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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1912-8-1, Page 3ere
MERRY OLD ENGLAND
NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT JOHN
BULL AND HIS PrIOPLE.
Ocaurrences In The Land That
Reigns Supreme in the Com.
mereial World.
' Lord and Lady Salisbury cele-
brarbed their sayer wedding at'Hate
fheld''Holmes
• Benjamin Peacock, an octogener-
ian, shot • • himself . at Rowledge,
Fatnhaan, Surrey..,,
• The body of a Swedish sailer eras
found shot in a railway carriage at
Charing Cross,
The body of a well-dressed wo-
'wan has been -taken from &eel: ver
Medway 'at Maidstone..
,, _,S,erious ,au,'tbseaks of the foot and
mouth disease among oattle .are re-
ported in the north. •
A carved font, the work of two in. -
mates, has just been placed in Lew-
isham Workhouse chapel. •
Mr. John Burns paid a great tri-
.hute to the London firemen at a
great display in Battersea Park.!
The King has conferred a. knight-
hood upon the well-known journal-
ist, Mr. Edward Tyas Cook.
John Nagle, a, veteran of the
Crimean and Indian mutiny, liras
died< at Colchester, : aged eighty--.
three.
Cabbages which weighed respec-
'teively 10)nlbs., 7% lbs. and 614 lbs.
have been grown at Wool, Dorset.
The profits of the International
Horticultural Exhibition at Chelsea
are , stated to be approximately
'85,000.
A spike of liquid orchids with
over fifty blooms has been found
growing by the roadside at Great
Chant, Kent.
The Lady Mayoress of London
paid a visit to the Lord Mayor
Trelsan Cripples' Hospital and
College, at Alton..
A thief has visited the crypt of
the new church of St. John the Bap-
tist and took X50 and a gold watch
and chain.
A young woman named Wright
has been atruok blind by lightning
at Southehurch, near Bishop Auck-
land, Durham.
A young married woman maned
Frances Darlington, at Copper-
head, has been. arrested for putting
her child in the fire.
A moving stairway at Oxford Cir-
• cus "tube" station is one of the
proposals in the London E+leotrie
Railways Bill.
• A resolution has been adopted by
the Gravesend Education Commit-
tee that women teachers shall re, -
sign on their marriage. •
Henry Kitchen was • sentenced to
three months hard labor for steal -
in the keyof theemergency
fixe
g'g' y
exit at 'Marylebone workhouse.
While excavating in Kings Road,
Swanage, workmen came across an
anolent barge believed to have been
buried for over 600 years.
Several doctors in Leicestershire
and Rutland connected with
friendly societies, have resigned as
a protest against the Insurance Act.
At the Windsor Rose Show the
' King Edward Challenge Oup for
the best forty-eight blooms was won
by Messrs. Price & Sons, of Col -
>chester.
A Cannock -Chase miner has re-
ceived the King Edward medal for
heroism displayed at the Old Heel-
' neasford Pit .disaster en Dec, 14th
lash.
Mr. William Baker, Dr.. Berner -
de's successor, reports that out of
24,000 children who have emigrated
to Canada, 98 per cent. have been
successful.
LONDON STREET PERILS.
Authorities Anxious Over Growing
Number of Accidents.
The ,alarming increase in the
number of street aecidemts in Lon-
don, England, is attraoting the at-
tention of the authorities.
In 1881 there were • 127 persons
killed and 3,400 injured, in the
streets of London, Ten years later,
while the horse still held undisput-
ed sway, the numbers bad grown to
147 and 5,837 respeetively, a notal
inorease in the year of. 2,257 acci-
dents.
With the advent of motor; power
the increase became more. rapid
In 1901 there were 9,383 ; persona
killed and injured. At the end of
1910 the number of aoeidents -had
more than doubled', the tonal num-
ber being 17,927.x.
Whereas at the be 'nning of the
century theold so e
e thorse oabs " were
running down between thirteen
hundredand fourteen hundred per-
eone' a year and 'Killing only a dozen
Or so, motor.cabs eo-day are killing
between thirty and forty a year and.
lejuriee approximately 2,000;.
