y» Nmvle ariiAnv. Hansel-tea QOM- are ANYTHING amen TAKlING ranuic "-0- "ll. l!!! D6811 l1! month; guy; since Tanlac overcame my wife's troubles after she bad suffered for ten yearn and tally aha is grill eu- lflylll! perfect health," said Arth» "l" Hllllfll‘. I well known carpenter residing at 25 Dawson an. Dari- mouth. Nova Scotia. ta a statement recently. “Nearly, eleven years ago my wife's health ‘broke down," he w“. tiaued. “and since that tilrne she has gone through her share of suf- fering. Her digestion was so than that nearly everything she ate caused trouble and gave her pains in the cheat and stomach. She complained of a heavy. smothering ln her chest and at times s-he -wns a0 choked up she had to fight to‘ get her breath. Many a night she was in such ‘misery l had to be up for hours trying to help her get rellei so she could get a little rest but often tt was pearl-y daybreak before she got easy. One time last winter she nad an attack of acute indigestion and they sent for me to come from ‘my work at once as they thought she would die. These spells got to coming on her often and whenever they dig she would be in lbed for two or three days at a time. She was badly constipat- ed and subject to severe headache..- Her nerves were in u wretched condition and she was about fit’- teen pound, under weight. Many u time I have seen her so weak sho could hardly walk and ll. iwaa lm possible for her to do any of the house work. “We had ‘been reading about Tanlac and when we sow it recom- mended ‘by several rn our friends We decided to ‘try it. Well, sir, ‘be- foro my wife lLid finished the first bottle l could tell she was improv- ing. lShe looked hotter and was picking up in weight. ln all Filli- took six bottles, gained ifully fli- teen pflullds in weight and was rt» store-d to perfect health. This wit}, six months ago and she has never- been troubled‘ in any way since. She is eating more than s-be has in many years and it all agrees witfii her perfectly. ller nerves are steady and strong. she sleeps like a child at night and does all her house work without any trouble. She is free 'i'rom constipation and headaches and she never complains of an uncomfortable feeling of any kind. Tanlat has certallnly been a blessing to her and she never los- es an opportunity to praise iL" Tanlac is sold in Charlottetown by lledilin Bros, and by the lead- mg Jruggists in every town. THE E'SKlM0'5 DIGESTION. 'I‘lierc is at least one native race of America that is little troubled with ilyspepsia. The Eskimo seems to defy ull laws in this relation and to thrive. He eat-s until he is satisfied, audit takes much to sat- isy liim, if. indeed. he ever is satia- lled. He eats ug long as there is ‘a shred of the feast before him. His capacity is ‘limited only by the sup- Ply. The Eskimo, it further appears, can make no mistake in the mun- ner of cooking his food for the very simple reason that he does not cook it. Nor, so far we the blubber or fat of the Arctic is con- cerned, is he worried about his manner 0t‘ eating it. indeed, he may be said not to cat it at all. He cuts it iuto long strips an inch wide and an inch thick and then lowers the strip down his throat as one might lower s. rope Jnlo a. well. Notwithstanding .all this the Eskimo does not suffer from indigestion. He can make a good meal oft‘ the flesh and skin of the walrus, provision s0 hard and grit- ty that in cutting up the animal the knife imust be continually sharpened. The teeth of a little Eskimo child will, it is‘said by those who know, meet in a bit of walrus skin as the teeth of one of our own children would meet .ln the flesh of an apple. although the hide of the walrus is from half an inch to an inch in thickness and bears considerable resemblance to the hide of an elephant. The child of tllie Arctic ‘will bite it and digest it and never know what dyspepsia means. DON'T WORRY (From the Guelph Herald.) ln these days. when the business of the world is more impact than it ever was before, and when even folinil-y life becomes upset because of the difficulty of making ends meet when the pay envelope has been handed over, men amd women are very apt to do more worrying than smiling. l do a lot myself- the former, l mean. What we all need to try and bear in mind is that there is no use in worrying. No good will come of that, will it? What is really required is a larger view oi‘ life. We are so taken up with our own little at fairs we sometimes forget there is a big world Ibeyond us. and ‘when things go wrong we reach the conclusion that the world is just a. great