HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1909-03-11, Page 6ltt00400
YOUNG
FOLKS
THE "WATEIt-BOOK."
Madge was lonely. She came
slowly up the stairs on her was. to
the nursery, feeling that she should
have a long, miserable afternoon.
Mother had gone to du necessary
shopping, and there was no ono at
iwuie but the anrse, and she was
busy with baby hcother.
As she carne by her Aunt Jennie's
roots, she paused and peeped in.
Tho fire was burning brightly in
the open grate, and the warm coals
sent out a cheer that was not to
be found in the nursery. She loved
her aunt's ronin. She liked to look
at all the pretty toilet articles,
gaze in the bright little silver mir-
ror, and open her ribbon box, that
always smelled of violet. She was
never allowed to play here when
Aunt Jennie was sway.
As she stood at the door a
thought came to her and told her
that she could do no harm just by
warming her feet at the grate.
This was the very moment when
she ought to have remembered -
but she did not. She went in, at
Srst timidly, and then, as she heard
too one coming, she sat down on
the very edge of the little rocker.
For a long time sho was content
with looking about, but by and by
the wonderful "water -book" seem-
ed to be looking right at her.
She always called it the water -
hook because there were lovely
streams in it flowing right past the
houses, and then there were red
boats with brilliant things draped
over their sides, tall buildings of
marble, and from the windows
gardens seemed to bo hanging,
while everywhere was the soft,
quiet water, and steps leading
down to the boats. On Sunday
afternoon Aunt Jennie always
looked over the water -book pic-
tures with Madge, and told her all
about them. She said the city was
Venice.
Madge thought it, could be no
harm to take the hook over to the
sofa and just look at it a very few
minutes. She looked at her hands,
and they were quite clean -and
anyway, she meantto tell Aunt
Jennie all about it when she came
home, and she was sure she would
say it was the right thing to do
when she was so lonely. She hoped
she would say that.
Wrong thoughts are like little
plants, they grow and grow; and
so it was not long before Madge
had the book spread out upon the
sofa, and was turning the leaves
to find a certain picture that she
liked so well. Just as she found Regular Pitched Battles Between
it, she heard nurse calling. It Rival Procession ists.
would never do for her to come in The average man is rarely very
Aunt Jennie's room, -she knew
what would bo said then, -so she tolerant of street demorrstraRiuns
reached out and took the tongs, with whose principles he disagrees.
Frequently, laid them across the book to requcutly, ns a result, bricks are
hold it open, and ran up to the thrown, or even more dangerous
nursery. It happened that nurse missiles, says an English paper.
had a lovely surprise for her in At Bar -Ilona, for instance, on
the way of a game and some taffy, June 7th, 1890, certain anti -clericals
and a good time for baby brother, went to the length of pitching dyna-
too. mite bombs into the ranks of a reli-
Madge really meant to steal away gious precession, killing fifteen per -
and put the book back. but sho was sons and wounding fifty.
having a good time, and then mo- No longer ago than July, 1851, a
then came home and asked her to procession of Orangemen in Liver -
help hide away brother's birthday pool raised so fierce a riot that the
present, and then it was tea -time, thoroughfares through which it
•nd so they were eating supper bo- passed were strewn thick with the
fore she remembered. There was dead and dying on both sides. A
Aunt Jennie smiling sweetly at her, similar march of Orangemen
just as if, when she went up -stairs, through the streets of Belfast, too,
she would not find the water -book led to the frightful conflicts of
with the tongs across it! August, 1804, in the course of which
Good thoughts are like plants, nine persons were killed outright
too, and as she sat there, looking and 150 wounded.
at her aunt, the little seed -thought Old residents in East London,
began to grow and tell her sho had again, will remember the dreadful
done wrong. It seemed to grow riots directed against the ritunlis-
right up in her throat and chukc tic processions in what was then
ber. She felt that she could not stand Ratcliffe Highway, nearly half a
it e felt
minute. "Please fur- century ago; while, at n later date,
Bite nae entailer she cried, and then she the open-air processions of the Sal
loft. her place and ran to Aunt Jen- talion Amy aroused even fiercer
pie and hid her face in her tap. "1 resentment in many parts of Eng -
want to tell all about it --and right land.
before mamma :'' At Gravesend, Guildford, and
elsewhere, Skeleton Armies were
unrolled, and regular pitched bat
tles took place between the rival
processionists. At Worthing fire.
arms w're brought into requisi-
tion, and many people were badly
hurt. At Brighton the casualties in
connection with a fortnight's fight-
ing amounted to over 100; while at
Tredegar, the rioting, that follow- I
ed the breaking up of a procession
by Irish rougllt, resulted in the en -
by Irish roughs, resulted in the en -
sacked and demc.lished, with loss
of life, and many minor casualties.