The motor -omnibus is a greater
peril ' still, for whereas She old
horse-drawn vehicle killed twenty
two''persons tend. lettered 503 in 1901,
the 'motor-onzhibies to-dayis+ the
cease of more rthen a thousand ae
oidents and is killing three times
the number of its predecessor,
;Horse-drawn carts, vans and car-
triages Combative cabs and alma
buses) are 4ltrilk, however, sufficient-
ly nlilnerolis to be' the, greatest atest
sat co of -dinger, for' their kill bee
tw,eeri eighty and ninety p
eiszin
s
every year in London, and iiue
between .four and five elatateenel,
OUT WAITED SERVES THE KING
TELLS OF THE DUTIES HE HAS
T O rguarogart.
4i3000 Pieces of Gold Plate Used at
Coronation Dinner at, Buck-
ingham Pelage..
' I am one of those waiters who
are enllployed by all the great res-
taurants ,and large caterers who
look atter the big entertainments
given by the very well-to-do in the
way of •balls, big ,dinner parties,
garden parties and yachting par-
ties," said sand a restaurant fres lance
waiter to a London (England) re-
porter.
"I am out six days' e. week and
somet.mes' seven, during the- sea-
son. When the King gives an en-
tertainment et Windsor Castle or
Buckingham Palace, from 50 to 100
out waiters .are often requisitioned
to help the permanent •staff of Royal
servants. My duties at the Royal.
entertainments consisted simplyin
helping to polish the •gold; plate and
wash the glass and china.
"On the occasion of the great
Conation dinner at Buekinghazn
Palace last year I : went to the Pal-
ace at 10 in the morning, and I and
about 30 others were employed un-
til 6 o'clock in the evening in pol-
ishing the massive gold plate dinner
service • and
BIG GOLD TABLE PIECES.
There were 6,000 separate pieces to
be polished. This was done, of
course, • under the supervision of.
one of the Royal servants. Then
we were drafted into a' sort of huge"
,scullery, where there were a cozen
big,. white -tiled ,sinks with hot and
cold water taps.
"There was an immense table in
the centre of the room, laden with
cut glass •turtablers, decanters and.
glasces. There were about a cou-
ple of thousand of them, which we
had to wash and .polish, and after
dinner they had to be washed and
polished again.
"One of the most .splendid enter-
tainments I was ever at was given
by a great millionaire at his home
in Carlton House terrace, where a
fountain, which had been put in the
supper room speciallyfor the occa-
sion, kept throwing up a spray of
iced scented water throughout the,
evening,' and made the air of the
room beautifully cool. This, I be-
lieve, cost the giver of the enter-
tainment 2200 for the hire, of it for
the night.._
"Often I go to a big country
house for a ball or dinner party.
Sometimes 30 or 40 out waiters will•
go down by special train, taking all
theand glass required for the
late a
Pg q
entertainment, for, of course, few
even of the very richest people keep
enough ,plate and glass to do for an
entertainment at .:which
SOME 400 OR 500 GUESTS
may, sit down to : supper. All the
plate •sent out on hire is solid silver,
and is in cherge of the head waiter,
who is responsible for its safety,
and he has to see every piece count-
ed into the packing /eases when the
entertainment is over.
"At all these big entertainments
given by the very well -to' -do there
are alwayssome deteetives present,
whose duty it is to keep a watch on
• us. 'This is as much for our pro-
tection as anything . else, so we
don't object, because, if anything
is taken the...detectives can testify
'thet none of the out waiters, at all
events, touched it.
"We don't get much in tips, but
a smart out waiter gets better" paid
than an ordinary. waiter, . and - he
Eczema 25 Years
Cured by
Mme. Y. Is
Ranson
•Montreal
la glike Raw Flesh from Knee Down
"I• have been treated by doctors for ,
twentyfive.years for a bad case of eczema ••
on my. leg. They did their hbest, but failed
to cure it. My own ad advised me
tb have my leg cut ou', but I said 1 would
try the Cuticura itemedies first. Re said,
?try them if you like put Z donot think
they will doany good. At this time my
leg wag heeled from the knee down, nay
foot was like a piece of raw flesh and I
bad.to, walk on crutches. •
et bought a cake of Cuticurs Soap, a box.
of Cuticura Ointment and a bottle of Cuticura
Resolvent. .inter the first two treatnleute
the swelling went down and in two monoss'
use of the CuticUra Remeciesmy leg was
sited and the new akin grown On. The doctor
could not believe his own eyes 'when he .salt
that Cuticuta bad cured sib and said that he
ould use Cuticura for his own patients.
