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51.10H1‘11 HALLAM Limited
202 HaIIm Bullollne, Toronto.
- „
WITH RUSSIAN PEASANT.'
•
Lm Relrgage‘10 Untire Village, Net
. Individual%
LAnd° be)ong:s not to individual Itga-
oant3 in Russia, but 'to the Pla
a whole. It can be redivided every
twelve yeaxs. at the wish of 4 Ilatte
jority o two-thirds.. '
Th IS and all ether legal n.110441964
'Snell as the iacidence taXatien, are
, settled by. Village meetings, consisting
el the heads of bongos, where age na,
turally haw a predeMinanCe;
A decision, 'which carries a major-
ity ef Iwo..thirds is, by laW g 010
Enanire, a legal usentenee" ", a the
village!
Tile villageelects its own village
elder,who is reePonsible for the call-
ing of meetings; and at eettainr-lea-
sons,. e.g., that, of;hay-rhaking, these
meetings take place as often as, once
a week, ••
IllanYy,villages are united in a can -
ten, whigh is ruled by a cantonal
elder, Sihillarly elected by the chosen
representatives of all the villages Of
the canton.
The cantonal 'Clerk is. nominated
by the Government, but the enntonal
judges, all of whom are peasants, are
elected by the Cantonal assembly.
Describing Lightning Operations Un-
der Fire,
-If, there were still degrees a chiv,
the highest award elieuld be ac.
corded- the nembers of the Medical
prefession,. who forsook lucrative
practices in I.,ondim, Melbourne, Tee
rent° sand Mentreal In a great rellY
Of self -Sacrifice, writes 146rd North,
eliffe „Pr the London Tine, • Figures.
on the eaSunitles among them. bring
them home to those who have•only the
besPital Wee of a war 'leder the
• sad'facts, that shanld lead to g due un-
• derstanding of this • not sufficiently
knownbody of .Knights Templar en-
gaged. in a great. crusade. '
• 'n In the last three menths the Royal
,-Army Medieal Corps. alone had fifty-
three officers killed and 208 wounded;
••the non-commissioned officers, 260
men killed and 1,212 wounded.
• I shall first describe a regimental
eid post. A doctor has to -day as his
only shelter • one Of his own trenches
•and any little part that may remain
of a captured German trench. There
is no other. covering. Fine young
men with English, Scotch, Irish, Can-
- • adian or Australian accent stand un-
• armed in these pests and work with
intensity and celerity. Their .speed
eclipses • even that of the surgeons of
London's operating theatres. Stretch-
er bearers' stagger in with their 'load.
There is a lightning diagnosis, anti-
• septic application, .bandaging, a hast-
• ily written label tied on the man's
breast Eind the wounded is borne off
to the next stage, the advanced dress-
ing station. The ,advanced dressing
station is in a dug -out, walking
wounded collecting in a station of
• tents.
In One tent I sear a wounded officer
famousthe world ever as a big -game'
•• hunter and scarred. as the result of .a
miraeulous escape from an African
. elephant; who though covered
btood had. only one anxiety; to ' have
.his wound dressed, get' a bath and re-
turn to his Men in time fnr-.the next
• "stunt," to use an abominable- Ameri-
• canism- which hat) grown . weedlike
• into,our War language. -, •
• • -• The. next Station isthe field oper-
• ating theatre, then the casualty clear-
ing 'station, where the weunded first
• Meet women nurses• nexethe hospital
trains and the !nit base hospitali.
•
Our hcispitals in France are a World
• of their. own. I do . net know how
•many iromen and men they eninfoy• ,
but 1. should say nore than "• bne
'hundred theusancl. In the Naples
• district alone are 35,000 beds. •
•,The men in the dugent4 talk on a
good many SubjeCte -bui.,11Se One • on
which they :are all agreed—that • is
the land question. They are not going
" back as laborers' tenants, but -as own-
ers. , Many of them have used their
eyes .and learned nnich about small
farming in Frairee. I wonder if the
people and politiciaria at home are
beginning,. to understand that the
-,'Iatavery. and camaraderie bf. offiters
•and men. in • the • field have broken
•11' down all dabs • feeling; that •tier,
millions of men abro d are changed
eemrannities of whos thoUghts and
•
IP aims we knew little.
Just -as Grant's soldiers fn •. the
Grand Army ' of the Republic. domi,
nated the elections in the United
• States for a quarter of a century, so
• will the men in the trenches and am-
bulances come home to demand with
- their votes is a reward a very chang-
• ed England.' The England they will
fashion is, as likely. to be a surprise
, to present owners of capital and lead-
• ers of labor as it may be to owners of
- land.. .
THE ONLY WAY TO
•CURE RHEUMATISM
Must Be ,Treited Through the
Blood and the POiSonous
Acid -Driven Out •
The twinges and • tortures of rheu-
matism are not due to cold, damp val officer' once while being conducted
weather as so many people suppose. over a Japanese arsenal asked point
Rheumatism comes from poisoneua blank to see some of it, and the Jap -
acid in the "blood. This ie a mediCal anese, polite .as always, produced a
truth that every•rheumatie sufferer sample for his inspection; the Ger-
should realize. There is only one way man, when nobody appeared to be
to cure rheumatism—it must be treat-
ed through the blood. All the lini-
gients and rubbing and so:ealled ,elecL
tric treattnent in the world Will not
cure rheumatisin, and the sufferer
who tries them is not only -wasting
money, but is allowingAhe "trouble to
become mere firmly rooted in the sys-
tem and harder to dire when.the pro-
per remedy is tried. Dr; Willinms Pink
• •Pills heve had remarkable success in
curing rheumatism because they go
right to the root of the trouble inthe
blood, driving out the poisonous- acid,
• releasing the stiffened joints, clearing
away the torturing pains, and giving
•the victim renewed health and ease.
Mr, Vincent 13row,. Havre Boucher, N.
• p„ says: "For two years I was an. al-
-most censtant -Offerer from rheuma-
tism, the trOtible tieing so., bad :at
tunes that I could scarcely get about.
The trouble.seemed to .bring with it-
-anaemia, and altogether I Was in a
very bad condition.. I 'uSed doctor's
medicine for alinost a year .without
relief. Then on the.advfee of a friend
• I decided to try Dr. -Williams Pink
Pills. I think I teok altegetherabout
r..a. dozen boxes, with the result that I
am again enjoying -perfect health,"
You can get these pills through any
• medicine dealer. or by mail; post 'paid,
at 50 cents •a- box kr 'six. • boxes for
$2.50 from The Dr. William's Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.' , '
• LORD KITCHENER ON WAR.
hick Picicoup
Luncheon try that most
delicious, nourishing, ,whole
wheat food, Triseuit, the
• shredded wheat wafer -toad..
