to-day possesses, nor the older part of Ontario, when the axe, first woodland. music of civilization, was heard in ite. un- broken forests. : There are two crops up here in the twelvemonth where the west has only one. The spruce trees have a com- mercial value so * * - between 3 and 4 a cord that their sale pays for the a of the land,-and pro- vides money for the sowing of the crops. There is profitable work- for winter as well as summer. ; Older Ontario had this double crop but what section had a railway pass along the virgin forest. Mostly the tr es, bigger far than here, had. to be felled and burned where theyfell, for lack of the transportation to a. mar- ket. The timber market of Northern Ontario is at its doors in the navig- able rivers and the colonization rail. way that the older province has sent up. : There is for none of the pioneers. of Northern Ontario the n to hit a trail through the woods and bear upon his back a bag of corn, 30, 40 or 50 miles, as more than one of Ontario s M.P.P. s has done in the olden days. A kind Providence has smiled upon this northern land. ms Cochrane is moving rapidly, but there is always a delightful sensation. of being on th border land between the old and the new; the tried and the untried; the land that has n bound to man s use and the land that lies way that runs straight south 600 miles to a city of 300,000, meeting here a narrow stumpy trail to the farms of the pioneers in the woods around. 4 When the giant. Cree Indian: was brought in from the' Hudson Bay out- post, me miles on shaie ane strapped, he was jarge of a whi man, named Clark,, who had been breaeht up om th shores of Lake Abitibi, 40 miles to north and east. He was a full grown husky man, a Hudson Bay factor, and the train that bore the two. south to Hamilton Asy- lum was the first this white man hunt- er had ever seen. re 3 The Way- of the Mounteds. In the. Busy Man s. Magazine for October, Kate Simpson-Hayes. relates the surprise of an American new-com- er-when he had his first glimpse of perta. I met.a keen-looking American from: Nebraska, and I asked him how he, liked living under the British flag? His answer was: eg Pretty d well, he aid, with- out elegance or. hesitation. He left his plow (a ten-furrow affair, worked by steam) and, leaning up agai lence, told me this: . . *T- was down near the boundary line last year with a bunch of hors s, when a moun along, all alone, in chase of a hali- breed horse thief. He sort of expect- ed to find him in a breed camp.a bit , and I went with him to see. just how them red-coats would make. a pinch. The fellow got off his horse, walked into camp, where there were about twelve or thirteen ugly-looking chaps. sitting around, and says red- coat: - ** Here, you come along with me, settling his hand quite polite like on a chap s shoulder. *There was a fellow grabbed a Winchester; another a Colt s; another let a yell out of him, but the red- coat just said: . Look here, you fellows, sit down quick, for I m going to take this man with me. ; He did. Preferential Trade. The newspapers of the Australian Ce alth want a pref es- tablished upon an Imperial as distin- guished from a commercial basis. We may perhaps be excused for being un- in trade can be established upon any other than a commercial basis. A preference to be of any value must be a preference which prefers. Canada took the lead in establishing a pret- - rence because she preferred the trade of the Empire to the:trade of the world, not that British trade is in- trinsically of any more value than the business we-do with the, United States. or with any other nation, but because Britain is-our best customer and the only nation which does not seek by the imposition of artificial barriers to hamper trade under the delusion that it is harmful and ought to be restrain- ed to the utmost. possible limit. Vic- toria Daily Times. - . Canada Will Lead. The Congress of Chambers of Com- merce of the Empire at Sydney, N.8.W., voted against confining the pref to goods earried in British lust as Canada was the pioneer in techs a preference, so must Canada the first to get the full. benefit of the preference. By and by, when ustrelia gets. educated. up. to the Canadian point of view, it will rea- liez that it pays h-tter to get its ls from Ene)- 7. by a British route Tistena of, ss now, by German or rench steamers. Ottawa Free Press. Ed. Thompson, of Camrose; Alta., res ports having finished threshing. His total acreage in. crop this year was 550 acres, and from this the returns were 28,500 bushels. This represents *a wheat, oats, and barley. TI got ahead a little once, said the Wall