flat, sunless, heartless sphere. Children worry and some- times their hearts are almost brok en because of what we consider a very trivia-l matter but latter on they learn to smile at what they once thought were great sorrows and anxieties. We need to remem- ber that when we are so prone to worry and cut short our lives by doing so. None of us. I imagine would do so much worrying if we hail the real faith of our Christian- ity. It is a great thinfl sometimes to ‘forget. ourselves and try and remember that our work and our life are Just a part of God's great plan for the betlenment of the world. l‘f weywould do that and then tackle our Jobs bravely doing our best that‘: all that God asks of airy man. hm; to Mrs.‘ Hillier. Ahitgfwnlt About everybody knows Charles M. Schwab a; a. steal king, but few know him as an author. He has written "Succeeding with what you have." a Bospel of common sense filled with a good deal of material, throwing light on his own success w? la iota otlllterary merit in the John Ward‘, the "Buffalo Bill of the British Parliament,” is 8 feet 2 inches. ‘The tallest soft white list ever seen in Westminster is responsible for the nickname. Ha was with Kitchener in Africa, and organized the dockers‘ union. who to turn sent him to Parliament. He raised a battalion of dockers for service in France. General Andran-ix Ozarnian la the military hero of the Armenians. Moat of his life of 50 years lie has spent in fighting the Turks. He is a soldier, patriot and law giver. During the recent war. on the Rus- sian aide. be had a fighting cora- mand of 40 battles. lie has a l-‘reach decoration and will be awarded a. British one. Earl Haig on entering the upper house of ‘the British parliament re- called an incident to Lord Birken- head, the chancellor, whose duty it was to receive him. When the lat- ter, then Sir F. E, Smith, was at the English ‘front in France, a Toin- my arrested him for disregarding a aentry's challenge. lt was found necessary to appeal to General llalg to get his release. Six English women have been ap- pointed magistrates. They are Mrs. David Lloyd George, wife of the llrlma minister: Murchioness of Crews, younger daughter of the Earl of Rosebery; Marchloaeas of Londonderry head of a political salon; hire. Humphrey Ward. an author; Mrs. Sidney Welt. social worker; Miss Elizabeth Haldane, sister of Lord Haldane, and Miss Gertrude Truckwell. When Winston Churchill was out 0f office as a result of the Gallipoli failure he startled‘ tho English pub- lic by becoming a full-fledegd land- scape painter. His creations are only on view to intimate friends. He has also gone into painting of portraiturea and one of Sir John Lavery, the famous artist, was re cently exhibited in a London gal- lery. lt is pronounced prefly good for an amateur. J. R. Binnlng, who was recently appointed by Sir Frederick Lewis Bart, bead of the Furneas Withy (‘o_, Ltd, as the Canadian manager of the company, has been the Mon- treal representative of the line for some years past. Until 1896 he had been connected with the fore- ign freight depaitment of the C. P. R. ‘Mr. Binning was for some years a director of the Canadian Steam- ship Lines, Ltdt, and vice-President of the Northern Navigation Co., is an ext-treasurer of the Montreal Bomd of Trade. and has been iden- tified with the work ot‘ the Shipping Federation of Canada since its in- ceptlon. Every European embassy in the United States. with a chatelaine, has an American woman in that position. Madame Jusserand (Miss Eliza iltichards), wife of the i-‘recnh ambassador, is a native of Boston. Senori di Riano (Miss Alicia Ward) the Spanish ambassadors wife, is of New York; Baroness de Castles de Nlassclitenno (Miss Marie Dow) bride of the Belgian ambassador. was Mrs. Hamilton Wilkes Cary. of Boston. Baroness Avezzano, wife of the new Italian ambassador, Miss Marie Jacqueline Taylor, oi St. Louis. The wife of the cousel of this embassy, Mme. Giuseppe Brambilla, is the daughter of the late George von Lengerke Meyer. of Boston. ----<ooqv---—— ECONOMY T0 THE END. The candidate for the position of locomotive firemen had studied the impression figures showing the aggregate ‘loss to the company each year resulting from careless firing and waste of coal ‘and oil. The first question ‘put to him in the verbal examination was what he would do if he ‘found his freight train confronted by an oncoming passenger train. He hesitated only a moment, then replied: "I'd grab a lump o1 coal in one hand, the oil-can in the other and jump for my life." She Was Sick For 0m Two Years MR8. PORTER