HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-1-21, Page 7i
tUTIVITIES o WONIO i
mitiwgimm-auranzakili
Russia,iaas -over 3,000 'svomaan. Iahy
eician•s,
About 35 per cent. of the elector
ate in Sweden at present are we -
men,
Over 50,00.0 working girls in New
York city attend night schools...
Over .50 per cent. of the females
in thee, United States are unn er
vied.
Woman school teachers in Den
mark receive from $364 to $520
year salary.
If Michigan establishes a wo-
man's reformatory it will be con-
trolled and 'operated by women.
Mrs. Leonora Z. •Meder receives
$5,000 a year as superintendent of
public welfare in Chicago.
Mrs. Betsey Story of Carnal, Ill.,
has never worn a corset in her life
and she is now 102 years of age.
Mme. Sembrich, the. opera singer,
ns at the head of the Polish relief
eammittec in the United States.
Three German soldiers taken as
prisoners by Russia proved to be
*oaten wearing the regulation uni-
form.
Great Britain is refusing the
proffered help of Englishwoman
doctors while Russia is gladly ac-
cepting such assistance.
Woolen are now employed as
cashiers in the Waldorf hotel in
New York city, because it is claim-
ed that they are sharper about their
work than men.
Mlle. Renaudiere has been award=
ed the Order of the Leopold by
King Albert of Belgium, as a re-
ward far her bravery under fire
while serving with the Red Cross
ambulance.
Among the laws of France which.
have been suspended .because of the
• war is' the one that requires that
the banns must, be posted in the city
hall two weeks before the weddings
take.place.
Emperor William of Germany has
broken his ironclad ,rule against
feminine advice since he now allows
his only daughter, Princess Victoria
Louise, to express her opinions con-
cerning the military operatiops be-
ing carried on in that country.
Miss Jean T. Moehle, an automo-
bile saleswoman, recently showed
. that she could handle machinery as
well as sell cars. Inaleather apron
'and blue jean she stood on a plat-
forms in a New York salesroom and
dismantled and assembled a motor
taken from a oar she had driven
• over.t;0,000 miles.
.14
FIGHTING MACHINE FAILED.
r The Knowledge of It IIas Sickened
the Kaiser..
DISEASE IS DUE TO BAD
BLOOD
.'`o Cure, CeMMOn Aliments the
Blood Must be Made Rich
and Red.
Nearly all the diseases that af-
flict humanity are cans -ed by bad
blood—weak, watery blood—poison-
ed, by impurities. Bad blood is the
cause of headaches and > backaahz s,
imubago and rheumatism; debility
and indigestion, neuralgia and
other nerve troubles, ;and di.sfigur-
ng skin diseases like eczema and
salt rhe}tin show how . impure the
- blood actually is. No use trying a
a different remedy for each disease,
because they all spring from 'the
• one cause—bad bond. '110 cure any
.of these troubles you must get right
down to the root of the. trouble in
the blood, and that is just what Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills do. They
make new, rich blood and thus cure
these diseases when common 'medi-
eine fails. Mrs. John Jackson,
Woodstock, Ont., suffered from.
botch ' nervous troubles and arun-
down condition. :and experienced a
complete cure tlnou.gh the use of
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills. She says :
"I was a sufferer for a number of
years from neuralgia, and a general
debility of the nerves and system.
h-acl tried several doctors and
many medicines, but to, no avail un-
til I began Dr. Williams' Pink Pills.
At the time I began the Pills I had
grown iso bad that I could hardly
be on my feet, and was forced to
wear elastic bandages about the
'ankles. The pain .I suffered at
times
'ankles.,
the neuralgia was ter-
rible. I had almost given up hope
when I began the use of D -r. Wil-
liams' Pink Pilus.. In the course of
3u few weeks I telt an improvemm,ent,
and. I gladly continued the use of
the Pills until I was once more
quite well and able to attend- to all
my household deities."
,If you areailing begin to cure
yourself to -day with Dr., Williams,'
Pink Pills. Sold by all medicine
dealers or by maal at 50 cents a
box or six boxes for $2.50, from
The Dr. -Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brookville, Ont.
The handwriting is on the wall
for German militarism; the mighty
war empire has been weighed .in
the balances and found wanting;
the vast superstructure .of militar-
ism built at infinite cost is falling
, because it rested upon a flawed
foundation, Says The New York
Tribune. Of all the terrible pages
that history has chronicled this is
the most awful; that a -people who
possessed a superlative capacity for
abstract thought, for scientific in-
vestigation, for music and poetry,
for commercial dominion and for
the •dome•stie arts should have been
wrecked on the false Assumption of
militaristic supremacy propagated
by a despotic aristocracy.