Street. Lost your entire capital, I pose, commented. the customer. sup- Oh, no, rejoined; the eolabler, TI held onto the last. They didn t quite get my awl. Philadelphia Ledger, virgin to the far northward; .the rail- policeman came: able to comprehend how a preference, bottoms, between British ports. Well, yield per acre of over 51 i) talkative cobler, and took a flier THE GAZETTE, CLDS, ALBERTA. ALL OVER THE WO thousands of housewives use Sunlight. Soap in pref- erence to any other, because it cleanses the clothes more thoroughly, and at half the cost without injury to hands or fabric, RS No Finding Carlyle Scotland has a great reputation for Tearning, and a Boston lady, who re- cently visited there, expected'to find the proverbial shepherd quoting eee and the laborer who had is by heart. She was disillusioned in Edin- burgh. Accosting a policeman she in- quired as to the whereabouts of Car: lyle s house. Which Carlyle? . he asked. Thomas Carlyle, said the lady. What does he do? Bee He was a writer but he s dead, she faltered. rie Well, madam, the big Scot inform. ed her, if the man is dead over five years there s: little chance of finding out anything about him in a big city like this. Very Much Affected Sprigg went to a noted phveisian te ask advice as to his health. -In pom- pous tones he addressed the doctor: T ah have come to ah ask you ah what what is ah the deuced mattah with me ah . - 3 T find that your heart is affected, . said the piysicita gravely. . Qh ah anything else ah? Yes, your lungs.are affected, too. **nything ah else ah? Yes, your manners are also affect- 2d. Tit-Bits. - x . Shop Talk Pea otk Say, remarked the wheelwright to the wheel, as he hammered. away at the tire, you're a great old rounder, aren t you? : Oh, go take a vacation, . rejoined the wheel. You make me tired. A-man with a.cold in the head can get mighty mad with his family if they. don t worry enough about it. : NOTICE. Notice is hereby given that the +Grand -Trunk Pacific Branch Lines Company will apply to the Parliament Canada, at its next session, for an Act amending the Act incorporating the Company, chapter 99 of the Sta- tutes of 1906, and - authorizing the construction of the following addi- tional lines of railway - the manner in which the law and. : . -order are enforced in the West.. The. os eee tacts on pee Neen iter says: 4 BET: nk Pacifi ae vf ae Railway in the f the-town A year ago, traveling through Al-' ( Watrous, Sask., to point. at-or near Calgary; Alta., or to a point on the line authorized to be constructed 12y the Company from a point on the said We tern Division between the ilth and 113th degrees of longtitude to Delany, Alta... re (2): From a point on the propos d line menti in paragraph (1), within ranges 4, 5 or 6, west of the third meridian, thence in.a south- easterly and: easterly direction to a point at or near Regina, Sask. : (3) From a point on the proposed line mentioned in paragraph (1), with- ;in ranges 21, 22, 23:or 24, west of the third meridian thence in a northerly or northeasterly direction to a point at or near the forgot Biggar, Sask: : . H. BIGGAR, gt; Solicitor for the Applicants. Montreal, Oct. 2ist, 1909. : Do you consider it a moral wrong to cheat a lawyer? asked the person who is always looking for a chance to start. something. z No, replied the man whose spe- ciality is worldly wisdom, but I con- sider it a physical impossibility. cant Do not tet a cold settle on your lungs. - Resort to Bickle s Anti-Con- sumptive Syrup at the first intima- tion of irritation in the thorat and prevent disease frum lodging in the pulmonary organs. Neglected colds are the cause of untold sufferin: throughout the country, all: of whic could have been plication of this simple but powerful medicine.: The price, 25 cents, brings it within the reach of all. : Her father (sternly) Geneveive, you are engaged to some young man. Herself Oh, father, how did you discover my secret? Her father The Bae bill for last quarter is suspiciously small. Minard s Liniment for sale everywhere Seg Patience Hasn t Miss Oldun got searching eyes? Patrice Well, I don t wonder at it. She s been Jooking for a husband for twenty years. 