TOO LITTLE BLOOD.
Responsible for Nearly all of the
Misery Women Endure.
Anai'rilla is written ..n the fea-
tures of ninety ltiurneu out of a
hundred. Unmistakable are the
signs of "tun little blood." The
weaker sex is assailed at all ages
by the evils resulting from blood-
lessness, from the girl who is weak
and languid, with dull eyes, pale
lips, fitful appetite and palpitating
heart, to the w.,lnan who feels
"never well," with pains in the
back and across the shoulders,
fainting fits end aching limbs. And
later at life's turning point, nerv-
ous disorders and heart, troubles
make great calls un awoman's
strength.
At all ages Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills are especially valuable to the
female sex, for they alone possess
the power of snaking in abundance
the rich, red blood of health. They
fill the starved veins with new blood
so that enfeebled bodies aro
strengthened, weak nerves aro for-
tified, and robust health is restored.
Mrs. E. Smith, Windsor, N. S.,
says: "A few years ago my health
began to fail. 1 suffered greatly
from inward troubles, and in about
a year's time niy whole system was
almost awreck. My blood had
turned to water, and my heart
had become so badly effected that
1 could scarcely go about. In fact
life had aliuost become a burden,
and there seemed little hope for
pie. One day a friend asked mo if
I had tried Dr. Williams' fink
Pills, and told me that she had
been in almost the same condition
I was and that the Pills had re-
stored her to her present splendid
health. I took courage from what
my friend told me and began to
take the Pills. I took them regular-
ly for .several months, constantly
growing stronger, and the inter-
nal troubles from which I had been
afflicted were disappearing, and
my whole system seemed to have
gained new strength. I wanted to
make certain that there would be
no return of the trouble and I :on
tinued to take the Pills for a time
after I had really fully recovered.
Since I have proved for myself what
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can do, 1
have recommended thein to a nuns
ber of suffering people, and those
who have given them a fair trial
have proved with me that Dr. Wil
learns' Pink fills are just, what the;
are recommended to be."
Sold by all medicine dealers or
by mail at 50 cents a box or six
boxes for 82.50 from The. Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockvtl'e,
Ont.
KILLED IN RIOTS.
And so the story carne out, and
Aunt Jennie forgave her on the
spot. "I knew sou would tell me
by and by," she said.
"Why, dies you know when I left
the table 1" asked Madge.
"Of course; I saw the book when
I caste in."
"And you were just as kind-"
N'ndg) c.,uld not believe in such
f teivene-is before the asking.
' 1 wanted you to tell me your-
self."
Madge was silent a while. "I
tell you, Aunt Jennie." she said, at
last, "please put away the water -
[wok, and don't snow it to me f.-rBABY'S C�lii TAPLETS
s_ long. long time, just to punish
me."
"i think that will be hest," her
aunt said. '•Forgiveness is sweet,
but the punishment makes us re-
member." -Youth's Companion.
WILL [UBE YOUR BABY
If your little ones are subject to
colic. indigestion, constipation,
worms. simpl• fevers, or the other
minor ailments of childhood. give
them Baby's Own Tablets and see
how quickly the trouble will disap-
Two men -one of them a Yankee pear. But better still, an (wee-
--were having an argument as to sional dose of Tablets given to well
t'ieir respective strengths. "Why," children will keep these troubles
Paid the Ynnke.', "every morning, away• Mrs. Allan A. MacDonald,
before breakfast. I get a bucket' Island Hirer, K. B., says: "My
and pill up ninety gallons from; baby Suffered greatly from consti-
thr a,`'? " "That's nothing," re- ipatiun and stomach trouble and
tort(d tate Britisher. "1 get a boat Baby's Own Tablets cured him. I
every morning and pull up the always keep the Tablets in the
tit i r " !.mune now." Sold by medicine
dealers or by mail at 25 cents a
F -WI• jokes are snletnn enough hoc from The Dr. Williams' Medi -
to r sae an undertaker laugh. cine Co., ltrockville, Ont.