- None dare say that the real, deep
soul of Germany , revealed itself
when the wheels of the ruthless m:a-
chine rolled over Belgium ,and left
its ghastly trail of crushed and rent
humanity aw t or • m h c c
when the haste and
rich beauty of Rheims Cathedral,
a that symphony in stone was batter-.
Pcl to dust; or when the bloody Mos-
lems were incited to a holy war to
butcher Oliristians; or when the
rules of civilized warfare were aba,n-
don ,d and quiet British ,seaside
resorts and holy shrines were shell-
ed without the prescribed notice.
''hese were the deeds of a blood -
drunk caste, that by a pseudo -
patriotism had harnessed a noble
• race to its chariot. Me sane na-
+tions of the world cannot, must not,
halt until that militaristic ogre is
shorn of its power and the real soul
of Germany is restored to its rights.
Great Bribein, Fnance, Belgium
and Russia are now figihting, nor
for themselves• alone, but for the
redemption of the Germany that all
men honor from the militaiy casae
Shutt mankind abhors.
On the East, on the South and ori
, the West the blood -lust leaden, have
firng their deluded millions upon
atebending lines of steel, martyrs of
the glorification of Mars. Slowly
but irresistibly that inflexible line
is closing in upon the decimated
ranks of the deluded. And all be-
cause the blood -drunk militarists
are too proud and too fearful of
their feudal tenure to acknowledge
that the fi�gg�hting machine has fail-
• ed.' The Kaiser knows, it and the
knowledge has 'sickened 'him. All
the world knows it, but the holo-
crust must go on if
only the gam-
blelrs chance of saving theprestige
ms 1 c
' of the caste in a desperate defensive
Struggle. ,he real
l German leo-
pie realized the truth, as every one
a
*URE OF IiiIIOR.TAL FAME.
Man Who May Succeed•in Recaptur-
ing Metz.
Ever since Marshal Bazaine sur-
rendered the capital of Lorraine
certain keys of th-e gates of Metz,
say's the Boston Herald, have been
held in Paris awaiting the time
when France should reclaim the
city, which up to that disastrous
day in 1870 had never been conquer-
ed as a fortress by an enemy.
One of the centres of conflict to-
day is the region between Metz and
Verdun, and French aviators are
scouting over the city and dropping
bombs upon its -great circle of forts.
La Pucelle, as the city has been
called because of its impregnability,
is far stronger to -day than half a
century ago, yet the forts were in-
tact when the capitulation yielded
175,000 prisoners of war to the Ger-
mans and left th•e road to Paris
open ' without obstacle to their
troops. A new. Chain of fonts has
been built since 189$, and Metz and
Strassburg are now the chief fort-
resses of the western frontier of the
German empire. -
The man who succeeds in taking
Metz will insure for himself an im-
mortality of fame measurable only
by the depths of chagrin and the
furious .anger into which its loss
plunged the people of France. Gam-
betta had escaped from Paris in a
balloon and was earning the ad-
miration of the world :by his •super-.
human exertions at Tours. Bazaine
had fought well in Algeria, Spain.
and the Crimea, and had been the
leader of the French in Mexico in
the time of Maximilian. Opinions
will always differ as to the degree
of his culpability for the surrender
of October 27, 1870:
Three years after he was dried by
courtrnartial and -sentenced to de-
gradation and death. The sentence
was commuted to imprisonment for
twenty `years. Eat the condemna
tion was doubtless due in part to
the necessity of making some con-
cession to the popular cry for ven-
geance and a victim. , Through all
these intervening years the French
people have cherished the memory
of that fallen capital, and, charac-
teristically, they have draped morale:
menta for its fall and treasured the.
keysthat were brought safely away
when the army of the Rhine march-
ed out of the gates. No event would
cause ,such .a frenzy of rejoicing.
throu.ghout'Franee as the Capture
of Metz. •
A MOTHER'S PRAISE OF
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
Mrs. Fred Tinkham, South Can-
aan, N.S., writes.: --"Please send
me another box of. Baby's Own Tab-
lets as I do not eare to be without
theme. I have and them repeatedly
and consider- them the best medicine
in the world far little ones," Thou -
sande of other mailers say the
same, thing. The tablets cure all
the minor ills of -childhood sueih as
eon.stipa.tion, ,t:rour stomach, colic,
ds, simple fevers, etc:; and are
else realizes it, a co
new and glorious 1
guaranteed to bo abeolutel,y safe,
Said by medicine dealers, or by mail
at 25 cents a box :from, The x)r.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
demrlocraey would rise out of the
:ashes of,the old Prussian despotism,
Life may be a grind, but gmi.nding.
iliarpens things. t Onit.