2 COUGHS COLDS TO CONSUMPTION Write for Free Sample. Ber Sale by all Dragsists a2 Dealers Ste. 1 PRONOUNCED. SI-KEEN BUNLIGRT SOAP prevented by the ap- 7 BUNTINS. STORY. Episode eof the Late Journalist and the New English Repacier. A short time ago some ' reminis- eences of the late Christopher W. unting were published in these col- u ins, and gt;an olu Toronto newspaper ran who read them has recalled an- other onc in which the noted ediior played a-small part. In the later seventies and iu the eighties, Mr. Bunting kept a supervising eye over porate ues and used to engage every- : en the ataff of The Toronto Mail himself, xd suggest the duties they were to perform. One day a little Englishman blew in town from Montreal, and told him a hard iuck story, sayirig. that: he was a trainsd reporter wha had not been able to, get a hold in this coun- try. Mr. Bunting engaged him and turned: him over to the city editor. The latter asked what he should do with him, and Mr. Banting suggested that he be put on railroad.news un- til he got to know the town. Mr. Bunting went to New York for a week, and on his return journey bought a copy of The Mail at Hamil. ton. Opening. it, he was. surprised to read a most astounding roast on railroads in general, and Canadian railroads in particular. They were ex- tortionate, theit officials were incom- fonoe and insolent, their equipment ad; altogether it was terrible ar- raignment. It was a complete revers- al. of the policy of The Mail, which was to stimulate railroad develop- ment as essential to Canada s future. Going. to the office in wrath, Bunting sent for Mr. Farrer, his chief editorial writer, and wanted to know what he meant by passing such an article. Mr. Farrer revlied that he had never seen it untij it appeared in the paper, and that it must have been sent up by the citv editor. The latter disavowed the article; said he had s en it in proof only, and as- sumed that it had been sent up by the edit fial writers for reasons best known to themselves. The original copy was sent for, and. the writing identified as that of the new. reporter. It was obvious that he had sent it to the composing-room himself The Englishman was told to go/and see Mr, Bunting; t z What the devil you mean by sending up an article of this kind without submitting it to anyone? asked the. chief. at The reporter was not erushed. With Cockney assurance he gave the ulti- matum to Mr. Bunting as follows: . I was assigned to cover railroad news.: If I am not to have a free hand to say what I please about the railroads, I wish to placed on an- other assignment. - Z - Mr. Bunting. was knocked breath- Tess.. All he could say was: Get to Hades out of here And seeing the look in his eye, the reporter got, and never came back. : Canadians Among the Great. There is-a new organization of painters and sculptors at Paris called the Societe-Nouvelle. The great sculp- tor Rodin is its president. The mem- bership is less than a score, and is up ofthe pick of Europe. -It contains two English names: Sar- gent, the celebrated ae painter, and Morrice, James W. Morrice, who is a native of Montreal. One must be sbie to paint, and paint well, tu get into that group: And Mr. Morrice is a Canadian He is vice-president of the-Salon d Aytomne of 49, anid a member Of the Societe tional. des Beaux Arts and of the Interna- tional Society. of Sculptors, Paimers and Gravers of London, and has been referred to by Mr. Louis Vauxcelles, competent Parisian Art Critic, as the one Englishman . whose wotk has tuken the place-of Whistler s in the estimation of Parisian artista. Both Walker and Morrice are now me mbers of the Canadian Art Club and are annual exhibitors here. Oth- er instances could be given, in sculp- ture as well as in painting. And it can be added without fear of serious refutation that in figure and. marine painting, as well as in the various phases of landscape and genre sub- jects, we are making satisfactory con- tributions not to Canadian art mere- ly,- but also to universal art. It is the other culated), must admit it. Canadian Alpine Journal. Few as interesting volumes are pub- lished in Canada as The- ian Alpine Journal. The volume for 1909 is-.dated from. headquarters, Winni- peg, (180 Furby strect). The fi aper is a spirited account by the ev. Mr. f climb Mount-Robson last year. Mr. Kenny s success this year adds to the interest of the paper. The. Second Ascent of Mount Tupper, by Miss ean Parker, and the story of the first..successful -climb. of the lt; same mountain, translated from the. Ger- man of Herr Wolfgang Koehler,-taken oo the oe . k 2 Glacier user come charm of person- ality and show the real fascination of mountain climbing. But the finest story in the book will be. found under Alpine Notes. It is an account taken from a letter by Tom Wilson, the most celebrated guide of the Canadian kies, of the tramp home seventy miles to Banff last Christmas. He was caught in a blizzard in the Pi stone Pass. Wimt he. says o is march reveals a pluck and tatutune which it would be hard to match. Born Farthest North, Commander Peary s snow baby