But for the Cutieure Remedies I might bare
lifea i : e o
last m . 1 M r11 rdlt fur f r the
yC y •g
wonderful cure 'that uticura wrought and
1 always recorntnsnd it most highly sea aur"'
and economical urs for skin troubles
(Signed) Milo,. J. B. Renaud, 277 Mentanx
t., Montreal.
For more than a generation Outieura Soar
end Ointtnent have afforded the speediest
and Most economlcaltteatnrentler skin and
Scalp humors. Sold by drugg8ists and dealers
ever�-Where. Fora libeial:e@ulple of each.
With 82-p, book, send to"'.Potterzl. 0St ,0.
Corp., 49 Oolulnbue AYe.i oaf011. U, , A.
may rise to the position of :mono-
ger of the out atraff, when hie would
got ,Ma00 to £400 a year'."
THIMBLES 228 YEARS OLD.
They Are Symbol of Induetra All
the World Over.
There was a time when that use-
fur preoteetive covering for indus-
trious fingers, the thimble --,which
dates from 1684—was welt costly,.
Indeed, only well-to-do women
could afford to wear one. After-
ward, however; they were made of
lead and other common metals, and
to -day you .can get quite a service-
able article for a halfpenny, says
London Answers.
The Dutch
$nga hat
(finger hood)
)
became in England the "thumb
bell," from its bell like shape. It
was originally worn on the thumb
to parry the thrust of a needle
pointing through the stuff, and not,
as at present, to impel it.
All the world over the thimble is
a, symbol of industry. The gift of
one to a 'little girl is taken ea a hint.
that she should learn to sew or that
her clothing needs mending.
Fashion in thimbles is very luxur-
ious in the East. Wealthy Chinese
women have .thimbles carvedout of
mother of pearl and sometimes the
top is a single precious atone.
HOT WE WEATHER . AILMENTS
A
A medicine that will keep chil-
dren
hi -drain well is >a [great boonto every
mother. This is just what' Baby's
Own Tablets do. An oceasion,al
dose keeps the little stomach and.
bowels right and prevents eickness.
During the hot sumaner months
stomach trou+bles speedily turn to
fatal diarrhoea or cholera infan-
tum and if Baby's Own Tablets, are
not at hand the child may die in a
few ' hours. Wise mothers •always
keep the Tablets in the house and
give their children an occasional
dose to Blear out the 'istomach and
bowels and keep them well. Don't
wait till baby is ill the delay may
cost la precious life. Get the Tab-
lets now and you may feel reason-
ably safe. - Every mother wife uses
the Tablets praise them and that is
the best evidence that there is no
other , medicine for children so
good. The . Tablets' are sold by
medicine dealers or by nail at 25
cents: a box from The Dr. Williams';
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
SOME QUAINT , OLD WORDS.
Few of the Old Collective Terms
Used in Sport and Venery.
Any sportsman would ..be. highly
amused at the ignorance of his
questioner if asked to
explain what
is meant by a "covey" -of par-
tridges. Moat sportsmen, continues.
the Pall Mall Gazette, would
promptly • correct a, speaker who
talked about .a "walk" of snipe, in-
stead of a "wisp," although they
would not be justified in doing\so.
A very few, might be able to say
that a "bevy" ; of quail is the pro-
per term to use;
But these are only a very few of
the old collective terms used in
sport and 'venery, and, indeed, in
every -day life, to denote a number
of any particular sort of birds,
beasts, fish, or even human beings.
It is not generally known, for in
stance, that it is as correct to talk
about a"'gaggle" of women as it is
tee talk about a "gaggle of geese ;
let us hojie that it was not a like-
ness in characteristics that caused
the identity in name.