•
ELIZABETH OF BELGIT.II
Stays With Ring Albert at the
Da•ttlefrent..
"`Lon; live Queen Elizabeth, e
great sovereign, but above every-
thing else, a great, a good, and a
brae woman," was the toast drunk
to Belgium's queen at a banquet of
the Municipality of Brussels, long
before the war became a reality,
"A great, a good,- and a true wo-
man." 1t is aphrase whit>h is in
no sense an exaggeration the vir-
tues of the Queen, whose . heroic
deeds since the War of the Nations
broke out were only to be expected
from one who was idolized by her
husband's ' subjects; and known
among them, as the. "Angel Qiteen."
It is fourteen years ago since
King Albert wooed and won the
daughter of Duke Charles Theo-
dore of Bavaria, who was so fam-
ous as aizt oculist. Inheriting that
kindliness of heart and considera-
tion for the weaknesses of others
which led her father to establish a
free hospital -at Munich; where he
performed over 5,000 operations on
the poor, Queen Elizabeth has al-
ways striven to ameliorate the lot
of those in distress.
, When still in Antwerp, King Al-
bert said to the Belgian Prime Min-
ister : "If necessary, you, my dear
Minister, and I will take our rifles
and go into the battle." "So will
1," added the Queen, "and with me
all the Belgian women.' Queen
Elizabeth has kept this pledge, for
she is constantly on the battlefield
aiding the wounded, cheering the
fighters, and comforting her hus-
band.
Rept Her Pledge.
No sooner had she placed her
three ohildren — Prince Leopold,
born in 1901, Prince Charles, horn
in 1903, and Princess Marie -Tose,
born in 1906—in the care of Lord
Curzon of Kedleston; at Basing-
stoke, when the • Kaiser and his
Queen Elizabeth of Belgium
Huns, violating the neutrality of
her husband's country,' invaded Bel-
gium, than she hurried back to the
King's side, insisting on sharing
his dangers and. discomforts. "I
am not a Queen at present. I am a
fellow -sufferer and helper," rhe re-
plied, in a simple, diignified tone,
when her husband and his officers
urged her to leave the zone of dan-
ger. -
As a nurse and the organizer of
hospital equipment; Queen • Eliza-
beth has rendered invaluable aid.
Before her marriage she gave seri-
ous attention to the study of medi-
cine, and after some years obtained
a degree of M.D.; at Leipsic, being
of great service to her:father in his
many good works, and herself gain-
ing experience in surgical affairs.
- Is Practical -Minded. '
Apart, however, from hospital
and nursing work, Queen Elizabeth
has given further evidence of her
practical -mindedness by her inter-
est in the industries of the people,
and her endeavors to further their
work. After the funeral of King
Leopold, who died in 1909, Queen
Elizabeth did a patriotic thing. in a
characteristically Womanly way.
She gave orders for large quanti-
tiets of Brussels lace to be used for
her robes of State when she came
out of mourning, and. for her ordi-
nary dresses. This was ata time,
when, for various reasons, Brussels
Iace had ceased _ to please its own
country, and the industry 'required
a fillip, And it was Queen Eliza-
beth who providhd': tlhat :fillip -in a
manner which gladdened "the hearts
ofth,e Lace-ana&ers of rthe.country.
. The home life of the King and
Queen of Belgium has always been
of the happiest description. • Their
favorite hobby is the study of time
violin, of which they are both ex-
tremely fond, and one"of 'the Most
popular pictures in Belgiuum is that
which depicts King Albert 'reading
while his wife (helps Prince 'Leopold
to master the violin.
Revenge.
A contributor to Pearson's Week-
lytells rus that after Jimmy's. tooth
wtl,s' drawn, he rose from the chair,
held out his little hand and said
"Give. ib to me, please," .
With en' accommodating • smile,
the dentist wrapped the tooth in
paper, and extended it to Jimmy.
