HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1913-10-30, Page 7LIFE'S SUNSHINE
,liiaddens Those Who Regain for
Health and Strangth
When the glow of health comes
back to callow cheeks; whenlan5
'guid'weaknesLgives place to vigor;
when you notice some, pale, ex-
hausted invalid restored to active
health --enquire, More than likely
you will find the cure to have been
yet another of ,the thousands al-
ready wrought by Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills.` Headache and neural-
St. Vitus dance ' and twitch-
ing of the lambs, indigestion and
;rheumatism, eczemaand disfi'gur-
Ing eruptions, and the ailments of.
growing girls and women all dis-
appear when the veins are, filled
with the new, rich blood Dr. Wil -
lianas' Pink Pills actually make.
Here is one instance among thous-
ands ; Mr. F. Ashford, Haileybury,
Ont., says : "Some years ago I com-
pleted a lengthy term of service in
India,the last three years being
spent in the beautiful but treacher-
ous Poshawar Valley. Ague and
dengue fever ° were rife, and Al-
though I was fortunate enough to
escape a severe attack of either,
on my'return home it soon became
apparent that the enervating cli-
matic conditions .-had left their
ravages on my constitution. In.
short the reaction had set in, and
inexhorable nature was exacting a
severe toll from years of strenuous.
labor. My first warning of the im-
pending breakdown were severe
pains in the back of the head and.
eyes, insomnia, irritability, a gen-
eral anaemic condition and an in-
definable nervousness. Life: had
lost its zest, work became impos-
sible and companionship intoler-
able. It really seemed that I was
swiftly passing to that stage where
nervousness ends ,and insanity be-
gins, when by, --chance I read an
advertisement •of Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills. I confess I was skepti-
cal of them doing what doctors had
failed to do, but concluded that
the cost was small, and perhaps,
the chance- in their favor, and so
decided to try them. To my joy
there was soon an improvement,
and a continuance of the treat-
ment effected a. complete cure. I
was now as fit and healthy as any
man and am grateful that the
lucky perusal -of an advertisement
brought to my notice the wonderful
curative properties" of Dr. -Wil-
liams' Pink Pills:"
Sold by all medicine dealers or
by mail at 50 cents a box or six
boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wil-
liams' _ Medicine Co., Brockville,..
Ont.
XIN.G GEORGE'S HOME, LIFE.
'Great Britain's Ruler Described as
Best Father in England.
The King's home life and tastes
have been described in the Liver-
pool Daily Post by the writer of
,`'Froim a Club Window."
'`In private life he is the simplest
and quietest of English gentlemen.
He is the most domestic of men,
the kindest of fathers, and always.
happy in the bosom of his family.
The King is the best father in Eng:;
• land.. Next to his children, the
Icing best likes agriculture, but he
has praefilally no 'time for this.
"His Majesty is •a most abstem-
ious man, not fond of champagne,
but as a rule drinking a light wine
or whiskey well deluted with min-
eral water. The Kingloves a good
English cheese both at lunch and
when he is dining quietly. He likes.
a choice, somewhat mild cigar, and
it is not unusual for him to ciln-
eunae a dozen as day.
"He has very little leisure for
reading beyond what he devotes to
studying, the i daily papers, but when
he taken up a book it is never a
novel, but a volume of geographi-
cal ,exploration; and he is fond of
studying the reports of the Geo-
graphical Society."
Itis Own.
TME SPI1ta OF THE SILIP.
When the Engine Stops There Goys
Out All Life,
To the uninitiated, the engines of
any steamer are ,noisy,` tiresome, be•
wilderitig. And yet every component,
every note of that great harmony, has
a special %meaning for the engineer;
moreover, he can detect the smallest
dissonance at once, So finely attuned.
to the music does the ear become, de;„
clares the author of "Letters from an
Ocean Tramp," that the dropping of
a hammer in the stoke -hole, the rat-
tling of a chain on deck, the rocking;
of a barrel in the stores makes the
engineer jump,
It is the ,same with the eye. It is
even the same with the hand. We
can tell in an instant if a bearing has
warmed ever so slightly beyond its
legitimate temperature. And iso it is
difficult to know "which is the potter
and which is the pot." The map and
the machine are inextricably associat-
ed, and their reactions, one upon the
other, are infinite. It is this extra-
ordinary intimacy; this ceaseless vigil-
ance and proximity,' that gives, the
marine . engineer suck an advantage
over, all other men, with whom en-
durance and resource must accompany
responsibility.