It contains all the 'body:
building material in the
whole wh.eat grain, including
tb.e bran coat which pro.
motes healthful and naturat
bowel Movement. It is real
whole wheat bread without
yeast,. baking powder or
chernicalp of any kind—all
° ideal -food for children be,
'case it compels thorongli
• mastication and ensures per-
fect digestion, A crisp, tasty
"snack" for picnics or excur-
sions, toast •in the oven
and serve with butter, soft
• &mese or rnannalades. ,
Made in Canada
.IAP OFFICER l''ir,i0LED HUN.
..,----
German Officer 'Tried to Fid Out
. 7 • • Secret of' Explosive. •
, As is well known; the new eXplo-
rnatist, the War has effected one so,
Sive •Ohich the Ruasians are using tam a • large hving roonr, from which
with, such deadl•y eff,ect. in their new a winding stair -case leads to the up- cial change of No small importance
offensive is, being suppliedby our Jan- per floer; a kitc• hen, a pa•n" try, and = a when it is coraidered •how -large in
England is•the number of "lonely wo-
•
anese allies. It is an improved kind bedroom, on the ground floor. Above,
•
there are other two bedrooms, a bath- men." Mr. Ervine regards' this • class
of shirnose powder, which was used
bY them 'in the Russo-Jap•anese war. roonr, and a sewing -room, all Of fair as constituted ehiefly a spinsters vrith
For years the Germans tried to find size. One of, the hardships in 'winter private income and widows without
out the secret of the compos •
ition of has been eliminated by the provision family Vtho "spent their days in pre-
•
this terrible explosive. A. German na,• of a roofed -over coal. and Wood bin ' war times in drifting from boarding
outside the house, but against the houses in Bath to boarding houses in
.--7-',
kitchen, with a sliding •door arranged . Bayswater carrying their dullness The fall is the most Severe season
In the wall so that the household sup- I with them' wherever they went." •
"The war altered all that. If there of the year for colds—one day 'warm
Ply can be replenished without the us- . the next is wet and and unless
ual cold out-of-door journey. , t is a lonely woman lef.t •in England it
the mother is 011 her guayd the little
The w 11 , t the ? f is her own fault; if.there is A Woman
ones are seized with colds that may
' in these islands who is without occu-
looking, snatched. a small quantitiand timber -6 and 7 inch logs "sided" , hang on all winter. Baby's Own Tab-'
hid. it in his cigarette case. A special down to 5 inches at the saw mill at nation, without friends, without de -
lets are mothers best 'friend in pre-
Anite aim and high purpose, thatf wo-
messenger was on his way to Europe Foleyet; made snug and comfortable venting or bangliffig colds. They act
With the treasured sample, addressed by caulking with oakum: The cornice , man has no one but herself to blame.
as a gentle laxative, keeping the bow
to the Wilhelmstrasse, within twenty- is carried entirely,around to pr 'd
ovi eWherever one goes one sees women
els and Stomach free and sweet An
formerly idle • now busy over work
four hours. ' The German officer, a
. "bell -cast" end.' Windows there , e are occasional dose will prevent' colds dr
highly delighted with Filmset , expec. - in plenty, and on the upper floor at
.. th t t I t , if it does come on suddenly „ the
• • • I th b •
ed all sorts of honors, so his feelings ten -foot wide dormer ... window fur- ' spires them. •In cities- and toVms and
prompt use of thtl. Tablets will quickly I
can be • imagined , when ' some Weeks 4 nishes natural lighting for the sew"- ' villages one sees them making band -
cure it The Tablets are Sold by medi- l"
•
later, he received a despatch inquir- ; in room, while on the opposite side ages ar surgica ressmgs, pec mg
eine dealers or by mail it• 25 cents a i
ing in the best offieial, German man- '
i a window eight feet wide, provides for parcels and Myriad other 'employ -
box from The Dr. Williams Medicine 1
ner what the blazes he Meant by try- , the bathroom • and tai Th Talents.. These occupations have turn -
Co., Brockville •Ont.
.a stair -way.. e I • ,
Ing to pill The leg el the Wilhelm- ' white 's•anded "reefing is firenroof, and I • ed the lonely, useless woman into a
strasse authorities, as the ' semple of the solid construction of the houses woman who has made mil friends •.
and is performing valuabl work." A True Entail's Answer.
HOMES Eon' EWIPIAYPES.
wet
.,•••••- ..•••
tko C.N.R. Xs Building 1,10-tsMato
. Monies in New OntArio.
The Canadian Nortliern Itaihvay
rifling to completion oPe hundred
houses distributed over a number of
divisional points on the Montreal -
Port .ArtInir SectiOa a Its transcon-
tinental- 1111101 These hornes--rcedern,
comfortable and •ef pleasing design,
are intended to provido patisfaetory
acanImetlation for the eniployees
the road and their families, -who will.
be living at those centres, The condi-
tions a occupancy have been Made se.'
.$asy tbarit will be a comparatively,
simple matter for the C.N.R. em-
ployees to virtually own outright the
towns, lirent, Capreol, Foleyet, Horne,
'Payne. and ,Iellicee, where the coin-
peny house-bnilding eperations are
nOW-An progress; •
It is conft. dently expected by Mr.
Cyril Young of the Eastern.Lands
Pent. of the Canadian Northern, who
is in charge of the werk, that the.
employees Will' be a:hle to • celebrate
Christmas, 1016, in their cosy • new
homes. This Work, be says, will pro-
vide at each point the nucleus of a
busy progressive town. With the ex-
ception of electric lightiag, which • may FEWER LONELY WOMEN. •*
be a later development, the houses in
New Ontarie will beequipped quite as
completely. as are the. homes
sizein long established 'towns and
villages .in Old Ontario, They. eon-
Former "Useleas" Pgrsons Now Beare-
• filing by Work in England.
Accoccling to St, Jahn Ervine, a dra:.
Said That Strife Preserved Meg From
Degeneracy. 1 •
In his boelt, "Memories of a Pub-
lisher," Mr. G. H. Putnam shows,
Lord' Kitchener's views -en *ay, Mr:
Putnam and Lord .Kitehener' were fel-
low passengers on the Oceanic in the
spring of 1910, and the publisher was
so fortunate as to be placed opposite
the general at table..•• •
One evening he, drew Kitchener into
conversation bi which )he genval told
of the essential impoirtaricd•and value
of war ter the development and main-
tenance of character ..and 'manliness
in 'the individual and in theeommun,
ity. Ile couldeoficeiVe of no power or
factor oat could replage war is an
infiuenee to preserve man from degen-
eracy. He did not lose sight of the mis:
eries and the suffering resulting from
war, but he believed that t'he loss to
mankind, would be far greater from
the "rottenness" of .a long peace. He
• pointed out that the -princes and no=
• bility of India, who consider war as
the oniy possible oceupatien "(except
hunting) for gentlemen, fend their
chief grievance against British .rule
in the fact that. it prevented fighting
throughout the peninsula. Kitchener •
agreed with :the Indian princes'
that
their class was' decaying Older •the
enforcedidleness of the pax Btitan-
nice, and he s3rinpathized keenly with
their grievance. • -
suggested to the genera)," says
Mr. Putnam, "that during the periods
In which Europe had accepted most
thoroughly the domination of ,the
soldier class: and the influence of the
military ideal; cis, for instance; during
the Thirty Years' War; there had been
no• satisfactory growth in nobility of
character among the fighting peoples:
He admitted that point, ,but coritrd-
ed that war could be carried on by
methods and With -standards that
Ali 00 ,p. e erveit-as-an-histrinnentiof-
civilization, .1 asked whether it would
be a geed thing for India if the Brit-
ish force, once every ten Years or so,
should establish 'a ring fence' Within
-Which thelnineas-uright;-ftn--t1
pose ef keening themselves in condi-
tion, car' on a little fighting,. with
their ownfollowers, a kind of g
twentieth-ebnthry tournament,
ti 'could liar* tnite 'the responsi-
bility, major,' he replied, 'of formally
recent -mending such a plan, hitt. Lent
• convineed that it would have many'
advantages!'"•
, •
' Kim Alment'CertAkin. Peath In ',Offort
• 0 • im".,it.iin •Conarades,
• v
•'The terrible pacilnace aectuz0t4Titod
.along the VeIgo,Thitch frontier. by Ilia
German authorities': under •the• phitpe
of dtadly .electrio current mid -of rifle•.