Eut•whab are ,you•going to do
with is " lie .asked,
"I am going to take it home,"
'Was the reply, "cram,_ sugar into ib,
and watch it ache.l"
3 agi ;alErect en Neuralgia�
Throbbing rain:(oesuIe 1y
A YEAR'S SUFFERER CURED BY
"NERVILINE."
No • person .feasting. this ,need ever
again suffer long from Neuralgia.
Nerviline will quickly cure the
worst Neuralgia, and Mrs. G. Evans,
in her strong letter written from Rus-
sel post office, says: --"One long year,
the longest of my life,was almost en-
•tirely given up to treating dreadful
attacks of Neuralgia. The agony I
experienced during some of the bad
attacks was simply unmentionable. To
use - remedies by the score without
permanent relief was mighty discour-
aging. At last I put my faith in Ner-
viline; I read of the :wonderful pain -
subduing power it possessed and made
up my mind to prove it valuable or
l useless. Norviline at once eased the
111 pain and cured the headache. Con -
I tinuous treatment with this magic -
`working remedy cured me entirely
and I have ever since stayed well."
Mrs. Evan's case is but one of hun-
dreds that might be quoted. Nervi -
line is a specific for all nerve, m.uscu-
lar or joint pain. It quickly cures
neuralgia, sciatica, lumbago, lame
back, neuritis and rheumatism. Forty
year's in use, and to -day the most
widely used liniment in the Domin-
ion. Don't take anything but "Ner-
viiine," which any dealer anywhere
can supply in large 50c. family size
bottles, or in a small 25c. trial size.
.p
BELGIANS TO SIIOW ENGLISH:.
Refugees Will Instruct in Secrets of
Intensive Cultivation.
England is' to reap benefits from
the agricultural skill of the Belgian
farmers who are exiles in Great Bri-
tain. • As a, token of their apprecia-
tion of English hospitality, the
Queen of the ' Belgians has suggest.
ed thatthe agriculturalists from
her country instruct English farm-
ers in "1 he -'system of intensive culti-
vation which has made Belgium,
famous the world over. •
A committee headed by Sir Rich-
ard Paget has been appointed, and
arrangements are being made to
delegate Belgian experts who will
direct their fellow -countrymen in
preparing English land for intensive
cultivation. The Englisch and Bel-
gians alike are eager to have all
Belgians return to their homes as
soon as possible, but, meantime,
there is a desire to make the Bel-
gians as little burden as possible on
England and the agricultural colony
plan has been hit upon as a desir-
able means of employing Belgians
where they will not be in direct
competition with Englishmen.
As many as five crops of vegeta-
bles are grown in a single year by
the Belgians on tracts under glass.
Only rough frames with ordinary
glass are required for this work.
The Belgian farmers are able to
make these themselves, and, in
many places in England they are
already employed preparing the
frames.
The Belgian knowledge of soil cul-
ture is the secret of the great sue -
cess 'the farmers of the little king-
dom have achieved. A tiny tract
of land is sufficient to support a
Belgian family in comfort, and the
refugees are willing to impart their
knowledge of soil treatment to their
English hosts, who are in no sense
competitors in the Continental mar-
kets dominated by the Belgian gar-
deners.
SOUND SLEEP
After' Change to Postum.
"I have been a coffee drinker,
more or less, ever since I can re-
member, until a few months ago I
became more and more nervous and
irritable, and finally I could not
,sleep at night for I vas horribly
disturbed by dreams of all sorts
and a species of ,distressing night-
mare." (The effects on the system
of tea and -coffee drinking are very
similar, because they each contain
the drug, caffeine.)
"I+'inally, after hearing the ex-
perience of numbers of friends who
had quit coffee and were drinking
Postum, and 1eaening of the great
benefits they had derived, I • con-
cluded coffee must be the cause of
my trouble, so I got aortas Postum
and +had it made strictly according
to directions:
"I was astonished at the flavour
and taste. • It entirely took the
place of coffee, and to my very great
satisfaction, I began td sleep .peace-
fully and sweetly. My nerves ion, -
proved, and I wish' 1 could wean
every man, .woman and child from
the unwholesome drug-drink—cof-
fee.
"People do not really appreciate
or realize what a powerful drag'if
is and what terrible effect it has
on the human •oyistean. If they did,
hardly a pound of coffee would be
sold. I' would never think of going
back to coffee- again. I would ale
mostas soon think of putting my
hand in a fire .after I had .,once
been burned. Yours for health,"
Postum comes in two forms
Regular reettinl - must be well
boiled.. 15e and 25c p,a lte. s. '
tasted Postum---;i;s a -soluble pow-
der, . A teaspoonful dissolves quick-
ly in a cup of hot water and, with
cream and sugar, snakes, a delicious
beverage instantly. 80e and 50c
tins,
The cost per cup of botch kinds is
about the sante.