I remember" arguingonce with a
matter-of-fact apprenticein the shop
concerning the suburbs as suitable for
such as he. He was . not convinced.
"There?" he said, slapping, the shelf
above his bench. "That's where I'd
like ter sleep. All yer gotten do at
six o'clock is roll off and turn to."
Well, that is just what he, would get
at sea. In most steamers the ' engi
neer walks out of the mess -room, bath.
room or berth, into an alleyway on
either side of the engine platform.
The heat of the engines becomes part
of his environment. :He sleeps with
it pulsing in his ears, so' that it she
slows or stops he opens his -eyes.
It is a point of honor among us to
know every kink and crotchet of day-
to-day working, If a joint starts
"blowing" ever so little away up in
some obscure corner of our little king-
dom, we know of it within an hour or
two. One would 'think we were a
mothers' meeting discussing our ba-
bies, to hear the grave tittle-tattle
concerning the inevitable weakness of
engines that passes over , the mess-
room table.
The propeller is our religion. When
it, drops away, as it sometimes does,.
there goes out from that ship all life,
all motion. Even as the•mass of metal
plunges downward, and as the Inenzied
engineer rushes through blinding
steam and water to stop the maddened.
engines in their panic rush, the spirit
of the vessel gods out of her in a, great
sigh. With dampened ' ash -pits her
fires blacken and go out, tile, idle
steering -engine clanks and rattles as
the useless rudder tugs at her chains,
and the:' brew tell in whispers :how -it
happened just like that on the Gypsy
Queen, out of Sunderland, or the Ger-
ald Dorr, out of .Antwerp. All of
which is not to be learned in the
study at home. ,
Cramps at Night
Require PromptrRemedy
Agonizing Pain Prevented by Tecp=
in.g Nerviline Handy On'
the Shelf.
A Case in Point Illustrated.
Deadly cramps -the symptoms are
not to be mistaken. Suddenly and
without warning the patient experien-
ces such agony in the stomach as to
contort the countenance and cause him
;to cry aloud for :help.
Then it is that the wonderful power
of Nerviline can make itself felt—it
cures so quickly.
"Last summer I was stricken with a
frightful attack of cramps. I feared
the pain in my stomach would kill me.
"My eyes bulged out and the veins
in my forehead stood out like whip-
cords.
"My cries attracted a neighbor, who
came to my assistance, and in a mo
went or two handed me half a 'tea-
spoonful of Nerviline in some sweet-
ened water.
"It seemed as if an angel had.,pharm-
ed away the pain. In ten seconds I
was well. Nerviline has a wonderful.
name in this locality, and is coiss l-
ered beat for cramps, diarrhoea, flatu-
lence, stomach and bowel disorders.
I urge all my friends to use Nerviline.
"MANLEY M. LEGARDE,
"Williamsburg."
No home is safe or can afford to
miss the manifold advantages of hav-
ing Nerviline on hand in case of acci-
dent or emergent sickness. Large
family size bottles of Nerviline, 50c.
trial size, '25c., all dealers, or The Ca-
tarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N.Y., and<
Kingston, Canada.
"What's the baby crying for
mow'?" asked the head of the house
ifrora the depth of his paper. "He
`wants his own way," 'answe`r. ed he
mother. "Well, if it's his,". say]
the absent-minded man, "why don't
you let him have it i"
q.
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
WATERY BLISTERS
INTENSELY ITCHY
Between Fingers, Spread to Tips.
Would Swell Up, itch and Burn.
Did Not Dare, Put Hands in
Water. Cuticura Soap and Cuti-
cura Ointment Cured,
Carrean;''1tManiteba.—,":A breaking out
between my fingers was the first trouble. It
was very itchy and Spread to MY finger tips
affecting the nails.' It first
appeared in watery blisters
and they, 'were so Intensely
Roby I sratched, them and
let the water out making
sores. They would 'swell
up,,itchand burn andfnallY
the nails: Would loosen and
come off. , I spent many
sleepless nights. I did not
dare tp put my hands in water except to
wash them.
"I kept using ointments;
Ointment, but was not cured. Sometimes
the remedies would help a little but E was not
free from it altogether. I was that way for
nine years trying everything. I heard of
Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for
them and before 1 bad used them half a
dozen times I noticed an improvement. By
Washing with the Cuticura Soap and ap-
plying the Cuticura Ointment frequently I
was cured in three months." (Signed) Miss
Florence l0. Sanderson, May 20, 1913.