'Cliets, haver not suceeeded.in restrata.
bsg the . Belgians' ardent patriotism.
I
There
are Man1".lret wilo. 40. not a•ed•
- UtfA to, face. 4111400t .cert414-4041.1.1.• •te
try and loin the' army or Ow Yeer. - •
: Three, brothers who had come from
-
Spa, reached the frontier nedr Vrove.
hewn ;•940 Of them touched the
electrocuting wire awl WAS 111111104fatp.
17 Wiled,' by the. hock;s' the two
others, bidslen 'in d, cornfield, were
discave.red And made prisenersby the
. _At Rysden, two patriots, frera Lote.ge,
Made en Wet1/111t to eacape Nui thu.
vast- pillion which ' Belgium is PAM
converted into.. One 'et theettk
ceeiled, .hut the' ' in ether,: untertunately,.
waselectreented• at •th.e• crossing.
4'§0,000 GET 171.ON CROSSgSA'
Germany Has Used 7ya Tons of Metal
and 87 Miles ef Ribbon, .
The German neyraPapers state that
up to the present 430,000 Iron Cresses
have teen conferred, of which 429,000
are a the second clash, each weighing,
lg• grains (about. 6mo-thirds of an
Ounes).
Half of the Metal is east irdp. Ina
halt.. silver, 'so that , altogether 150
lau.nciredweight ot racital. 'and 140,000
meters (eighty-seven miles) of ribbon
have been used in these awards.
GUARD THE CHILDREN
FROM AUTUMN COLDS
"Made in Canada"
MINION
1400 for quality, st le and
• value. Guaranteed tor aD,
Mat4.P.
AskYour
ft:coaler
"shimose" he had °sent by • _special. appealed to the Canadian Northern
messenger was composed of harmless executive officers as an added pretec-
The Prussian King Frederick Wil -
materials colored by...a little -mustard.'ition against this danger in the north. VANCOUVER A dB AT PORT. Giant Guards. before the foreign Am-
liaM was very fond of parading his
Deaver board' supplies. the. interior . . .
finsh, end ship lap. may he added' out- City . Will Spend. $5;0130;0 0 and ' the
' ' bassadors at the Priasian Court. •-gii
Coffee and Gout • ,
I Side. C.P.R. $1,500 000 on New Wharves. Ambassadors .if they thought an equal
1. . one occasion he aaked the 'Various
Will the deelme of coffee drinking i As a general rule the plan has been ••• • •
fca. number of the soldiers of their • Own
in Turkey, due to prohibitive pr/Ce#, ! followed of placing each house at the The Canadian Pacific has plans
. , .
lead to a eorresponditig increase . of.'..side of a good, sized lot, to facilitate Whart,es at Vancouver which -will eolintry could overcome these giants
. , ,
.gOut.among.the Turks? The 'French the planting of the remainder to gar -1 vest; -311,500,000. These plans 'will All the Ambassadors except Great
._
attribute Abell: general freed* - from , den truck fer table needs. But the dove -tail into those which the city Britain's tepreSentatiye replied at
Wen. and east a ,.
•gouty disorders to their !eve Of •cOf- i trainmen and their. fernlike, Wild 'contemplates ; to ' Carry out •• at ' the The King', tarn -
once hi the negative '
fee, and in Turkey,/it is said, dieeases ilmove toing to the Englishman, asked for his
' the new towns to take up Part - The letter is 'groWing in value .
Of the lcmd have hitherto been prac- 1 residerice, ete expected , to constitute and bigness, all the • time., There is
tically unknown. 'Prof, Johnson . in a fairly- good r,Aarket. and it. is under- great complaint from.. shippers of.
The Chemistry of Colnmen Life, stood that'. the Ontario Goveennient is 'congestion, for. VanceuYer is becOni-
recorde the \ case of a Min who. had surveying, and Will later -thi•ow open • ing a great poli. The oitY is going
suffered . from chalky gout for a.cittat- 'tO settlement a township contiguous totspend.$5,90moo On :Wharf exten;
ter of a century being mired event-. to the town of Foleyet and anot4r to . sion in "the iminediate future, an
the
uallY by a free use of coffee. Sortie' Horne Payne, in the great Clay belt. railvvay -company, -on its own ateount
doctors,, it must he 'added, .take an The Canadian Northern officers are has plans' fop- a further-, eittension , of
opposite view, and forbid-. coffee to confident that the building of these the wharves which it will use for its *emulated Eyelidi.
gouty patients.—London Chronicle. 7 homes will mark the beginning of a • own business . ' Both ' -
• . 0 Eyes inflamed by expo-
neW era infirm! NeW North. First the .Canadian'Pacific Railway hat'now sure to Sun; Dust and Wind
GRAINS OF: Gpma.'
ThiS s;let the- time to'CoWS Saert'
ficee„ but to act As Citizensof a ,frea
country.Premier 1:Inghes. •
Duty and self-saeritiee are the es". ,
Sence -of the British effortAll ; We.
rest is mere detail.—Lord. Dewar. '
The moment appreaches When".
izn-
deour. Ahnon iinpetue the Ocrmin • -
military "powerwill completely giye
way.--,-Gencral Jofire,„ , „ •
Sone men..think•they, belong to'thet
cream of .society. the More need'
then that ,they, should. be stirr84 Up
and W11 shaken -1L W. Oellingwood•':.
Tribunals are appointed to hold the
settles of -justice evenly between Ito
rights cif ' Men as. 'citizen*. and etlie1. • -
nheds of the ceuntrY,--,Mr...P. W, At..
. • -
The -aristocrat andthe workmen; ,
met in this war .cm pe broad grounds '
of neutral equality, and each has hen •
astonished to find that the other .pos-
sessed geed qtialities of which • he
-never. previously drearrit—Mr.-.Rob-
ert Harvey;
minarcra Ziatment Crams Plin5ra4,.