BACK TO TILE LAND.
Question Will be Settled About the
Year 2103.
Sir William Ramsay is of opinion
that the "back to the land" ques-
tion Hill be settled, somewhere
about the year 2109, by the com-
pulsory return of the great mass of
the people of England to agricul-
tural pursuits. The primo factor
in the case is the diminishing coal
supply, which, according to this
eminent authority, would not last
more than from 500 to 800 years.
The chief source of energy at the
present moment are coal, oil, wood
and water. Long before the coal
supply becomes exhausted theie
will be diminished production with
higher prices, and within 200 years,
or even less, the high price of coal
will render the conditions of living
very difficult.
A supply of hetet might be obtain-
ed in the form of steam by drilling
a hole in the earth's crust at least
ten miles deep. Such a protect has
boeu considered from a practical
point of view by Hon. Mr. Parsons,
of turbine fame, and his verdict is
that the execution of the project
would cost 84,800,000, and could not
bo accomplished in less than eighty
years. It is conceivable that such
a project might be undertaken, but
it is highly improbable that it will
be.
Sir William urged that the pres-
ent generation should exercise
thought for the generations to come
by conserving the stores of coal ex-
isting in England, otherwise in two
hundred -years he foresaw a general
emigration from England to other
countries and the decay of the in-
dustries dependent on coal for their
energy.
RUSSIAN MARRIAGE REFORMS
Ceremonies Abroad to be Reeog-
nized in the Empire.
Important reforms in tho marri-
age laws are impending. Itussia is
about to recognize the validity of
civil marriages and to remove di-
vorce cases from the jurisdiction
of the religious to that of the civil
courts.
At present a Russian who con-
tracts a civil marriage in England,
France, or Germany can, on re-
turning home, marry again with-
out, any hindrance, his first marri-
ago being considered invalid. Many
women have been wronged through
ignorance of this fact.
The Government has now pre- AN IDE -1.
rented proposals to the Dounra
greatly facilitating divorce, cases -
which will be tried before a civil
judge instead of a religious synod the world to do, and at the same
or consistory -and also elaborating time the hardestt" A little girl
ascheme for civil marriages. raised her hand timidly. "Well,
Emmal" "To get married."
WAS TAKEN S:C
FROM CATCHiN3 COLO
PE.RU•NA RELIEVEV.
M 1SS E1tNESTINE BOUVARD,
Duck Lake, Saskatchewan,
Can., writes:
"At the close of 1903 I took sick
as the result of catching cold. I
became very weak and could not
do anything.
"I consulted a doctor who had
me take various kinds of medicine,
but 1 did not find any relief from
my suffering. At the advice of a
friend, I wrote to you and you ad-
vised me.
"After I had taken two bottles
of Peruna there was noticeable im-
provement. I combined the use of
Peruna, Manalin and Lacupia and
after taking several bottles of each
1 find myself entirely cured.
"I can certify that it was through
your medicines that I recovered my
health. I advise every one who is
similarly afflicted to obtain Dr.
Hartman's advice and be benefit-
Mrs. Wilda Mooers, R. F. D. No.
1, Lents, Oregon, writes:
"For the past four years I was a
wretched woman, suffering with
severe backaches and other pains,
leaving me so weak and weary that
it was only with difficulty that I
was able to attend to my household
duties.
"I used different remedies, but
found no relief until 1 had tried
Peruna.
"Within two weeks there was a
change for the better, and in less
than three months I was a well and
happy woman.
"All the praise is due to Peruna."
Peruna is not a local remedy,
but an internal systemic remedy.
It will relieve catarrh in its most
obstinate form.
In developing the idea of truth-
fulness, a teacher asked the ques-
tion, "What is the bust thing in
Once More from
The Great West
Comes Evidence of the Great
Work Dodd's Kidney
Pills Are Doing.