For more than a genaration Cuticura Soap
and Ointment have afforded the most eco-
nomical treatment for affections of the sidn
and scalp that torture, itch. burn, scale and
destroy sleep. A single set is often sufficient.
Cuticura Soap and Cuticura' Ointment are
sold by ;druggists and dealers, everywhere.
For a hbbral free sample of each, with 82-p.
book, send post -card to Potter Drug 8y
Vhem. Q,rp., Dept. D, Boston, U. S. A.
CURIOUS HOTEL CUSTOMS.
Strange • Rules Prevail in Some
Scotch Houses.'
Weary Tiredness
Changed to Vigor
That Played Out Feeling Was
Quickly Remedied` sail
Heath Restored.
story of a Merchant Who Almost Lost
His Bualness and His Health
Through 'Neglecting .Early Symp.-
toms of Disease.
"My life for years has been of se- -
dentary character," writes T. B.
Titchfield, head of a well known firm
in .Buckingham. "Nine hours every.
day. I spent at office work and took
exercise only on Sunday. I disre-
garded the symptoms of ill -health,
which were all too apparent to my
family. I grew thin, then. pale, and
before long I was jaundiced ----eyes
and skin were yellow, my strength
and nerve energy were lo'werod, and
I was quite unfitted'. ,for business, In
the morning a lightness in the head,
particularly when 'I bent over, made
me very worried about mybealth.
Most of the laxative medicines I
found weakening, and knowing that
I had to be at business every day I
neglected myself rather than risk fur-
ther weakness. Of course I grew
worse, but by a happy chance I began
to use Dr. Hamilton's Pills. I was
forcibly struck by the fact that they
neither caused griping nor nausea,
and It seemed incredible: that pills
could tone, cleanse and regulate` the
system without causing any unpleas-
ant after effects. Dr, Hamilton's
Pills acted with, me just as gentle as
nature—they gave new life to my
liver, strengthened my stomach, and
won me back to perfect good health.
My skin is clear, dizziness `has disap-
peared, and my appetite, `. strength,
spirits are perfect."
Refuse anything offered you in-
stead of Dr. ;Hamilton's. Pills, which
are sure to cure. Sold in 25c. boxes,
five for $1.00, at all, druggists and
storekeepers, or, postpaid from the
Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, "N.Y., and
Kingston, Canada.
In an Edinburgh hotel the bar coun-
ter contains a slot, into which each
visitor who is heard to swear must
drop a penny, and a notice to that
effect is displayed. These pennies are
at intervals collected and sent to aid
the funds of one of the local institu-
tions, says London Tit -Bits.
A curious custom prevails at an
hotel in Dumfries. 'In one of the pub-
lic rooms there is an armchairwhich
was often occupied by Robert Burns,'
the .Scottish national poet. Any one
who enters the room and seats him-
self in this chair is expected to "stand
treat" to all present, when the mem-
ory of the bard is drunk. -
At Aberdeen, in a temperance hotel,
each visitor, on, signing his name in
the hotel book, is 'desired also to 'ad
hibit his signature to a card testifying
that he isa teetotaller and will not
bring any intoxicants into the hotel.
In. a Glasgow hotel it is the custom
weekly, on Sundays, to go round the:
various rooms and take a subscrip-
tion on behalf of one of the city char-
ities. In another Glasgow hotel the
proprietor, religiously inclined, holds
divine service each Sunday at noon,,
to which all the boarders are invited.
At several of the large hotels in the
north of Scotland the guests are be-
guiled from their slumbers each day
by the playing of the bagpipes, while
in an hotel in Inverness a posthorn
is employed for this same purpose.
Baby's Own Tablets arethe best
enedicine a mother can give her
Attie ones. They are absolutely
cafe, being guaranteedby a gov-
'ernment analyst to contain neither
,opiates; narcotics or other harm-
rful drugs. They are good for all
(children from the newborn babe to
'the growing child. They eure coni,
etipation, indigestion, expel y oras,
hreak up cglds and make teething
easy. In fact they are a cure for
'all the minor ills of little ones and
a box should always be kept in the
,house as a safeguard against suet
xlerr attacks of stomach or bowel
-troubles, ` Mrs, J. V,' Rieliard, St.
'Norbert, N,33.; says "I have found
Bliby's Olin Tablets . all that is
!claimed for them. My baby suffer-
ed from his stomach and bowels
4mud the Tablets certainly did him
good." They are soldby all media
eine dealers or by mail at 25c a box
'from The Dr. ; Williams' Medicine
Broek'vIIlle);"Ont
Perfectly, Simple.