,
•
'Greatest Rattles •Only Shnrt.
. Most of the • -.great battles which
were. ought long ago ;were over in 0..
day, remarks the Indianapolla
The famous •engagements-Materloo,
sit hours; Sedan, twelve a'nd It • half.
hours; Gravelotte, nine' trours'; Mars
la Tatir, ten hours' Koniggratz, eight
'honri;Alma; threa:•and .a half hours;
Leipsie, .three ,* days; GettYebtitg,,.-
three days.
••,
reply, which was characteristic: I
• don'it. know for certain, • your .• Maj-
esty," he said, "whether an equal
number of British seldiers could over'
come your trussian Guards, but I am
-geite sur even half of the number
would' try " •
•
•
Arqk ,,,„'e*
there should follow -the Stores tO eater Tor its shipping interests, facilities m'ckly relieved by/Aided
to the needs of the town dwellers; and , which render it absolutely andepend R17Vai EyeRemedy. NeStnarting.
just Eye Cinnfi*. .At
then settlers to take up the adjaeent , ent-this independence making for Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Burke Eye •
land, because of the inducement of e better _arid more. efficierit „service ' in $alveinTubes25c.,FoilloolkeltheEyelfreeask
good market; and the advantages: of the ocean carrying -business, Width Druggists orldtirkkayeRemedyCo.,,Chleallf
adequate ,shipping facihtaes lthe company has •notably • extended
!during the Past few years. Thelleet
lef the company -110W numbers, all told;
;over 190, yeaselet but it has especially"
strengthened its Atlantic and Trans -
Where CowsWear Suits ef Hemp1Pacific service in latter years•-•--recog-
.
I nizing, as it ditl,.the possibilities of
Guard
Your Baby's
Health
Enough is Sufficient.;
•Old Pa Stuctdlegeld—That
er, *ants me to pay his :debts' again.
014- Ma iStubbleileld-,That boy's
young and you got to make allowances.
014 Pa.-4,made Win a.good month-
• ly aliewartee to start with an' I've
raised it twice, •Now I'm through
makins alli>wances;
Sil3ar4001 Without Ilkelier;ei atenralstle,
• tt•
• Cheerful, Chitbby Children
• Maim the Homu'Happy
Weak, puny babies are a constant
care to tared molhers and are subject 7
to many diseasb,. that do .hot• affect
healthy children. ••
Keep your children in good health.
Ste that their bbivels.move regularly
-especially during theteething period.
This is a distressing tine in the life
of every. child and the"utmost pre-
cantion shotild. be taken .to' keep them .
well and strong. • . •. . - • •'
• By the.,consisteetese of •
• Mrs. Winslow's
Soothing Syrup
it is possible to avoid many childish
ills now so .pre;alent.
It is a correcnvelifor diiiTltc
and other infantile Rilments. It soothes
-
the fretting baby and permits the
'child tosleep well and grow healtlfe.
It brings comfort and'relief to limit
child and me her • -
.1m
-DRESSED 'BEEF.
• • Cloth in Winter.
• . • * !increased exchange between thiw en -
We learn from the Sap .PranciscO., tinent and Europe and Asia, an intim
Chronicle that Sir Francis Webster is •licy and largeness of continunication
a Wealthy alatiefacturer of hemp,, which, somewhat hurt by the war, are
!goods M Scotland, an,d the owner -V. _resuming their, urgency and ' import-,
a stock range -in - Texas; , -On. --which' epee from day to tMy, 7
:tthousands of cattle renge,clad, tint -1
ing the winter et least, in garments ' •
„ Gorizia Not:1:1.611am
1 other than their own hide and hair. i
1 Sir Francis's cows- wear sulfa of Gorizia, oorz, or Goriei has nevei•'
- • • Poor Judgment.
. •
"Visitori--"What has became tti your
living skeleton?"
Showman—"Oh,he is dead," poor -
chap. Drank hinrielf to :
Visitor -Dear me, how sad."
ShOvirinan-"Ye,, he married the
two -headed 'women, and, what With
two mouths nagging at him and two
hats to 'buy, it broke him all up."
'purely Herbal—No poison-
•• Aans coloring matter.
Antiseptic—St op s blood -
poisoning, festering, etc.
Soothing -Ends quicklythe
ain and smarting.
Hee s sores.
•
50c. 111- AllDruggists and Stores
HELP WANTED.
ABINET' MAKERS AND MACBINB.
.ha:nds • • wanted. Steady " work at . •
highest wages. Apply to The Bell •
Furniture _co,. Southampton. Ont.' • - •
"
Byrn po*.amonn
END POTATOBS. IRISH . COBs
biers. Deleitare. Carman. Order
at once. Supply limited: Write for QUO!
talons. H NV. Dawson. Brampton.
NEWSPAPERS Tom giazin
1)ROPIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB ,
• Offices for salts in good Ontailo "
towns. The most useful and interesting
Of all basinesses. S'ullinformation, on
application to Wileon Publishing Com-
pany, 73 West'Adelaide Street. Toronto:
332BCEIDDANZOITS.
elANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC.; •
•• interbal and otternat cured With-
out pain by our ho.me treatment. Write.
us before too late. Dr. Bellnian Medical
Co.. 'Limited. Collingwood, Ont. '
''ingmmollggrogrogrgob
• -We'helieVe M/NARD'S-LINItIENT.
is the best i ".. • •. •
1, hemp, doth, made ni his own faCterY, formed part of "Italia," whether "Ir -.1 MilthiiiS Foley, Oil City, ant, • •.
ito Protect them from the cold and redenta" or otherwise,.aincethe days Joseph Snevi,,Nerway; Mi
. -
snow, make them less isusceptible to of • Imperial Rome. Except , for . a , Charles *-Vv‘ hooten," .Mulgraye, N S-
tuberculosie, and increase 'their daily 'brief interval 'during the: Napoleonic iZev R 0.-...Arinktrong,. _Sulgrave,
-
1 yield of :Milk. . - • • period,- it has. .a was belonged :to Ni. S•.•
•
• -
1. Each cow has two suite a. week. ,1Soine Germanic ,p,olver. Oddly enough Pierre Lenders;' Sep., •pokeinonche,
They a•re: notelaborate' affairS,'.,•by• the dominant • ranguage • is neither 'N. P, -
any means—sitnply Cover -all. blankets'. German no: Italian, .-but. Slavoide:.
,• that fit loosely ::' Theresare a thoesand This•towgof three language's has an •
!
cows in his dairy fe,rm, and they use interesting :connectiOn with our
two thousand hemp,. blanketsa week.*.Prench allie,s. Here in 1810 died. the
1 That .s.f.-conrse Means - :added eic- exiled Bourbon Charles 1., the last
! pensei-Stits the yield of milk during • King of Prance. , • ."
•
1 the cold weather is * about twenty- • ._,.--........41,,,._-__:_.._ . st .
seven per centlarger than from tows Kinard,. Liniment , Curbs Earns,' Eta
not thus nrOteeted. -, ' •
• GETTING 'ROUND DOBIIIN. -
•••••••"••• .