Cyrille Maginel Cured of his Rheumatism
and Diabetes by the old Reliable Kid-
ney Remedy.
Findlay, Man., Mar. 8. (Special).
- Cyrille Maginel, awell known
farmer living near here, furnishes
further evidence of the great work
I)odd's Kidney fills are doing in
the west.
"I suffered from Rheumatism
and Diabetes," Mr. Maginel says
in telling the story of his cure.
"My sleep was broken and unre-
freshing, and I was tired and nerv-
ous all the time. I was treated by
doctor but he failed to cure nue.
Reading that Dodd's Kidney Pills
were geed for brick sediment in the
urine, led me to try these, and
after using twelve boxes 1 am as
well its I con possibly be. Dodd's
Kidney Pills have spade a new
man of me and I nm thankful."
Do-d.l's Kidney l'ills are no cure-
all. They euro sick kidneys and
that is all that is claimed for them.
But sick kidneys are the root of
numerous diseases caused by im-
pure blood. For you can't have
pure Lord with sick kidneys. It is
the work of the kidneys to strain
the impurities out of the blood.
Dodd's Kidney Pills cure i)iabetes
because it is a kidney disease; they
cure Rheumatism because it is
caused by sick kidneys failing to
strain the urie acid out of the
blood.
DIS('RETION.
Valor is often taken for d&sere
tion. During a certain battle tho
colonel of an Irish regiment notic-
ed that one of the seen was ex-
tremely devoted to him Every-
where the colonel went, the soldi-
er followed faithfully. At last the
officer remarked:
"',Voll, my Ivan, you have stuck
by me well to -day."
A Woman's Sympathy
Aro you discouraged? le your doctor's
bill a heavy flnanclnl load? Is your pain
a heavy physical burden? 1 know what
these mean to dell, ate women—I have
been discouraged, too; but learned how to
cure myself. I want to relieve'our bur-
dens. Why not end the pain and stop the
doctor'. bill? I can do this for )o4 and
will if you will assist me -
u ori neat do le to w•rlte for a free be equal to the task of stopping
box of the remedy which has been placed
In my hands to bo gh en away. Pot haps that also, and he ran out of the
this one boa will cure you—it has done so cellar to "fetch a tap."
for others. If so, I shall be happy and
you will be cured for 2c (the cost of l He never returned. and the inn -
postage stamp). Your letters held conn- keg cr had to wait by the aide of
d.'ntecirr fomite to-dav for my free treat• p
merle MRS. F, E CUItIWI. Windsor. Ont. his cask until his family had re -
TAE FIRST FUNCTION.
"I'rn living in a new neighbor-
hood now."
"Have your new neighbors of-
fered you any attentions t"
"Well, I think some of them in -
These two desirable qualifica-
tions, pleasant to the taste and at
the same time effectual, are to be
found in Mother Graves' \Vurm
Exterminator. Children like it.
•
"I am going to marry your
daughter, sir," said the positive
young plan to the father. "Well,
sou don't need to conte to me fur
sympathy," replied the father, "I
have troubles of my own."
Repeat It;-1111stloh's Curs will always
cure my coughs and .olds."
CALVES ReissTbebw►1a ,. W theutMitk. ( `NTE Kali' LI BT.". It ISN gniw wo>t!`I
►'rw all o'.r "e Sala 1, w..,k 1..r u. during
Steels Briggs seed Cu., Ltd.. Tweets their spare hears selliag our Isiah !rats rechhatse.
Toilet .Quieltes. Tease ('•-S.ew •to roett�+eft•
LOVELY EASTER TO`e4«e.a.r, weak p..a.anl. p Fere oust 1tabualive.
Tks hums Eyeda'uss Co., Dept. W, irabuy
Avouw, Toronto. t•anata-
6 Or SEAUTIrut POST CARDS
FLORAL
With rem' NAM! or TSWN 1a CCU) cr
YILYIT 10 a. Agents war.tsi. hie au -
titin I'reuaisa,. or Large t I. •ts.)Jua rim acres. close to rail and taarcnvu, a.:.
liven. N. It. - Tilts ad will u : appear avian Price 510u. looms Also city and suburban lots
and acre ye.