Gladstone, the great English
statesman, always took a keen ' 'in-
terest in everything that related to
rural life. The Tagliche Runds
chat tells of one of the earliest.
manifestations of that interest:
When :still a very small boy,
,Gladstone' vas visiting with his
parents at a country estate, The.
owner of the estate showed the boy
the farm -buildings and pastures.
The •young Gladstone took a
great interest' in everything, but
particularly in 'a, large black bull.
"Tlaait is a very fine, strong ani-
mal, aster William, said the
owner of the estate. "And he's
only two years old."
"`Why, how can you tell his ago ?"
asked the boy.`
"By his horns,"
"By his hornsj" the lad relocat-
ed, in an incredulous voice. , He
continued to Stare thoughtfally at
the bull; then suddenly his face
brightened. "Oh, now 1 tinder -
stand,'' he said, '`Two horns—two
years;"
His :Opportunity.
"Well; did he pay you?" asked
the wife of a dentist who had been
to collect a bill for a full set of:false
teeth that he had made for a man
almost a year before. "Pay . me 7"
growled the dentist. "Not only did
he refuse to pay me but he actually
had the effrontery to gnash at me
—with my teeth.' _.
Lord's Day Alliance Active.
Very huey with the good work, but no
more efficient than the old reliable Put-
nam's Corn Extractor, which cures corn
and warts in one day. Fifty years use
proves the merit of Putnam's. Use no
other, 25c. at all dealers.
Mrs. Gabbleigh (nudging her hus-
band who . is snoring)—William, if
you kept your mouth shut . you'd
make less noise. Husband (half
awake)-'So'd you.
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, &c.
One way to avoid being disap-
pointed in love is to marry for
money.
Blood troubles yield to LIQUID SULPHUR
Why She Left Her Place.
Mistress (engaging servant)"! .
_
"Why . did you leave your .last
place i" Servant—"I couldn't put
up with the way one of the young
ladies used to copy me, mum." Mis-
tress—"What do you mean?" Ser-
vant -"Why, 1 had a private sol-
dier for asweetheart, and. what
must she do but go and get an of-
ficer for, hers I"
A Good Thing.
"You knew old Dempster, who
was said to be so well off 1 As you
know, he died the other day, and
now the story goes that his one
and only possession was an ` old
grandfather's clock." "Ah, well,
there's one good thing about that.
The trustees won't have much dif-
ficulty in winding up his 'estate."
We believe MINARD'S LINIMENT is the
beet:
Mathias Foley, Oil City, Ont.
Joseph Snow,; Norway, Me.
Charles Whooten, Mulgrave, N.S.
Rev. B. 0. Armstrong, Mulgrave, N.S.
Pierre Landere, eenr., Pokemouo e, N.B.
Thomas Waeson, She*eld, N.B.;
hands and. .arms tingled to the el-
bows, zny neck and face were swol
len and aflame. I buried sayaelf in
my blankets, but that only made
the venom of the demons stili.'iilore
irritating; besides, it was so hot
and sultry that the lightest cover-
ing was ,aslnuoh as I could bear.
Sounds of the digress of others
came'`'to see ; and there was a satis-
faction, however feeble, iui feeling
that I was not suffering in. solitude,
Not before the brief twilight of �
dawn had announced the sun did
the pests depart,
At the next c zap ni;a i -.la there
'-P a c
were no mosquitoes to speak of.
Still, I was not permitted tohave
the restful night I desired, for no
sooner had I lain down than I was
serenaded by a playful kitten.
Whether it was the mere desire for
company that brought her out of
the barley barn to me, or whether
she was .attracted by my hairy blan-
ket, I know not. But she persisted
in dancing about on my recumbent
body, and catching imaginary
moths with fore paws, like a jug-
gler with his balls. I put her to
flight; but she only enjoyed - the
fun, and returned to her capers as
soon as I had lain •down." She toyed
with my hair and olawed at my
blanket. While the buggy whip was
in my hand she kept a safe dis-
tatice, only to return with fresh
vigor just as I' was passing off to
sleep. Ultimately, a more desper-
ate determination to get rid of the
pest possessed me. When a very
small boy I once, with the best in-
tentions in the world, attempted to
wash a cat under the seullery tap.
That cat fled and never returned.