•
1
*RELIEVE. HEADACHES. Ho'wr.a'' II' 7-1
saebitMaof fillaelk(14.e:', 14:1'h.°
. •
WITHOUT DOSINGtwho.
A 'Writer- in • Our : Dumb.. Apirneits
. apparently, 'snakes .ii, business of
. ' . • . .buyingand selling !milky, hprees',. ,e.x.,
. .
plains, how a' herse. can be Cured, Of
By Applying Sloan'.6 Liniment to . this'troublescenehabit without resent--
. , foreiread You Can Stop bit to cruel or ' libueive..17 measures:,
•the Severe Paiwi: , •Whipping onlyincreases the animal's
: -
Mrs VVinslow's
So(t)thing Syrup
Makes Cheerful,
Chubby, .Children
• Is absolutely itOrPriarcotle.. It conl
tains no opium, morphine nor Rey of
their derivatives'. It hiseothing, pleas-
ant, and harmless. For generation.
• mothers in all parts of the wbrld have
used,,,it and miliitins of ietbie4 have
been benefited by it.
*Buy a bottle today and •
•-hove it bendy •
ltelle've and 14;etea
Sedd 4j. till druggith in •Canalla.and
thmitighout the =wield
. •
HINDENBURG'S WAR MOTTO:
Germans Think h An Improvement
. . • ,
• • on the French.:
• To •a -university '0.professor who
greeted, him with the Latin title ap-
'plied to -Arminius l?y
att�r haud dubie Germaniae,
burghas returned a Latin' • greeting
trtinslated into -English, reads:
•.....13rainvioi the Wfir,_ •
•
. Heart for the King. ; .• •
Bleed for the Fatherland;
t' c erman, ornment 1. on
T;11licriloitil)d6 • ;
, stubboinness; but there is a method this is that it is a proof of }linden-
hurgl-s-stiperier morality, fer"Otp
marshal, it says, deliberately prefers
• the above tO 'the corresponding
trench Motto,:the last two lines Of
Which are:
' Many that goeslo-the root tifIlioalsle-.-'A-4
Ih.ehaedaseyhineostotes trot; asuiciehutiaielagdic.
here never changes has course of ac-
• aches are intense and lingering pains tion without moving his eaes. Some
In the brow. temples',ot-:"beek Ore one foundthat when a horse balked,
11 annoyed 'him to have one ear push-
e- un r e crown o 6 brut e• so
that Ii-e-coulti not move it. 'Wes, also
found that, if the earwere left there
for a few minutes, 'he beenme so itn-
heyed,:thtit he forgot all abent his de-.
termination to balk. •
He shook' his head, turned :to . one
side and then the others and Made
eery effort to release the par, That'
so occupied his mind that, when„ the
driver .ordered him to go„; he Obeyed..
After it few minutes the driVer_pp:
leased the 'ear, and he went 011 as if
'lie had forgotten all about balking.
Concluding, the writ& adds, "This
bid( will not break a horse of balk-
• ing, but it %%rill invariably start one
:That has balked on the roadt provided
he has not already' been winpped and
•ontuteed to a point where nothing mat-
fett." .
Stblete's X4aIm.at for i1e eVerawberai.
•
Irri4-tr`ini-i.eetairt-relisfrithe°
.been known and recommended for
yearS back, -Sleatee lAtiftnent—One
applicatiott and the dull pain is praeti.
cally gone. 11 is ettsily applied with•
out rubbing. "Rubbing is unnecessary,
se" Sloan's Liniment quickly pene-
trates to the seat of the trouble.
Mitring • muscles; rheumatism-,
bruin:be, lumbago, ehilblitins, einnifis
and atiff um* can also be most et-
feetttely treated . with Slocute Lini-
ment. Cleaner than entesy -plasters
or ointments- ; cloee not stain the
sldn or clog the pores• ..
At all drug stores; 25c:, 50c,, 81.00.
• :
Sloan's
Liniment
Glory for rne.
.104
_Amertcs's
Monier -
Dig Remsdhs
,II0cM ON
DOG DISEASES,
Anct How 'to Feed
Mailed frhe to oat address bY
. _ the Author
E. CLAY CLOVElt CO., Inc.
118 West 81s1StreetNew York
When buying. your Piano
insist on having an .. •
" OTTO RIGEL"
*PIANO AOTION
ABsoRBINE
TAE MARK REG U S PAT OFF
Will reduce ,inflamed; Strained,
Swollen Tendons, LigaMents,_,
or Muscles; Steps the lemenessand
pain kern a Splint, Side Bone oi .
Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair .
gone and horse can be used. .
battle it druggists or delivered. De,'
setibeyour casefor'special instruc,
done and interesting horse BiiiSk 2 M kree. 0
mmABeannStInRdIvITNociEdieguncJeRgastahtrdegaa.inn.vtiesedeinp.: vidolorinrinivignueccitgalfz. •
Heide Cuts. Sores, Uleirs. Allsyg palm Prim
31.00. bunk sgt derikra or elitiveted.. Book "Evidence' free. "
W. F....YOUNG, P. DJ., 518 Lyelaii Oldi, Montreal, Gas.
• ltiorbiat and Absinthe. Ti.. Ire side In Ditudit,o-
Machiliery, *For Salt:
Whtelgr ErIgiKtOT
• HP., .18 x 4Z, itIth: double
aln.„14tirmitelt24Ju
illite;and 1y.nagt030•11W.
bcIt dr1vn. 411:in firsi
class collditIon. 'Would be
sold together:or scparato• -
13, also a lot of slAttltig.
at a verysteat bargaifi. as
Tobin Is: reqiitted lone&
. eat elYa
SrFriirt.k 141 &" tons..
4 .
73 Adekide Street 4itlest,‘:
• Toronto.
• ' ISSUE 43L -e'16, -
Ell. 4:
s
•
k
tiT
A.FTER A DAr
Otli„,,DOORS ,
' Yao can provAnt chappedloidii
mid kaa by .9443g •
asejine
Camphorated.• -
Cream ,
it. oky. As 44.0„9, ot the
..,..., ,
,6* JU .ClegP handy tin tubes
at chemists, 'department' and
gneral stomp e ve ry wh ere.
Refuse substitutes.
ala..--asee ttoopet Pr= On iggc4pot.
10414.1710111111111164 I
„ ,
.cfauguRouGuMFG.Ca
- ilgs0 C4u4f147:,4") montrca
•
Former "Useleas" Pgrsons Now Beare-
• filing by Work in England.
Accoccling to St, Jahn Ervine, a dra:.