SOUVENIR ART CO , (LINTONVI.LE, CONN. t06OBUg A. KENDALL. healer In Beall?,
016 Hastings xt. SV . tanc..urer, .C.
FRUIT LAND.
Sotne mighty big then have been
known to crawl out of some mighty
small holes.
cur my coughs and cold will always
Blessed is the silent Span. for he
is able to keep the lid on his ignor-
ance.
Patient. -"I wish to consult ori No Alcohol In It. -Alcohol or any
y her volatile platter which would
with regard to my utter loss of other
impair strength by evaporation
memory." Doctor -"Ah, yes! Why
does not in any shape enter into
--er-in cases of this nature, I al- the manufacture of Dr. Thomas'
ways require my fee in advance." Ecicctric Oil. Nor do climatic
changes affect it. It is as : ervice-
able in the Arctic Circle as in the
Torrid Zone, perhaps more useful
in the higher latitudes, where man
"� is more subject to colds from ex-
posure to the elements.
Hunker -"Hallos, Ricketts, when
is your marriage to Miss Flirte
coming off'?" Ricketts -"It has
been indefinitely postponed."
"What's the trouble 1" "Oh, she
married another fellow.
agues Ian saloam,ln which there is no optatn,
tiaras sore throat and sure lunge. as it allays the
tuflammation and ride you .•1 the mucous tb:1t
stops up the air passages. 2Jo, bee, .1.00 b.,ttls..
Little Ella -"I'm never going to
Holland when I grow up." Gov-
erness -"Why not!" " 'Cause our
geography says it's a low lying
country."
When all other corn prepara-
tions fail, try Holloway's Corn
Cure. No pain whatever, and no
inconvenience in using it.
Many a woman prides herself on
her ability to understand things
without giving them a thought.
Sure Regulators. -Mandrake and
Dandelion are known to exert a
powerful influence on the liver
and kidneys, restoring thein to
healthful action, inducing a regu-
lar flow of the secretions and im-
parting to the organs complete
power to perforin their functions.
These valuable ingredients enter
into the composition of Parmelee's
Vegetable Pills, and serve to ren-
der them the agreeable and salu-
tary medicine they are. There are
few pills so effective as they in
their action.
A fellow may turn as red as a
lobster without being one.
Repeat !t:-"Bhtloh's Ourio will always
cure my coughs and Colds!'
SIMPLE SIMON.
Ono Sunday morning, when
everybody had gone to church, a
traveller undertook to show the
landlord of a country inn how to
draw three different sorts of wine
from the same cask.
The two went down into the cel-
lar, and the stranger bored a hole
in the cask, over which he asked
the landlord to place his thumb ;
he then bored a second hole, which
mine host, had to stop up with his
other thumb.
He then set to work on the third
hole, when it apparently struck
him that the landlord would not
turned from church. The rogue
On the ocean of life many a wo- had by that time, of course, de-
nten sails tieder false colors. camped with all he could lay hands
They Wake the Torpid Energies. Many p'Ltent medicines have come
--Machinery not properly super- and gone, hut Bickle's Anti-Con-
vised and left to run itself, very sumptive Syrup continues to occu-
soon shows fault in its working. It py a foremost place among reme-
is the same with the digestive or- dies for coughs and colds, and as a
gaps. Unregulated from time to preventive of decay of the lungs. It
One they are likely to become tor- is a standard medicine that widens
Fid and throw the whole system its sphere of usefulness year by
out of gear. Parinelee's Vegetable year. If you are in need of seine -
Pills were made to meet such cases. thing to rid yourself of a cough or
They restore to the full the flag- cold, you cannot do better than try
ging faculties, and bring into or- Sickle's Syrup.
der all parts of the mechanism.
Kind words never die - and the
A young man dbPSn't begin to other kind live forever.
rise in tho world until he settles ---
down.
--
down. Repeat it:-"Bhlloh's Cur* will always
ours my ooughe and colds."
Repeat it: -' Ahtloh's Cure will always
euro my coughs and ccads." Leap before you look -then look
foolish.
Fresh children, unlike fresh
paint,
should be tell upon, hes' M N Tard 5.1:s. The femme "The
PAI:' Menthol P1w•ters whleh tura Ismhago,
up 111 .rimae yanl lands icer ph T.Iciens nod femlljsoee.