The memory of the episode stirred
me to make afinal effort to put this
one to flight with a bucket of cold
water,
But I could not oatoh her, She
had the light-hearted, wanton
spirit of a butterfly, the slipperi-
ness of an eel. At length, however,
after .a considerable time spent in
stalking, I managed to give her a
fairly successful douche. But be-
fore I had got comfortably settled
again, she was' back, and, perched
on my shoulder., actually began to
lick herself with her tongue. I was
beaten. She had come as near to
my ear as she•well could, to do hex
toilet; and as the night grew cold-
er,`I dragged some folds of my tent
over my head, and finally went to
sleep to the monotonous tune of
that scraping, insistent tongue.
Skin diseases yield to LIQUID SULPHUR.
"Don't go near that old fellow in
the pasture, sonny," the farmer
warned the fresh -air child. "He's
terribly fierce." "I tried himout
a'ready," the lad replied. "He
ain't half as fierce as an automobile
in the city. Got any bears or lions
around here?"
Try Murine Eye Remedy
If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes
Or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smart
—Soothes -Eye Pain. Druggists Sell
Murine EyeARemedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c.
Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes,
25c, 50c.. Eye Books Free by Mail.
An. Eye Tonle Coed foe. An Eyes that Need Care
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
"There • is no gout in Sir Percy's
family, is there?" "Not now;
there was formerly. It was intro-
duced into the family by Sir Roland
Highliver, but they have been so
miserably poor for the last two
hundreds years that they couldn'-t
keep it up."
MInard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
ADVENTURES OF A SLEEPER.
Tells , His Experience of a Night
With Mosquitoes.
Richard Brinsley Sheridan said
that had the fleas of a certain bed
on which he once slept been unani-
mous, they could easily have'push-
ed him out, Arthur T. Johnson,
who writes of a camping trip in his
bunk, `California, An English
man's Impressions," says that had
the mosquitoes that attacked him
one night been unanimous in their
attentions, he thinks he must have
perished. Mr. Johnson continues
All that night did I' lie awake,
the 'suffering prey of legionsofthese
pernicious petits. "Dopes" I had
long, ago given up as entirely impo-
tent to deal with the foe; the
stronger the smell, the better they
appeared to like it. With yards of
cheese -cloth I now endeavored to
parry their assaults, only to And
the old truth verified, that one mos-
quito on the wrong side of the net
is snore venomous than a hundred
when there is no net at all. .I
smoked until I could smoke no
longer. 1 'remembered the midges
of Lakeport, how they so obligingly
committed suicide by castino them-
selves into the flames, and lit a fire
in the vain hope that the mosqui-
toes might be egttal}y accommodat-
ing. But the taste of imported
blood was far too flood for them to
dream of doing anything half so
foolish. The fire only attracted
Mere. For emery one I slow, a hull
Boarder (on leaving) ---"Madam,
you are one of the most -honest per-
sons I ever met.'''' Landlady-"I'na
glad to hear you say that, sir,"
Boarder --`,`ares, your' honesty is
even apparent on the very front of
your.. establishment. Your sign
says 'Boarders taken in.' "
Mlnard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
QED. 4. ISSUE 44--' f:8, tired arose to avelige its death. My,
ar
A nanrisl;;ing, tasty.
economical meal,
A'tune and sooner
saver.
i A strength producer.
woirrommo
„ splits
Doctor—"You must be careful,
man. The influenza is not so very
dangerous, but 'it may have ex-
tremely unpleasant consequences."
Patient -"1 noticed that when I got
your bill the other day."
LIQUID SULPHUR cleanses the blood.
Those Wives.
Griggs—My wife has a habit of
spending money before she gets it.
Briggs—Mine is worse; she
spends it before I get is myself.
Carlyle once told of a lawsuit
pending in Scotland affecting the
succession to a .great estate of
which he had known something.
The case depended upon a family
secret known only to one old ser-
vant, who refused to reveal it. A
kirk minister was sent to tell her
that she must speak on peril of her
soul. "Peril of my soul-!" she said.
"And would ye put the boor of an
auld 'Soottishfamily in competition.
with the soul of a poor creature
like mel"
.
1 ELECTRIC DYNAMOi
OR GENERATOR
FOR SALE
30 K. VOLTS, .C•.
675 R. P. M.
At ai Very Reasonable Figure fo4'
Immediate Sale.
S. FRANK WILSON & SONS°'
73 Adelaide Et. West, TORONTO. '
Lingered.
"She told me to kiss her on eitheif;
cheek." "And you—" "1 hes1u
tared a long time between them.'44
LIQUID .SULPHUR cures ECZEMA..
Assimilation.
"Do you assimilate your food
aunty?" "No, I don't sail, I buy al,,
it open and honest, sah,"
Minard'a Liniment Cures target In. Cows.'