Said That Strife Preserved Meg From
Degeneracy. 1 •
In his boelt, "Memories of a Pub-
lisher," Mr. G. H. Putnam shows,
Lord' Kitchener's views -en *ay, Mr:
Putnam and Lord .Kitehener' were fel-
low passengers on the Oceanic in the
spring of 1910, and the publisher was
so fortunate as to be placed opposite
the general at table..•• •
One evening he, drew Kitchener into
conversation bi which )he genval told
of the essential impoirtaricd•and value
of war ter the development and main-
tenance of character ..and 'manliness
in 'the individual and in theeommun,
ity. Ile couldeoficeiVe of no power or
factor oat could replage war is an
infiuenee to preserve man from degen-
eracy. He did not lose sight of the mis:
eries and the suffering resulting from
war, but he believed that t'he loss to
mankind, would be far greater from
the "rottenness" of .a long peace. He
• pointed out that the -princes and no=
• bility of India, who consider war as
the oniy possible oceupatien "(except
hunting) for gentlemen, fend their
chief grievance against British .rule
in the fact that. it prevented fighting
throughout the peninsula. Kitchener •
agreed with :the Indian princes'
that
their class was' decaying Older •the
enforcedidleness of the pax Btitan-
nice, and he s3rinpathized keenly with
their grievance. • -
suggested to the genera)," says
Mr. Putnam, "that during the periods
In which Europe had accepted most
thoroughly the domination of ,the
soldier class: and the influence of the
military ideal; cis, for instance; during
the Thirty Years' War; there had been
no• satisfactory growth in nobility of
character among the fighting peoples:
He admitted that point, ,but coritrd-
ed that war could be carried on by
methods and With -standards that
Ali 00 ,p. e erveit-as-an-histrinnentiof-
civilization, .1 asked whether it would
be a geed thing for India if the Brit-
ish force, once every ten Years or so,
should establish 'a ring fence' Within
-Which thelnineas-uright;-ftn--t1
pose ef keening themselves in condi-
tion, car' on a little fighting,. with
their ownfollowers, a kind of g
twentieth-ebnthry tournament,
ti 'could liar* tnite 'the responsi-
bility, major,' he replied, 'of formally
recent -mending such a plan, hitt. Lent
• convineed that it would have many'
advantages!'"•
, •
' Kim Alment'CertAkin. Peath In ',Offort
• 0 • im".,it.iin •Conarades,
• v
•'The terrible pacilnace aectuz0t4Titod
.along the VeIgo,Thitch frontier. by Ilia
German authorities': under •the• phitpe
of dtadly .electrio current mid -of rifle•.
'Cliets, haver not suceeeded.in restrata.
bsg the . Belgians' ardent patriotism.
I
There
are Man1".lret wilo. 40. not a•ed•
- UtfA to, face. 4111400t .cert414-4041.1.1.• •te
try and loin the' army or Ow Yeer. - •
: Three, brothers who had come from
-
Spa, reached the frontier nedr Vrove.
hewn ;•940 Of them touched the
electrocuting wire awl WAS 111111104fatp.
17 Wiled,' by the. hock;s' the two
others, bidslen 'in d, cornfield, were
discave.red And made prisenersby the
. _At Rysden, two patriots, frera Lote.ge,
Made en Wet1/111t to eacape Nui thu.
vast- pillion which ' Belgium is PAM
converted into.. One 'et theettk
ceeiled, .hut the' ' in ether,: untertunately,.
waselectreented• at •th.e• crossing.
4'§0,000 GET 171.ON CROSSgSA'
Germany Has Used 7ya Tons of Metal
and 87 Miles ef Ribbon, .
The German neyraPapers state that
up to the present 430,000 Iron Cresses
have teen conferred, of which 429,000
are a the second clash, each weighing,
lg• grains (about. 6mo-thirds of an
Ounes).
Half of the Metal is east irdp. Ina
halt.. silver, 'so that , altogether 150
lau.nciredweight ot racital. 'and 140,000
meters (eighty-seven miles) of ribbon
have been used in these awards.
GUARD THE CHILDREN
FROM AUTUMN COLDS
"Made in Canada"
MINION
1400 for quality, st le and
• value. Guaranteed tor aD,
Mat4.P.
AskYour
ft:coaler
"shimose" he had °sent by • _special. appealed to the Canadian Northern
messenger was composed of harmless executive officers as an added pretec-
The Prussian King Frederick Wil -
materials colored by...a little -mustard.'ition against this danger in the north. VANCOUVER A dB AT PORT. Giant Guards. before the foreign Am-
liaM was very fond of parading his
Deaver board' supplies. the. interior . . .
finsh, end ship lap. may he added' out- City . Will Spend. $5;0130;0 0 and ' the
' ' bassadors at the Priasian Court. •-gii
Coffee and Gout • ,
I Side. C.P.R. $1,500 000 on New Wharves. Ambassadors .if they thought an equal
1. . one occasion he aaked the 'Various
Will the deelme of coffee drinking i As a general rule the plan has been ••• • •
fca. number of the soldiers of their • Own
in Turkey, due to prohibitive pr/Ce#, ! followed of placing each house at the The Canadian Pacific has plans
. , .
lead to a eorresponditig increase . of.'..side of a good, sized lot, to facilitate Whart,es at Vancouver which -will eolintry could overcome these giants
. , ,
.gOut.among.the Turks? The 'French the planting of the remainder to gar -1 vest; -311,500,000. These plans 'will All the Ambassadors except Great
._
attribute Abell: general freed* - from , den truck fer table needs. But the dove -tail into those which the city Britain's tepreSentatiye replied at
Wen. and east a ,.
•gouty disorders to their !eve Of •cOf- i trainmen and their. fernlike, Wild 'contemplates ; to ' Carry out •• at ' the The King', tarn -
once hi the negative '
fee, and in Turkey,/it is said, dieeases ilmove toing to the Englishman, asked for his
' the new towns to take up Part - The letter is 'groWing in value .
Of the lcmd have hitherto been prac- 1 residerice, ete expected , to constitute and bigness, all the • time., There is
tically unknown. 'Prof, Johnson . in a fairly- good r,Aarket. and it. is under- great complaint from.. shippers of.
The Chemistry of Colnmen Life, stood that'. the Ontario Goveennient is 'congestion, for. VanceuYer is becOni-
recorde the \ case of a Min who. had surveying, and Will later -thi•ow open • ing a great poli. The oitY is going
suffered . from chalky gout for a.cittat- 'tO settlement a township contiguous totspend.$5,90moo On :Wharf exten;
ter of a century being mired event-. to the town of Foleyet and anot4r to . sion in "the iminediate future, an
the
uallY by a free use of coffee. Sortie' Horne Payne, in the great Clay belt. railvvay -company, -on its own ateount
doctors,, it must he 'added, .take an The Canadian Northern officers are has plans' fop- a further-, eittension , of
opposite view, and forbid-. coffee to confident that the building of these the wharves which it will use for its *emulated Eyelidi.
gouty patients.—London Chronicle. 7 homes will mark the beginning of a • own business . ' Both ' -
• . 0 Eyes inflamed by expo-
neW era infirm! NeW North. First the .Canadian'Pacific Railway hat'now sure to Sun; Dust and Wind
GRAINS OF: Gpma.'