/or Ohicol xis , Frost Oltes, Ilralees, �pralm' Dw1s A Lawrence Co.. MuiiIreal-
nothiug .j a;s the 'crocus old renely, Perry
Davis' I'etukltler. Keep s bottle aaways
band. Equa.ly good to check Chillsaud tacticup CERTAINLY.
Veld,. At all druggists.
-- ''\Vhat would you say," says the
Some pe .ple believe everything prophet of woe, "if 1 were to tell
they hear and a lot they dream. you that in a short space of time
all the rivers in this country would
Repeat 15:-"Shiloh's cunt will always dry up 1"
cure mycoughs and colds.'• "I would say," replied the pati-
ent man, "go and do thou like-
SEEKiNG A REPUTATION. wise."
"hem Johnsings," said Mrs.
'Rastas Black, "loan nebbah hab
chicken fo' (linnet' no mo'."
"No," replied her husband,
"since dry begin inakin' a 11'1
money dey bin fain' meek belich()
dey kin affo'd ter buy in bro'd day-
light all de grub dey need."
'Yes, sort," replied Pat. "Shure "It says here," began the laxly
"
it wit! my mother to sure who could do more talking in one
clay than six phonographs and five
she, 'Just you stick to the colonel,
Patrick, pie bhoy. and you'll be all rarruts combined, that after a
roight. Them colonels never get Lall ,nn has ascended to the height
hutted.' " of six miles its occupants dare not
open their mouths." "Will you
ia, if I buy a balloon 1"
go up, Mar
In the British Museum there are asked her husband, desperately.
on exhibition honks written en oy-
ster shells, bricks, tiles hones, and • Some fellows haven't enough
ivory. I Push to master a wheelbarrow.
----ISSUE NO. IA- 03. v ---
A. Ishorttanes fit weak iungs ha serious handl•
tap, but Allen's Luna Balsam, taken at the Ani
sign of a cough will ensure immunity from this
dangerous decoct. Don't trifle with unknuwa
cure-alls.
NOTHING SERIOUS.
"Say, Rufo, what dis I hear
'bout your son Gabe gettin' in
trouble at church last Sunday
night l"
"'Taint nothin' serious, parson.
He jes' mucin' hisself some. Broke
up de meetin' wid a axe handle,
and carve he's name on three of
thein deacons' face; wid a razor.
Dat's all."
"Do the new neighbors annoy
you as much by borrowing as their
predecessors did!" asked Mr.
Blykins. "No," answered his wife.
"They haven't run over to borrow
a thing. I never saw anybody quite
so haughty and unsociable."
CLEANINGI
WALKING
OUV
os
is is s •Y '
Oa• be aerie perteotly by oar Fr..eb Procesa
SIITIin AMESICAN ITSIN.5S,
1507tla$hJ, TOZONTu (YSTAWA • QUESRO
Important Auction Sale
of Shorthorn bulls. o,rws ani heifers, at
11003STOCK, ONT., MA1ON 4th, 1509
In Sale Pavilion. Forty bead an in the offering,
irarmers and breeders 1n used of bent hulls wil
And them at this sale. Apply 1 .r cat -L. nes to
11. J. Da, is, woodstuok
Capt. T. E. Robson, Auctiol.e.r.
A. J. PATTI SON & CM
33.35 SCOTT STREET, TORONTO,
Stock Brokers & Finanolal Agents
4D OB AL LW
and other stocks boa ht ands dei n n c maladroit,
Correapondetsoe invited. Orlon may be wired
ear eapeaa.
No f Dt?tlto
Cream Separator
PhICE5w.0,.
J. 11.
BB1UIITUN
LET MK 116ND YOU
Dome Cream Separllfor
to your home for 1. days'
Flea Trial.
The Trial will nut cost
you a pine,. 1 sell my
machine strictly onits meth,
and It has to be better thee
ethers (not .Imply as good) to
stand a chanes In o'tsppett-
tie.. It is better, and is in-
troduced In a square -deal
way. My Free fiLst and ex-
aI iluatloa ylan.h .uld inter-
est you.