GIVES HE-R EX PERliElNCE WITH IJODUS a KIDNEY PILLS Saskatchewan Lady, when the Doc- tors Dlsagreed. Turned to Dodd’: Kidney Pills and Found the Ram- ady She ‘Wan Looking For. Mardh Isl- Kidney Pills they cured Widemew, Sask. (Spcciall-"Dodwa not only helped doe, me." This is the enthusiastic state‘ ment of Mrs. Charles Porter, a well-known iesident of this place. Asked why the was so ‘sure it was Budd's Kidney Pills that brought athout her cure, Mrs. Porter re- plied: ‘ "l was 110k for over two years. One doctor said 1 had gall latches. Another said i hall stomach and lnldney troubles. "l bought sl! boxes of Dodo’: lOidney ‘Pills. They cured me." ‘MP5. Porter's troubles were cana- ed by the kidneys. That’s why she got such prompt and complete re- lief from Budd's Kidney Pills, for they act only on the ‘kidneys. The reason D0dd's Kidney Pills bring new health to so man-y suffering women ls because the kidneys are the cause o: llllYé-‘(EMHS of all the ills which women suffer. lf you ask your neighbors about Budd's Kiidney Pill, you will flad that thousands of women have secured permanent relief from us- iag them. ilmcrnii $110k“ ilt sometimes happen; that sin ong the pictures adorning the -pai'- lor of. a country inn or an old-rash- ioned farm, wedged in between a portrait of Queen Victoria in her coronation robes and a Landseei engraving or a representation of Nelson on the deck of the V-lc- tory, there appears a frame con taining a small square of embroid- ered linen or canvas, and at this sight the cnlletrtor‘: heart leaps up for there, 2n all probability is a sampler. There will be no question of its genuinsness. either, in such a case and ‘it ‘may very likely turn outvthat it was worked by some distant connection of the present inbalbitants of the house, IWhQII she was a little girl. ‘Flowers of various species and hues. the letters of the alphaibet. numerals. and even figures and houses may all appear in such a sampler. accompanied as a rule by a verse or tiwo, or a. set of moral maxims and lust ibut not least by the name of the little needlewomun who, years ago, spent so many hours patiently adding tiny atitcn to tiny stitch till the whole o! the dainty work was done. _ For the guidance of the would-be collector it may be noted that eni- broddered borders lnclosilng the do sign came into fashion about 1H0 and. that some 30 years ‘later they increased considerably in width su-peraeding the narrow, compac- ter ones. lt is hardly probalble that tho collector will meet with any samplers older than the eighteen- th or early-nineteenth centuries in the way described. A ‘fair number of seventeenth century samplers exist and they are to be bought" but they are for the most part al- ready in collections. ‘Phase earlier samplers are much longer and nar- rower than the later specimens and they are generally rather different in design. Allusions to samplers are plenti enteenth. eighteenth. and early nineteenth centuries. The poet laureate John Skelton makes one of the earliest in his lines: With that the tappettls and rar- pettlis were ‘toyed, Whereon thPii-i lady/s softly iuyght rest. The suumpler to sow on the lucla to enhraid. A little later Shakespeare makes Helena toll how she and Hernilu Have with our needle-s, created both one flower, Both on one sampler. sitting on one. cushion. ' Possibly one of the most signific- ant oi these allusions is Dr. John- son's remark in the idler that “oui girls forsake their samplers iu teach kingdoms wisdom," n sign perhaps that times were changing. There is a fine sequence of sain- piers in the Victoria and Albert Museum ranging afronl lche first half of the seventeenth century until well into the nineteenth. One cxamiple ot‘ a seventeenth century sampler. very long and narrow iii width, asihe earlier samplers an were, is dated 1641i and is embroi- dered partly in silks and ‘partly iu linen thread, while a portion of it is ornamented with cut work, drawn "work and needle point stit- ches. Another ainailler. one, its co.- ored silks a little Iladed, is iascrib ed "Martha Salter 1651" as well dr- with the words “The feare of God is an excnilent gift.‘ Yet another very beautiful sampler -in the same collection consists of a long and im- posing strip‘ of embroidery display- ing inuny varieties of stitches and adorned with roses, panslea. honey‘ suckle, and grapes, the letters oi the alphalbet and much elaborate cut work; it was worked by one Elizabeth Macket-t in the year i696. in the early years of the eight- ceath century samplers became shorter and aquarer. Maps some- times made their appearance upon them. beaxing testimony Ito ,tho worker's knowledge of geography. thus in the year 17,80 Ann Rhodes worked u map of England and Wales in her sampler and added thereto several shlps and u rowing boat. The early nineteenth century l.