Father—"I should liketo knows,
the intentions of that young maz}` who calls on you so often." Daugh
ter—"His intentions don't matter,
dad. I know what mine are."
EDUCATtoN..
•11'1 LLI01T'f BUSINESS COLLEGE, TO.
.LL *onto. Canada's Popular Cominer.
tial School. Magnificent Catalogue free
AGENTS WANTED.
5
MRS. A. SAICH, of
Cannington Manor, Sask.,
Writes :—"My brother suf-
fered severely from eczema.
The sores were very exten-
sive, and burned like coals
into his flesh. Zam-Buk took
out all the fire, and quickly
gave him ease. Within three
weeks of commencing with
Zanr-Buk treatment, every
sore had been cured.')
This is but one of the many
letters We are constantly receiving
from people who have proved the
healing powers of Zam-Buk, For
eczema, piles, sones, burns, cuts
and all skin troubles there . is
nothing like this wonderful balm.
No skin disease should be con-
sidered incurable until Zara -Duk
has been trice?.
All Druggrsta, 50c. pet Box.
Refuse Substitutes,
4.614
T
r ANTED. PERMANENT MEN OR
Women locally. Salary and Com„
missiona Make Five to Ten Bollars daya
spare time accepted. Samples free. J.. L.
Nichols Co., Publishers, Toronto, Canada
FARMS FOR'SA'LL.
H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street..
Toronto.
1 11171T, STOCK. GRAIN AND DAIRY,
3.' Farms in all sections of Ontario.
Spme snaps.
ACTORT SITES. WITH DR WITHOU'il
Railway' tra.ckase, in Toronto.
Pramntnn and other tows and cities.
D FFIDENTIAL, PROPERTIES IN.
A!, Brampton and a (omen other *awns,
H. W. DAWSON, Coiborne 8t., Torortu
STAMPS. Aur rOtfS
Q TAMP COLLECTORS—HUNDRED DFB-
L-7 ferent Foreign Stamps. Catalogue.
Album, , only Seven Cents. Marks Stamp
("mar/inv. Toronto,
NEWSPAPER FOR SALE.
COUNTRY WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOR
Sale in good Ontario town. Excellent
opening for man of energy. Write Wilson
Publishing. Company, Toronto.
MIEOELLANEOtal.
UDR SALE --SILVER PATCHED FOXES,
adeo dark reds. wish to buy 100air
of Mink for ?heeding purposee. Graham
Bros R. E. No. 1, Strathroy, Ont '
CANGER, . TUMORS, LUMPS. EsrO.
Internal and external, cured with,-
ant pain by our home treatment. Writ..
no before too late. Dr. Bellman Medica?',
Co., Limited, Collingwood. Ont.
el ALL STONES, SIDNEY AND BLAD-.
Vr der Stones, Kidney trouble, Gravel,
Lumbago and kindred ailments positivel7�a
cored with the new German remedit
`Sanol," price 81.50. Another new remedy,
for Diabetes-Mellitue, and sure cure, til
"Senors Anti -Diabetes." Price $2.00 from
druggists or direct. The Sauoi Manufaa
taring Company of Canada. Limited,'.
Winnipeg, Man.
The Heart cifa Piano is the
Action, Insist on the
-OTTO HIGEL"
Piano Action
Why we pay more for your
RA FURS
We are the oldest RAW FUR HOUSE
as well as the largest collectors of
CANADIAN RAW FURS In Canada.
That means larger experience, larger
markets and a LARGER PRICE to you.
Ship direct to us. Returns made acme
day furs are received.
Shipments hold separate on request.
Fail prloo list now ready. Write for It,
HIRAM JOHNSON LiMITED,
404 St. Paul St.
Mail Dept. "C" Montreal.
FOR SALE
Pulps at :Shaftin
Suitable for Mllis, Manufacturing '1'
Plants, Printing Houses, Ete.
2 Wood Split Pulleys, 121 x 48 i>It
for 8 15/16 ill. shaft.'
1. Wood Split Pulley, 121 is 48 it*
for 2 15/16 in. shaft.
1 Wood Split Pu114y, 121 x 28 iti{;
for 8 7/16 in. shaft,
1 Wood Split Pulley, 101/2 x 36 1
for 8 7/16 in. shaft.
Pulleys of smaller sizes and Sha
Ing of -various lengths and sizes to b
sold at very low figures. ,
Box 23,
Witeoai Publishing Co,, "roioflta� 1.