ThiS s;let the- time to'CoWS Saert'
ficee„ but to act As Citizensof a ,frea
country.Premier 1:Inghes. •
Duty and self-saeritiee are the es". ,
Sence -of the British effortAll ; We.
rest is mere detail.—Lord. Dewar. '
The moment appreaches When".
izn-
deour. Ahnon iinpetue the Ocrmin • -
military "powerwill completely giye
way.--,-Gencral Jofire,„ , „ •
Sone men..think•they, belong to'thet
cream of .society. the More need'
then that ,they, should. be stirr84 Up
and W11 shaken -1L W. Oellingwood•':.
Tribunals are appointed to hold the
settles of -justice evenly between Ito
rights cif ' Men as. 'citizen*. and etlie1. • -
nheds of the ceuntrY,--,Mr...P. W, At..
. • -
The -aristocrat andthe workmen; ,
met in this war .cm pe broad grounds '
of neutral equality, and each has hen •
astonished to find that the other .pos-
sessed geed qtialities of which • he
-never. previously drearrit—Mr.-.Rob-
ert Harvey;
minarcra Ziatment Crams Plin5ra4,.
,
•
'Greatest Rattles •Only Shnrt.
. Most of the • -.great battles which
were. ought long ago ;were over in 0..
day, remarks the Indianapolla
The famous •engagements-Materloo,
sit hours; Sedan, twelve a'nd It • half.
hours; Gravelotte, nine' trours'; Mars
la Tatir, ten hours' Koniggratz, eight
'honri;Alma; threa:•and .a half hours;
Leipsie, .three ,* days; GettYebtitg,,.-
three days.
••,
reply, which was characteristic: I
• don'it. know for certain, • your .• Maj-
esty," he said, "whether an equal
number of British seldiers could over'
come your trussian Guards, but I am
-geite sur even half of the number
would' try " •
•
•
Arqk ,,,„'e*
there should follow -the Stores tO eater Tor its shipping interests, facilities m'ckly relieved by/Aided
to the needs of the town dwellers; and , which render it absolutely andepend R17Vai EyeRemedy. NeStnarting.
just Eye Cinnfi*. .At
then settlers to take up the adjaeent , ent-this independence making for Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Burke Eye •
land, because of the inducement of e better _arid more. efficierit „service ' in $alveinTubes25c.,FoilloolkeltheEyelfreeask
good market; and the advantages: of the ocean carrying -business, Width Druggists orldtirkkayeRemedyCo.,,Chleallf
adequate ,shipping facihtaes lthe company has •notably • extended
!during the Past few years. Thelleet
lef the company -110W numbers, all told;
;over 190, yeaselet but it has especially"
strengthened its Atlantic and Trans -
Where CowsWear Suits ef Hemp1Pacific service in latter years•-•--recog-
.
I nizing, as it ditl,.the possibilities of
Guard
Your Baby's
Health
Enough is Sufficient.;
•Old Pa Stuctdlegeld—That
er, *ants me to pay his :debts' again.
014- Ma iStubbleileld-,That boy's
young and you got to make allowances.
014 Pa.-4,made Win a.good month-
• ly aliewartee to start with an' I've
raised it twice, •Now I'm through
makins alli>wances;
Sil3ar4001 Without Ilkelier;ei atenralstle,
• tt•
• Cheerful, Chitbby Children
• Maim the Homu'Happy
Weak, puny babies are a constant
care to tared molhers and are subject 7
to many diseasb,. that do .hot• affect
healthy children. ••
Keep your children in good health.
Ste that their bbivels.move regularly
-especially during theteething period.
This is a distressing tine in the life
of every. child and the"utmost pre-
cantion shotild. be taken .to' keep them .
well and strong. • . •. . - • •'
• By the.,consisteetese of •
• Mrs. Winslow's
Soothing Syrup
it is possible to avoid many childish
ills now so .pre;alent.
It is a correcnvelifor diiiTltc
and other infantile Rilments. It soothes
-
the fretting baby and permits the
'child tosleep well and grow healtlfe.
It brings comfort and'relief to limit
child and me her • -
.1m
-DRESSED 'BEEF.
• • Cloth in Winter.
• . • * !increased exchange between thiw en -
We learn from the Sap .PranciscO., tinent and Europe and Asia, an intim
Chronicle that Sir Francis Webster is •licy and largeness of continunication
a Wealthy alatiefacturer of hemp,, which, somewhat hurt by the war, are
!goods M Scotland, an,d the owner -V. _resuming their, urgency and ' import-,
a stock range -in - Texas; , -On. --which' epee from day to tMy, 7
:tthousands of cattle renge,clad, tint -1
ing the winter et least, in garments ' •
„ Gorizia Not:1:1.611am
1 other than their own hide and hair. i
1 Sir Francis's cows- wear sulfa of Gorizia, oorz, or Goriei has nevei•'
- • • Poor Judgment.
. •
"Visitori--"What has became tti your
living skeleton?"
Showman—"Oh,he is dead," poor -
chap. Drank hinrielf to :
Visitor -Dear me, how sad."
ShOvirinan-"Ye,, he married the
two -headed 'women, and, what With
two mouths nagging at him and two
hats to 'buy, it broke him all up."
'purely Herbal—No poison-
•• Aans coloring matter.
Antiseptic—St op s blood -
poisoning, festering, etc.
Soothing -Ends quicklythe
ain and smarting.
Hee s sores.
•
50c. 111- AllDruggists and Stores
HELP WANTED.
ABINET' MAKERS AND MACBINB.
.ha:nds • • wanted. Steady " work at . •
highest wages. Apply to The Bell •
Furniture _co,. Southampton. Ont.' • - •
"
Byrn po*.amonn
END POTATOBS. IRISH . COBs
biers. Deleitare. Carman. Order
at once. Supply limited: Write for QUO!
talons. H NV. Dawson. Brampton.
NEWSPAPERS Tom giazin
1)ROPIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB ,
• Offices for salts in good Ontailo "
towns. The most useful and interesting
Of all basinesses. S'ullinformation, on
application to Wileon Publishing Com-
pany, 73 West'Adelaide Street. Toronto:
332BCEIDDANZOITS.
elANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC.; •
•• interbal and otternat cured With-
out pain by our ho.me treatment. Write.
us before too late. Dr. Bellnian Medical
Co.. 'Limited. Collingwood, Ont. '
''ingmmollggrogrogrgob
• -We'helieVe M/NARD'S-LINItIENT.
is the best i ".. • •. •
1, hemp, doth, made ni his own faCterY, formed part of "Italia," whether "Ir -.1 MilthiiiS Foley, Oil City, ant, • •.
ito Protect them from the cold and redenta" or otherwise,.aincethe days Joseph Snevi,,Nerway; Mi
. -
snow, make them less isusceptible to of • Imperial Rome. Except , for . a , Charles *-Vv‘ hooten," .Mulgraye, N S-
tuberculosie, and increase 'their daily 'brief interval 'during the: Napoleonic iZev R 0.-...Arinktrong,. _Sulgrave,
-
1 yield of :Milk. . - • • period,- it has. .a was belonged :to Ni. S•.•
•
• -
1. Each cow has two suite a. week. ,1Soine Germanic ,p,olver. Oddly enough Pierre Lenders;' Sep., •pokeinonche,
They a•re: notelaborate' affairS,'.,•by• the dominant • ranguage • is neither 'N. P, -
any means—sitnply Cover -all. blankets'. German no: Italian, .-but. Slavoide:.