~ responsible for a very elaborate ni- fa-ir which figures -in the some cul» iection. worked -by an industrious ‘young person called Harriet Tay- lor. lt states that: Not Land but Leaning Makes a ‘Man complete Not Birth ‘but Breeding Malkes him truly Great Not wealth but [Wisdom Does adorn his iState Virtue not llonor Makes him Fortunate l Learning. Breeding. Wisdom Get those three [lien Wealth and Honor Will attend to thee. fin the loner part of this sampler appears a square house labeled “Queen's Palace)“ four cliplleil trees stand within the neat paling of the little garden, on two of which huge squirrels are dlsportlnfi themselves. On each of the two chimneys sits a very portly pigeon who would have considerable dif- ilculty iii getting through the front ful ln English literature of the sev- ‘ “W; . \ ,. PAR PLATE s lleie is the Plan l you. Then turn in three one year subscriptions and you will receive the 6 teaspoons- Many people start out with their own subs~criptions~ The subscriptions must be new and not renewals. 3 one year subscriptions get 6 teaspoons. 5 one year subscriptions get 1 doz. teaspoons. 6 new subscribers, 1 doz. desert spoons. 8 new subscribers, 1 doz- medium tablespoons. " 12 new subscribers, 1 doz. Medium knives or half dozen forks and half dozen knives. A 20 new subcribers, 1 set Bridal Wreath knives, forks, spoons, 26 pieces in al $18-75 The Butter Knife, Sugar Shell and Mahogany-finished Chest free with the Guar- dianfs compliments to complete your chest- REMEMBER-There are onlya limited number of chests so if you desire one you had better send in the reservation slip at once. SEE THE SILVERWAPlE ON DISPLAY IN THE (lUA RDLUVS \ViNl)()\V. Get Subscriptions for ONEIDA COMMUNITY Will Be Given Free t0 You For a Few‘ Hours 0i Your Fill out and sendsinythe ‘Silverware reservation Coupon and we will hold a chest; for“ Reservation Silver 0iiei 4tns> _-_ Kindly‘ reserve chest of the On- eida Community Par Plate Silver- ware ror me until I can get the re- quired number of subscriptions to procure it. I will begin work on ....andthink that the desired number of orders canbesecuredby I will get the number of subscrip- tions and take the chest of silver- ware. Signed Address Ph0ne_........ 4 900-00404 O O 9Q O 904 GFV§O O Q4 649 VVQO-QfiQQQ-O-OQ-O-O 'l'lieCliarlotietown Guardian 90% v w __,_,_.. THE PROM-EM OF THE FLlRT which hor plalner and more aus- tere sisters availed themselves. The flirt in fiction is not ii new character by any means, but iii the current ‘number of Cosmopo- lltuu Magazine, Dunn Gatlin hue written linterestingly of the type of girl who holds her affections so lightly that she delays" accept- ing u proposal until it is too late. Miss Gutluu has" called lit-r story door of the "Palace" if it wished to do uu. One hopes that. Harriet Taylor thorouglhly enjoyed working her sampler and found great amuse- ment tnerein, for it must have tali- en her a-very long time and slit was only seven years odd. What industrious llttlepersons all these 'ii“Ol'kP'l‘S if samplers ‘must have been but at any rate their work has reu- civeu its full meed of admiration. "Love e’re love flutters fur away" was written many years ago by Francois V-ilioit, ln one of his incomparable poems. Per- haps he didn't hove the flirt in mind, but certainly the girl who flirts must onc day live to regret that she didn't take advantage of the matrimonial opportunities oi sot." "The Slay-fly” tho enrinen-t French tells us “is born in the heat of a. summer afternoon, and dies at aun- Thia story its well worth read- ing and thinking about most of the stories which Cosmo- politan publishes. Among the writers in this‘ issue are, other world-famous which as Fabre, B. Kym, qmwemem- Mo" Illllllrllllflt. Rupert Hughes, Dana Gal Arthur Somers Roche, Ha (Tlllsslua, Jack Boyle, Robert Chambers, Harris Dickson, he ditli Nicholson, and IMary Carol as are Davies, *—-<-oo—-—-- SW18 illeople wouldiilt object U"? deadly cigarette were a lli Peter more so. BRINGING UP. FATHER * l $-$$‘3“l§?,-3§‘ I ?Sv\i,t::.-" " v‘ g st 8 {Wane wJREN you QIT THROUGH ' \ ' VM 40mm sea n= one 6* autos-Jam», . wlLL 4N6 uD THE MY wiFE l‘: ORWIN ME. CRAZY wvm HE ‘ piano OH‘ i5 THAT Yul-L tsetse l Pam 5QME. THINQ. HEAR WHEN I ‘m, webs Yong r n‘ u a i" t KNOW -Bu"r\ KlN TnROw THI. vlOum om‘ ‘Vi-l: WINDOW‘.