All kinds of animals, wild and
tame, had '"oolleetive" names allot-
ted to them. Who ever hears now
of a "pride" of lions, a • "lege" of
leopards, or a "sloth" of bears, all
common worths in, bygone times for
a collection of these, ;'various ani-
mals'?
ni-rialsR A "singular of boars" and
a "sounder of swine" are terms still
familiar to thepig-sticking' frater-
nity of India and elsewhere; but a
"route of wolves," a "harrass of
horses" and ,a "rag of colts". have
passed from the mouths of men. A
"stud of mares"'is still in common
use, .although in a alightly different
sense frons its original meaning.
A "team of oxen," a "drove of
kine" and a "flock of sheep" are
familiar to all, but a "pace of
&sees,'" a "barren of mules" or a
"skulk of foxes" are _ three terms
that have ,quite,. Usappeared. Fur-
thermore, you cen fond in the old
books a"dome ';a rha.ra'k:es;" a "nest
of rabbits":and "clowder of
cats," but it is mere'' correct to
speak of a "kendal of kittens." A
(',shrewdness of apes" and a "labor
,f''moles" are two delightful terms,
the .aptness of which need not be
pointed out.
Turning to• the birds, especially
those formerly hunted with hawks,
we find that most of them were also
given collective names. All are
familiar with a "covey ofar-
" "flight fir of doves " a
trdgesy a gt h
"building of roeks" end a. "brood.
of hens," and a few perhaps with a
"spring of teal," a'" Meister of pea-
s
cocks A a "walk of snipe" and e
"fall of woodooek�" But what of.
a "se'ge of herons {or bitterns), a
"heed. . of swans," a "doping of
aheldrake'"' and a "covert of
coots" R Who now +speaks of a "nye
of pbsaaante," 'a "eongregation of
plover," a "badelynge of duck" or.
a"sordsute of: mallard" R A ""mer-
mutation of starling," ai "watch of
nightingales" And a "'charm of
Dr. O. Gordon tfew$tt, Do.
Tree rt1An Entomologist,, says,
referring to the infantile death rate
from intestinal diseases and diarrhoea
spread by the, house fly, be believes
that the so -calls haramen fly is yearly
causing the death of thousands of
infanta, as well as spreading the
Senna of typhoid fever.
WILSON'S
FLY PA rS
are the best thing to rid your house
of these dangerous pests.
goldfinches" are three exquisitely
pictorial expressions, which it is a
great pity should ever have become
lost to the English. tongue; apart
from these, a "host of sparrows" is
a' terra that still remains with us, a
strange tribute, indeed, to the im-
pudent gatherings of these ubiqui-
tous feathered, ,pests.
HE KNOWS HIS. ROAD.
Few men :can ride. over 1,500 to
2,000 miles of railroad and not only
know every mile of it, but also have
located the route and been .finally
responsible for lits construction.
Yet this is the record of M. H. Mac-
Leod, general manager of the C.
N. R. Western lines, of which he
was chief engineer 'before becoming
general manager.
His knowledge of the road and
country led to. his appointment.
Before his appointment, Mr. Mac-
Leod, along with Vice -President
Hanna, was, making an inspection
trip over the Western lines. There
joined the party one of the heads
of an;, American steel corporation
inaking' railway equipment, 0 a,
shrewd judge of men, who backs his
favorable estimates of men with
millions; of, capital. He saw what
was going on and heard the discus-
sion that took place in the obaerva-
14ir. M. H. MacLeod.
tion end of the private car. On the
second day he leaned over to a fel-
low -traveller and said : "They are
looking for a general manager, and
the papers • are talking about. some.
one from the States. There is the
span they need," pointing to Mac-
Leod-, "I'd make hini general man-
ager right now: Why, he knows
everything about the system, and
the way he handled the Boards of
Trade and Town .Councils of the
towns we passed through, (shows he
knows how to handle inen. Yes, sir,
that'e the man I'd appoint general
manager." A month afterwards
Sir William Mackenzie appointed
the 'man who "known everything
about the system" to the position, of
general manager of the Western
liners. •
HATBAND A. SAFE DEPOSIT.
Pawnbroker's Wife 1Via4o a Strange
Discovery.