lmay have been born farthest north, Lut there is a young lad in Kincar- dine who is a close second, vis.. Herschell Stringer, son of his lord- Bip the Bishop. of Yukon, and Mre. ttringer. He is named after Herschel) Island, where he was born. Thatie- and. is in the Arctic Ocean, north- sast of the Mesckenzie River. He was born when his father was a mis- sionary . amo the Esquimaux. Kincardine: Review. z Railway Profits. -Profits on railways in the Unitea lielons amount to over 200,000,000 year. 1 4. well-known business man attend- ed his daughter s commencement exer- cises at an eastern college -recently. He. had been greatly pleased with the bebhuty and dignity of the exercises, and was discotirsing to his wife upon the Zofthing intvenges of college life. Suddenly is impr ssive monologue was cut shirt. A girl, gown, came dashing down the steps of the main hall, raving her diploma and shouting, Educated by gosh Ladies Journal. ; Occasionally thih Wonfan acquires the art: of not 'showing it. se . misery, and even now as I recall vk week: My book, Woman s Own Kenny of the attempt to ais in cap and . REBUILDING THE woure s ure ano cerrens, WHOLE BOD rhat is the Constant Busi- ness of the Blood And That is Why a Blood Mak- ing Tonic Will Make the Body Well and Keep it So. Pure, red blood is the vital princi- pal of life, for upon it the tissues of the 4 live. It 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 constant state of change. To maintain -health, strength. and life the blood must be pure in order to sepia these tissues with fae of fresh nourishment and rid the body -of its waste material. Men and women who are run down will find Dr. Williams Pink Pills the best tonic for their condition because these Pills are a cer din blood-builder and furifier. They enable the blood to me et the unusual demands of the body and give perfect health. We offer the case of Mrs. John Harman, of Wel- and, Ont,, as a-preof of the great power of Dr Williams Pink Pills over disease. Mrs. Harman says: For several years I lived a life of pain end illness it seems. awful to contemplate. The trouble began with weakness and loss of appetite. This was followed by headaches and emaciation. At times I had violent palnianes of fhe heart and shortness of breath, finally I was on prostrated. I was so hag- gard that my friends hardly knew me, and I often thought my last hour had come. . My suffer: ues would follow me into the region of dreams with such distinctness that often times I would awaken shivering and shaking with sobs, and scarcely able to realize that I had been but dreaming. . The best efforts of three doctors at different times failed to help me: Then I was urged to try Dr. Williams Pink Pills.. Within one month I felt a distinct improvement and after. usi: eleven boxes I was again in the full BSeB- sion .of. health and strength. . eral years have now elapsed since this ill- ness and as Ihave constantly enjoy- ed the best of health I am warranted in saying that the cire-is permanent. Dr. Williams Pink Pilis should be used in all diseases caused by thin, watery or impure- blood, such as anaemia, rheumatism, stomach trou- ble, the after effects of la grippe and fevers, neuralgia; headaches : and the -various. ailments common to women and an Birls: These. Pills are y all medicine. dealers or sent by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for 2.50 by The Dr. Williams Medi- eine Co., Brockville, Ont. Be Foolish Sometimes, said Uncle. Eben, it s lucky not to be too wise. . De crow dat-don pay no tention to de scare- crow isde one de farmer is bliged to So Bley wit a shotgun. Washing- ton ae eras * Conscience is- something those who need it haven t good. Minard's tiniment relieves Neuralgia: It takes a mighty smart man to know enough to conceal: what he doesn t know. Ea Z A WINDSOR LADY S APPEAL To All Women: with full instructiens, my. home treat- . ment which positively cures Leucor- thoea, Ulceration, Displacements, Falling of the Womb, Painful or Ir- regular. Periods, Uterine and Ovarian Tumors or Growths, also Hot Flushes, Nervousness, Melancholy, Pains in the Head, Back or Bowels, Kidney and Bladder Troubles, where caused by weakness peculiar to our sex. You can continue treatment. at. home at a cost of only about. 