,• that fit loosely ::' Theresare a thoesand This•towgof three language's has an •
!
cows in his dairy fe,rm, and they use interesting :connectiOn with our
two thousand hemp,. blanketsa week.*.Prench allie,s. Here in 1810 died. the
1 That .s.f.-conrse Means - :added eic- exiled Bourbon Charles 1., the last
! pensei-Stits the yield of milk during • King of Prance. , • ."
•
1 the cold weather is * about twenty- • ._,.--........41,,,._-__:_.._ . st .
seven per centlarger than from tows Kinard,. Liniment , Curbs Earns,' Eta
not thus nrOteeted. -, ' •
• GETTING 'ROUND DOBIIIN. -
•••••••"••• .
•
1
*RELIEVE. HEADACHES. Ho'wr.a'' II' 7-1
saebitMaof fillaelk(14.e:', 14:1'h.°
. •
WITHOUT DOSINGtwho.
A 'Writer- in • Our : Dumb.. Apirneits
. apparently, 'snakes .ii, business of
. ' . • . .buyingand selling !milky, hprees',. ,e.x.,
. .
plains, how a' herse. can be Cured, Of
By Applying Sloan'.6 Liniment to . this'troublescenehabit without resent--
. , foreiread You Can Stop bit to cruel or ' libueive..17 measures:,
•the Severe Paiwi: , •Whipping onlyincreases the animal's
: -
Mrs VVinslow's
So(t)thing Syrup
Makes Cheerful,
Chubby, .Children
• Is absolutely itOrPriarcotle.. It conl
tains no opium, morphine nor Rey of
their derivatives'. It hiseothing, pleas-
ant, and harmless. For generation.
• mothers in all parts of the wbrld have
used,,,it and miliitins of ietbie4 have
been benefited by it.
*Buy a bottle today and •
•-hove it bendy •
ltelle've and 14;etea
Sedd 4j. till druggith in •Canalla.and
thmitighout the =wield
. •
HINDENBURG'S WAR MOTTO:
Germans Think h An Improvement
. . • ,
• • on the French.:
• To •a -university '0.professor who
greeted, him with the Latin title ap-
'plied to -Arminius l?y
att�r haud dubie Germaniae,
burghas returned a Latin' • greeting
trtinslated into -English, reads:
•.....13rainvioi the Wfir,_ •
•
. Heart for the King. ; .• •
Bleed for the Fatherland;
t' c erman, ornment 1. on
T;11licriloitil)d6 • ;
, stubboinness; but there is a method this is that it is a proof of }linden-
hurgl-s-stiperier morality, fer"Otp
marshal, it says, deliberately prefers
• the above tO 'the corresponding
trench Motto,:the last two lines Of
Which are:
' Many that goeslo-the root tifIlioalsle-.-'A-4
Ih.ehaedaseyhineostotes trot; asuiciehutiaielagdic.
here never changes has course of ac-
• aches are intense and lingering pains tion without moving his eaes. Some
In the brow. temples',ot-:"beek Ore one foundthat when a horse balked,
11 annoyed 'him to have one ear push-
e- un r e crown o 6 brut e• so
that Ii-e-coulti not move it. 'Wes, also
found that, if the earwere left there
for a few minutes, 'he beenme so itn-
heyed,:thtit he forgot all abent his de-.
termination to balk. •
He shook' his head, turned :to . one
side and then the others and Made
eery effort to release the par, That'
so occupied his mind that, when„ the
driver .ordered him to go„; he Obeyed..
After it few minutes the driVer_pp:
leased the 'ear, and he went 011 as if
'lie had forgotten all about balking.
Concluding, the writ& adds, "This
bid( will not break a horse of balk-
• ing, but it %%rill invariably start one
:That has balked on the roadt provided
he has not already' been winpped and
•ontuteed to a point where nothing mat-
fett." .
Stblete's X4aIm.at for i1e eVerawberai.
•
Irri4-tr`ini-i.eetairt-relisfrithe°
.been known and recommended for
yearS back, -Sleatee lAtiftnent—One
applicatiott and the dull pain is praeti.
cally gone. 11 is ettsily applied with•
out rubbing. "Rubbing is unnecessary,
se" Sloan's Liniment quickly pene-
trates to the seat of the trouble.
Mitring • muscles; rheumatism-,
bruin:be, lumbago, ehilblitins, einnifis
and atiff um* can also be most et-
feetttely treated . with Slocute Lini-
ment. Cleaner than entesy -plasters
or ointments- ; cloee not stain the
sldn or clog the pores• ..
At all drug stores; 25c:, 50c,, 81.00.
• :
Sloan's
Liniment
Glory for rne.
.104
_Amertcs's
Monier -
Dig Remsdhs
,II0cM ON
DOG DISEASES,
Anct How 'to Feed
Mailed frhe to oat address bY
. _ the Author
E. CLAY CLOVElt CO., Inc.
118 West 81s1StreetNew York
When buying. your Piano
insist on having an .. •
" OTTO RIGEL"
*PIANO AOTION
ABsoRBINE
TAE MARK REG U S PAT OFF
Will reduce ,inflamed; Strained,
Swollen Tendons, LigaMents,_,
or Muscles; Steps the lemenessand
pain kern a Splint, Side Bone oi .
Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair .
gone and horse can be used. .
battle it druggists or delivered. De,'
setibeyour casefor'special instruc,
done and interesting horse BiiiSk 2 M kree. 0
mmABeannStInRdIvITNociEdieguncJeRgastahtrdegaa.inn.vtiesedeinp.: vidolorinrinivignueccitgalfz. •
Heide Cuts. Sores, Uleirs. Allsyg palm Prim
31.00. bunk sgt derikra or elitiveted.. Book "Evidence' free. "
W. F....YOUNG, P. DJ., 518 Lyelaii Oldi, Montreal, Gas.
• ltiorbiat and Absinthe. Ti.. Ire side In Ditudit,o-
Machiliery, *For Salt:
Whtelgr ErIgiKtOT
• HP., .18 x 4Z, itIth: double
aln.„14tirmitelt24Ju
illite;and 1y.nagt030•11W.
bcIt dr1vn. 411:in firsi
class collditIon. 'Would be
sold together:or scparato• -
13, also a lot of slAttltig.
at a verysteat bargaifi. as
Tobin Is: reqiitted lone&
. eat elYa
SrFriirt.k 141 &" tons..
4 .
73 Adekide Street 4itlest,‘:
• Toronto.
• ' ISSUE 43L -e'16, -
Ell. 4:
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•
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