•A prolonged litigation was out
short at Aberdeen, .Scotland, the
other day by a discovery in all old
silk liat which a, pawnbroker's wife
was endeavoring to sell. In order
to make it fit the purchaser she dip-
ped her fingers under the band to
remove what seeen.ed to be padding.
Taking the wad out she discover-
ed'that it was a bunch of bank de-
posit receipts for the amount of
te600. Fortunately the pawnbroker
knew that the hat had belonged to
a
gentlema who ho had died three
years previously. Ete restored the
receipts to his executors and was
informed that the rnOney,• represent-
ed had given rise to a bitterly eon-
tested lawsuit. •
The dead man's lawyers were spe-
cially overjoyed at the discovery,
as they h•ad'been under serious sus-
plcion'of carelessness in losing the
receipts. Nobody had been aware
of their client'as habit of tieing his.
hat as a safe deposit box,
BRITAT'p MERCHANT FLEET.
Comprises PraetleaUr fine»b$f of
of Worid'a Steam Tonnage.
An idea of the sapidity with which
the sailing ship is 4itappearing is
conveyed in figures a.rven in the
new volumes 'of "Iyd'.s Regis-
ter, a'
The world's sailing fleet now to-
tals little
oo,tals.•little more than 4,000,000 tons,
whereas the merchant steamers of
the globe are in excess of 40,000,000
tons, On the assumption that one.
ton of steam; is equal to three of
sail,
steamships now do thirty times
es ,much of the carrying trade of the
world as sailing ,ships.
Of this huge total of steamship -
ping the British flag Boasts praoti-
r f ranch as 17,700,-
000
77 0-
all o e hak as 0
000 tons being registered in the
United Kingdom, and 1;600,000 tons
in British colonies. It may be con-
jectured too' that the British half
comprised; the newer and snore Geo-
nonhically worked moiety. •
While 340,000 tons of shipping has
beenadded to, the United Kingdom
register sine>e 1911, Germany has in-
creased her tonnage by 162,000, Ja-
pan by 141,000 and Norway by 138,-
000
NEW GOVERNMENT BUILDING
Magnificent Structure for Exhibits
at Canadian National.
The new government building at
the Canadian National Exhibition
is being rushed to completion and
will be ready for the year's -Fair. It.
-will cost $160,OQ0,' of which. the Do-
minion Government pays $100,000,
the Ontario Government $25,000
and the City of Toronto the balance.
It will be used for Provincial, Da -
minion and Educational Exhibits,
'7•
Ever notice that the most glaring
faults are those of others
Minard's Liniment Curs Colds, Eta
She--"Wouldu love me better,
dearest, ±1 hair were a different
color '' . He—"Well, I don't .know,
darling. What othr colors have,
you R"
libmoommmom
As a vermicide there is no pre-
paration that equals Mother
Graves' Worm Exterminator. It
has saved the lives of countless
children. •
SMALL BLAZE. •
Mr.Dubb—"My brain is on fire."
Miss Seen—"I hardly think ,we
need call out the fire department,"
Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
NEEDED.
The meek -looking man walked up
to the book counter. "I want some-
thing to keep me home at nigh
t
A
show me my faults, tellme how to
spend my—"
Hold on, old man, said the
clerk; "you're in the wrong';de-
partment. Marriage bureau on the.
left, three aisles down."
A Sure Corrective of Flatulency.
—When the, undigested food lies in
the stomach it throws off gases
causing pains and oppression in the
stomachic region. The belching or
eructation of these gases is offen-
sive and the only way to prevent
them is to restore the stomach to
proper, action. - Parmelee's Vege-
table Pills will do this. Simple di-
rections go with each packet and a
course of them taken systematically
ie certain to effect a cure.
Some folks ,make us dlizy
By the way they shirk,
Keeping wondrous busy
• Avoiding honest work
Mutard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
BE CHEERFUL.
There's nothing sweeter in the land
That meets with more resentment
From misanthropes on every hand
.Than simple, sweet contentment.
It cheers you like the summer sun
That shines when it is raining,
Or like the smile of anyone
Whose days are swiftly waning.
Be cheerful, and it niatter,s not
Which way the winds are blowing;
However hard may be your lot,
Whichever way you're going—
Uphill or down the winding vale,
Through sorrow, failure, trial,
The best o1 us will often fail,
And meet with strange denial,
It costs you nothing to be gay—
The very birds are gladsome.