12 cents a e- -dical Adviser, also sent free on re- quest. Write to-day. Address, Mrs. M. Summers, Box H. 77, Windsor, Ont Sa Does your typewriter need re- pairs? asked the meandering tinker as he entered the office. It would seem 80, replied the em- ployer. She has just gone across the street to consult a dentist. Minard s Liniment Cures Burns,. Etc. Good advice is the kind you remem- ber too late that you forget to take. Flattery has nearly always some: thing back ofeit. - a Oletimer Is your married life one grand sweet song? : Newlywed Well, since our baby s been born its been more like an opera, full of grand. marches with loud calls for the author every night. Real Optimism. Trouble s. gone a-scootin An the goose is hangin high Aint a-wantin nothin Cept another piece o pie. 2 Buffalo News. Lots of money-making hints are written by men who are unable to make good. aye ) IONEY 2 I will send free, - duke s infatuation for m: + bread too girl entered.a baker s shop, s pledse, said the baker. Les day s, was the reply. Beckles Willson Publishes Great Sel- dier sCorrespondence. Mr. Beckles Willson has the food fortune to tive in the neighborhood of what. was Wolfe s house at Westerham: He has thus the aid of in writ his unt. of Wolfe s: boyhood And later life. He claims also.a great enthusiesm for the hero. Certainly he has accor: plished a valuable addition to.the bio- graphy of Wolfe in publishing for the irst time, many of Wolfe s letters. The Life and Letters of Wolfe. is a ee of more than 500 pages. The narrative which connects the letters is interesting and shows a genuine attachment and. ad- miration.-- But it is to the letters themeelwes that the reader turns to discover, if possibl , the character of a soldier so important to the world whose personality has remained hid- den to some extent and is inno less ae contradictory. early letters the first printed was written when he was 13 do not reveal a remarkable youth. His early love affairs are far being. en thusiastic. But when he writes to his father of war the passion of- his life to led. A - battle seems revea gained is, I believe, the oe joy mankind is capable of r ceiving, to him who commands. The same feel- ing is to be discovered in an eager -tetter of counsel he writes thr e years before his death to a yo e officer. The reader is not at i impressed with his industry. But that he had a strong pu read: pose to be ed some tt achievement shows grea a letter rae to his mother in 1762 from aris. ; . My way of.life that you inquire for is very: singular for a ae x whan that appears to be in the world and in pleasure. Four or five days in the week. I am up an hour before day that is six hours. sooner. than any ine gentleman f Paris), I ride, and a8 I told you a former letter, fenee and dance and have a master to teach me French. These occupa- tions take up all the morning. I ais twice-or three times a week at home, ee Bde Albemarle s, sometimes. wi my i juain ances. After dinner a -the eae or to visit, at -Z come home and am in bed sonar ave any the most what I. By eleven. I. can t say 1 ie-time; nor do I live in the art of dancing, for genius better. This ise letter in which, without doubt the true: Wolfe: is to be- found, The same is true, of the tery. particu- lar. directions he gives for ihe care. arid feeding of dogs. He wag a wise as well as affectionate master te the well-disciplined - Fl: ; But Wolfe appears to Rave lov is mi r with more coi and sibly more enthusiasm. His single touch of humor is in an affecti either go to 2d th num of his letters to Miss Lowther are published and a good deal is said her in the biography. THROW AWAY ALL YOUR FEARS 3ACKACHE, GRAVEL. AND RHEU- MATISM VANISH BEFORE DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. Proved Once Again in the Case of Mrs. Fred Krieger, Who: Suffered From the Worst Forms of Kidney Disease. Palmer Rapids, Ont. (Special.) The thousands of Canadians who live in daily terror of those terrible forms of Kidney Disease known as Back- ache, Gravel and Rheumatism, will be deeply interested in the story of Mrs. Fred Krieger, of this place. Y was for years a great sufferer from Kidne: isease, Gravel, Rheu- matism and Backache, . Mrs. Krieger states. It all started through a cold, but I got so my: head ached, was nervous, my limbs were heavy, I. had dragging sensation across my loins, and I was totally unfit to do anything. Reading about wonderful cures by - Dodd s Kidney Pills-led me to buy some. After using a few I found they were doing me good and this encour- raged me to continue their use. Eight boxes made me well. T have been able to do my own work ever since and today I am com- pletely cured.