Witte for Cliental. "11' to
MORROW,
ONTAI:IOk,
DR. RUNT'S BUST' DE11.i,1111Ert
Will develop your bust from two to three taci,a4
In a ver, short time.
ABSOLUTELY IIeRNLi'3. Price 111.(10 prepaid.
Communications strictly private.
THI KDWait se MIDICIN i COMPLY
et 1 Bathurst ht., 'Toronto, Out..
DAILY MISHAPS MAKE
ZAM-BUK A DAILY NEED.
ACCIDENTS will happen in the
best regulated homes ; and
having a box of "Lain-Buk handy is
a precaution that has saved thousands of
families much worry and expense. There
is never any knowing what a small injur/
may lead up to if neglected. The stoppage
of the bleeding, or the pain from a cut,
burn, or scald, lulls many people into a
false sense of security. Dust getting into
a wound may set up fs.tering, inflammation,
and blood -poisoning. In a similar way, a tiny cut may
be the starting point of itching and irritating eczema ; and
the spot your child scratches on his head, the unsuspected
beginning of ringworm or some th-r hair -destroying scalp
disease.
Zito -Hutt. while such • perfect healer, is alga the inveterate enemy of skin_ Omega,
A burn. sca;d+ cat. or bruise promptly and reaularly dressed with this rare aed rich
balm cannot ' turn the w-ony way"; •nd any tendency of the skin to tecorre it hy,
inflamed. or " matter-,." le speedily checked. This is because I•m-Duk not c my gr we
new. healthy skin, but. being so refined. Is absorbed by the rores. and its healing me aces
make perfectly healthy all the underlying tissues. Always keep a boa of Zrm-link
handy. for daily mishaps maks Zam-Buk • daily need.
BAD 8OALD OURID.
kits. W. Cotkex. 15. krcbmond Sq ore,
ktontreel, rays:— My little grandson was
severely scalded on his right leg Iron the
knee to the ankle. 'I his injury was very
serious. and demanded it. eat attention. We
used n.t:ung but 7.an-nut. and it wig
wonderful how cooling •h -i soothing it
prove.(. It was some weeks before the deg
was Molly healed. but thele was sol a scat
left to show where he had been scalded. As
the home ' fast -aid; I think Zam-Bur Is
without equal."
CHILD BURNED ST STOVE LID.
Ph 11. Girdlestone. of 1e16. Rawdon StleeI,
itr..ntford, urn.. s+.ys:—' 1 fund lain link a
splendid dealer of children's inr.,Ie.• t
little buy burned his foot very badly cal t
red-hot lid cd the sieve. 7 he sAin wa
completely hunted off. and he bad a shocking
foot. the s.cwnd turning to a running or
fHteriu` and discharging 1 ap i, d
Ism -Belt. and it elfecliccly cher kr ,l •'I
discharging and festering. dttw out t' e
inflanmamun, and fatally t,ealcd the woun
n?ctly '•
Zancliuk is ■ p•.sttine and certain curs for r ts, bur ., bruises, sprains. piles. fertrr:ng
sores, ulcers. scalds. blocci-poiwniry. xr ma. scabs, chapp:d hands. cold -tracks, chilblains.
ytriggworm, scalp so,cs. bad leg. disease ankles. r all other skin diseases and injuries.
Rubbed well into the puts •Ifeaed, it cures nen d a, rheumatism, and 'mumu. All Utu!gitts
a Stores sell at YY tws, targe (-yr 51.15. or poor free from tam-nuk Co., Toronto, for ,edge
S3IIdHI
ES
WrI:s for W..kly Frte. Lists, Shipments Solicited.
JOHN HALLAM - TORONTO, ONT.
!1
s-'
WI 1Y 1)0
So many Intbhitialll devoted to the high(' F.du-
catidtt select Bell pianos) Tihe fact that they tis
I'd their. the i3eU is evidence of chstinc t m, -Sit 1
Ops lotiows ptofe.sio.al advice in acqui/lo! an .ducaeoa,
Wig sot follow /Ioleamosal custom is Isuyat h pianos )
Tha only ptasos wilt the tl imuable (cis
Rope ng Meese,
sitfT
Send for (free) Catalogue No 75.
Th. dell PIANO "organ co,, I, armed t3' GL.PH,ONTA!;IO..
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