So tuck your worries well away
I say it, and I've had some.
BO. 7�
ISSUE= lid --'1
CANNOT I BE
GNT13E WORK.
refe"orI m thoughtMnlf" she married him to.
"So sbe did."
"But be's just as wild as ever."
"Yes. She can't keep him home
et nights long enough to start the
reformation."
The Foe of indigestion.—Indiges-
tion is a common ailment and few
are free from it. It is a most dis-
tressing complaint and often the.
suffering attending it is most se-
vere. The very best remedy is Par
melee's Vegetable Pills taken ao-
cording to directions. They rectify
the irregular action of the stomach
and restore 'healthy action, For
many years they have been a stan-
dard remedy for dyspepsia and in-
digestion and are highly esteemed
for their qualities.
WHAT THEY ESCAPE.
Willie—"Paw, what is the middle
class R"
Paw --"The middle class consists
of people who are not poor enough
to accepb charity and not rich
enough to donate anything."
I bought a horse with a supposedly in-
curable
nDurable ringbone for $30. Cured 'him with
$1.00 worth of MINARD'S LINIMENT and
sold 'him. for $85.00. Profit on Liniment,
854.00.:
NOISE DEROSOE.
Hotel Keeper.St. Phillippe, Que.
HARD BUT TRUE.
"Have you any relatives living in
the country'" .
"No;: whenever we take our vaca-
tion we have to pay our board."
When I1VV Try sMurine1eEye Remedy
Try 1tta�ned; Woek;'Natery.lQyyee and
fro r Granulated L'pellde. Illustrated Book
P • R11 5 s con-
In ick e. �1.0 1
• s 1Pdunnded our gedt tilts -nota "Yarm!
Medfalan "tit used in eueceaeO 1 PhySI.
Needclans' Praq ie@ ror many years. PPow
air'sd to yhe Pnhlia and cold by
rDragnetsatParbottle marine
Eyolve' in Aseeeptic Tubes, 11o50a.
,.�.�.... Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chiea90
OBEYING ORDERS.
Employer -"You're late again."
New Olerk—"Well, you said you
didn't want a man who watched the
clock.'"
Pain Flees Before It.—There is
more virtue in a bottle of Dr.
Thomas' Eclectrie Oil as a subduer
of pain thane in gallons of other
medicine. The public know this and
there are few households through-
out the country where it cannot be
found. Thirty years of use has
familiarized the people with it, and.
made it a household medicine
throughout the western world.
Owens•—"How do you do, Mr,
Shears. What can you show me in
the way of a new suit to -day R" His
Tailor --"Your bill, sir --that is de-
cidedly in the way of a new suit."
Minard's Liniment Cures Carget In Cows.
"Jinx's daughter bids fair to be-
come a humorist." "That so?"
"Yes. I was visiting there last
night and I told her she had her
mother's voice and her father's fea-
tures, and she asked me if I thought
suicide a sin."
We have no hesitation in saying
that Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dysentery
Cardial is without doubt, the best
medicine ever introduced' for dys-
entery, diarrhoea, cholera and all
summer complaints,. sea sickness,
etc. It promptly gives relief and
never fails to effect a positive cure.
Mothers should never be without a
bottle when their children are
teething.
WAS ALL WORN OUT.
The teacher of a Sunday School
elass tells of the excuse for being
late offered by one ,of her pupils, a
boy of ten years.
asked hire`:' `James, why were
you so late to -day R'
"I couldn't help it,' he encs
plained.
" 'And why not R' 1 asked.
re
tt Well,' he said, I dreamed that
I was running, and running, ' and
minting, and when my brother
woke me tip I was so tired that 1~
went back.. to sleep again, 'ears . I'd
been reaming such a long ways.' "
APT TO OBT OUT OF B1IBATH.
"I believe honestypays in the
long rung"
", o do I but i often wish it were
�
not such a mighty long run."
Af1MS FOR SA
E.
R. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street,
Toronto
EIQRI' TIiOO'S4x1D IJOtLA,Rs 4PILi+:
buy beautiful hundred mires .its
Northumberland County, including Stock
and Implements. There is !a the stoolls�
4 horses, 10 cows,. etc. This Is a anep, and
can be bad on easy terms, Possession as
once.
ri 00D FARMS IN LINCOLN, WELLAND,,
.3r $niton, PoeI, York, Durham, North.
timberland, Prince Edward counties as
reasonable prices.
LBERTA. SASKATCHEWAN AND
Manitoba lands Li largo or small
Woks,
RUI FARMS -ALL SIZES, IN T
I t om'.
•� T RAR e L S ,
Niagara Fruit Belt.
N. W. DAWSON!, Toronto.
MALE HELP WANTED,
AILWA'XS REQu1RE 'YOUNG MEI'`
for positions in stations. These men
are placed in Doeitione as fast as we can
Prepare them, Railway officials endorse'
our School, Now is the time to make as.,•
rangementa for Fan studies. Free Book
No. 18 explains. Dominion School Railroad.
ins. Toronto.
MISCELLANEOUS.
TTAY AND FARM SCALES. Wilson's
1.a seals works, 9 Esplanade, Toronto..
d`I ANOER, Ti7MOBS. LUMPS. etc, 15.
ternal and external, cared without
pain by our home treatment. Write no
before too late, Dr. Reitman Medical Do.
Limited, Coi lnawood, Ont.
EA TON SCALE GUAl1AIiTEED, Wilson's
.Scale Werke,, 9 Eepianade, 'Toronto.
ci ASK ADVANODD FOR APPROVED
Patentable Inventions. Patents la*
cured, bought, sold and developed. WMtt,
for free booklet. The international Patent
Syndicate, 803 Bathurst 6t.. Toronto,
CHENILLE CURTAINS
and all kinds of house Janglers. ala
LACE CURTAINS DYEDL,lie afro reltw. CB144Sp
write to us about yours. Gold Medalist.
BRITISH AMERICAN DYente0©., sox233,Montreal
I.. 0:31- DTYXEL'ES
CRHIOSOT11I
glinlaLiixa.ggr31.ta REM 2mil :cm
Protect— Preserve Elea welly
Samples and Booklets on Application
JAMES LANGM@UIR & CO,,'l.Im ted
1574§ Bathurst Street TORONTO
erri
THC ARLIHCTOP1 00.
of Canada, Ltd.
ea rRAzea Avesue
TORONTO
tgooARa
cu
AoLoewledfiedbe
betieefieesterea-
tioa of Water,
woof collars
overload,. Ask
to tee, and bay
no other. Alf
etoree or surer
for 25e.
ERMAIWIROVORWROONMIR
•
l�r
COMFORTCOW
is guaranteed to keep Flies off your Cattle
$3,00 PER GALLOP
Dilute with 4 gallons of water.
Write far a gallon now to
THE NIACLAREN IMPERIAL CHEESE 00.,
LTD., WOODSTOCK. ONTARIO.
Solo Mfrs.—The Sapbo manufacturing Co.,
Limited MontreaL
A HOT ARGUMENT.
"Who's getting scolded in your
house now R"
"Nobody. That's just ma telling
pa a few reasons why women ought.
to vote."
No matter how deep-rooted the
corn or wart may be, it must yield
to Holloway's Cern Cure if used as
directed.
EXCITEMENT.
Husband (cheeri'y f—"Well; lova,
have you had a pleasant' day Y",'
Wife—"Oh, splendid 1 After I
dressed the children and got them
off, washed the dishes and made
some pies, cleared away the lunch-
eon table and answered ,some left.
tens, I still had time enough left to
dart my stockings.,'
Dr. Morse
ra Root Pins
are just the right medicine for •
renthey areconstipated
hs
Eiril� When co ti to
-when their kidneys are out of order
--when over -indulgence in tome
favorite food gives there inchrid
'•-Dr, Morse's Indian hoot rills w
t�nick ly and surely put them ri be,
Purely vegetabic, they neither sicken,
weaken or gripe,, lake harsh at�.thrall,
Guard' your children's health by
always lreepknI a rani of Dr.141oree'ss
Indian Boot Pills Iti the house, Thr a
it*bo **dam *
ip
• 1