- Dodd s Kidney Pills gave me health and I feel like a new woman. a If you keep your Kidneys strong and healthy you can never have Backache, Rheumatism or Gravel. .Dodd s Kid- ney Pills never fail to make the: Kid- neys strong and well: Never Done Young Husband You mark me A woman always manages to get what she wants. Old. Husband I wouldn t mind that 80 much, but the worst. of it is, as soon as she gets it she wants some- thing else. Tit-Bits. John Timothy, who at present is building 35 miles of the Vegreville-Cal- gary branch of the C/N.R.; has receiv- 5 rock work. and bridge work contract on the Esquimalt and Nana- imo railway, involving 1,000,000. The average girl thinks she could lie for ss hero in a novel. lt; Unsurpassed for quality and flavor Lead packets only. .At all Grocers. letter consoling her for the state of her teeth, and on his father s death his chief that he meant what he said. at. th wha last, Then I die happy. oe Knew an Actress. : A returning traveler from the Weat tells of .a. little visit he made to one of the. smaller towns of southern Manitoba, It was a with one hotel, and in the office the stranger was waiting for the train that. was to take him to his next stop. -. The proprietor noticed his dapper appear- ance and enquired: aie x are yous eee man? answe: e stranger. , Well, by gum; you look like one was the response. -e To satisfy the obvious curiosity of the landlord. the traveler. confessed that his business was the promulga- tion of a few special lines, crockery and glassware, in the smaller com- munities of Western Canada. Bay, Nor TF can tell theatte people when I see them. I ve been to the By-jew and the Unickky in Winnipeg often. may be said, are well known amuse- ment places in the western metro- Why, there was an actress came along here two or three weeks ago, right away. She was a. nice, bright woman, too, and: a swell dresser. Came down from Winnipeg to see her husband. He was runnin a threshing engine duri the harvest, just to pick up a little extry dough. What -was her line? Ont I ald do alm Oh I gu L ost anythin , re hotel proprie- tor, eee gee her clog dancin was Bluenese Pastors. The announcement. that Rev. Dr. Robertson .of St. John s, Nfid., for- merly of ifax, N.8., has been un- animously invited to become pastor of 8t.. James Square Presbyterian Church of Toronto, recalls the state- ment that the Bluenose region is the home of great preachers. The Bluenose region is the coun- try of great divines. A score of To- ronto pulpits, especially of the Pres- terian faith, will corroborate that. There are at least a dozen preachers and college professors. in ily city to-day who either firat saw th light of day in Nova Scotia or became fam- ous in their profession there, and their fame reached to Toronto and re- sulted in acall. A word to the wise is sufficient. If sessions or church boards are in search of a preacher or teacher, let them send a deputation to the east, where most of the magi seem to come from. Wenderful Power ef Suggestion. Howard Did you ever, ky:ow of your own knowledge any one who was cur. ed by suggestion? Coward Yes; I cured the old doughter by suggesting that he lend me 85. wiien a rise in the price of effect in. London, a little apd. plac- ie coun- On a day ing: twopence-halfpenny on ter, asked for a loaf. Another halfpenny, my. dear, Hes it-rose, then? asked the little merning, said the baker. --- Well, then, give me one of: yester- The way you can make the furnace The Bijou and Unique theatres, it and spotted her for what she was girl, - Dae ee Yes, my dear; bread went up this WINNIPEG BUSINESS COLLEGE. 28th Year. : Individual Instruction. Good Positions Await our Graduates. . for Illustrated talogue. Address, The - Secretary, Winnipeg Business College, Corner Portage Ave. and 8t., Winnipeg, ian SOLID GOLD LOCKET - 5.00 wrt ese Xmas gift could be found than this locke Ie is made in heavy 10k solid - gold and hawspace for two photo- Graphs. : . Delivered post paid to any address in Canada except the Yukou for 5.00. This may be had in either yellow or bright finish. Same locket in 14k - 7.00 Same locket in finest gold filled 1.75 SEND FOR ALOGUE R Our handeomely illustrated 144 page -cata- eee Diamonds, J epos ee a atts Coeds san tei ciaen tee request. RYRIE BROS., Limited 154-138 Yonge Street TORONTO MERIDEN BRITA Co. BOLD BY LEADING DRALERS Silver Plate that Wears ' MADE IN CANADA GILLETT KTARTAR CHEMICALLY PURE Canadian Government tests show we have the purest, and highest strength goods, Gillett s is used by the - best Bakers and Caterers everywhere. Costs no more than the inferior edulterated kinds. . W.GILLETT CO.,LTD. Toronto, Ont. go is by trying to slow it down when it s too hot. i fl
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Image 923 (1909-11-12), from microfilm reel 923, (CU11429558). Courtesy of Early Alberta Newspapers Collection, Libraries and Cultural Resources Digital Collections, University of Calgary.