"There's as Reason" for. Postural,
w -ecoid • by Grocers,.
-GERMAN D E: PI.1CITy.
Military Orders at Liege, Were
Dated "Liege 1906."
At the University of Liege, which
was all knocked to pieces, I ran
into something that convinced me
beyond doubt of the responsibility
for this war, writes A, E. Cantrell,
an American who recently escaped
from Belgium.
Yellow German military orders
were pasted up in a good many
places. They had the German arms
at the top, and were dated from
the city of Liege ; "1906," printed
on the orders, had been crossed out
and "1914" written in with pencil.
The posters were all the same
color, a kind of dark yellow, and of
different shapes and sizes. I saw
them principally around the Place
de l'Opera. They were on regular
bulletin boards and in some cases
pasted to the walls of buildings.
Some were .long and narrow, .some
broader than -they were long, and
some were about the size of a sheet
of paper for typewriting. The post-
ers included orders, such as that no
drinks other and stronger than beer
and wine should be sold. 1 remem-
ber one that said persons having
horses for sale might bring theta to
a certain place. Every one of the
posters was headed, in German,
"City of Liege." And every one
had the printed date "1906" crossed
out in blue pencil and "1914" writ-
ten with the same pencil.
The Kaiser was eight years late
getting to Liege.
$5,000 Limerick Prize
The twinning of it 'can't ease the, pain
of the corn, but "Putnam's" will ease,
cure and prevent co¢•ne and warts. Guar-
antee goes with every bottle of "Put-
naur's." Use no other, 25c. at all dealers.
Continuous Performance.
Gorman—We were at the dinner
table from one till five.
Dyser—And what did you do af-
ter dinner?
Gorman—Why, it was so late we
had supper.
INFORMATION FOR INVENTORS
Messrs. Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis,
The Patent Solicitors' of 71a, St.
James St. Montreal, report that
156 Ca-nadian Patents were issued
for the week ending December 29th,
1914, 108 of which were granted to
Americans, 34 to Canadians, 10 to
residents of Great Britain aged
Colonies, 'and 4 to residents of for-
eign countries.
Of the Canadians who received
patents, 15 were of Ontario, 5 of
British Columbia, 5 of Quebec, 3 of
Manitoba, 3 of Alberta, 2 of Sas-
katehewan, and 1 of Nova Scotia.
•French Endure War Well.
The French people are enduring
the emotional shock and strain of
the war well, sajd Prof. Anatole
•Chauffard, an eminent member of
the French Academy of Medicine.
'llhe early closing of wine.shops and
cafes, the prohibition of the sale of
absinthe, and physical education,
Prof. Chauffard said, were among
,the things which explained bile
strength of the race supporting the
shock, and these, he contended, also
would contribute to the restoration
of the birth-rate and to the moral
and physical condition of the na-
tion.
Minard's Liniment Cures Carget in Cows.
The Later the Better.
Husband (firmly) — Understand
me, madam, your extravagance will
have to cease sooner or later.
Young Wife - Well, then , we'll
make it later.
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Etc.
' "Here I am .breakin.' stones by
the roadside," said Patsy Bryan 'to
his friend, "when Tan heir to half
' of a splendid estate under my fa-
ther's will, so 1 am. When the ould
man died he ordered my •brother
Phil to divide the house with me,
and by Cit. Patrick so he did—for he
took the inside ,hiinself and gave me
the .outside."
.Drs Morse's
Indian Root Pills
are ?just the might medicine for the
children. When they are constipated
-when their kidneys are out of order
—when over-indulgence
hi some e
favorite food givethem indigestion
Dr.Morse's Indian Root Pills will
' qquicklyeneburelyyut theright.
Purglvgtale, they neither sicken,
weaken or gripe, like
harsh purgatives.
Guard your children's health by
always keeping a box of Dr. Morse's
Indian Root Pills in the house, They sl
Keep the Childtt‘„0314WcIlf
)angel oa,s Wood Akaliol.
There is an enormous amount of
wood .alcohol used in the trades --
about 8,000,000 gallons per annum.
About 4,000,000 workers are more
or less exposed to inhalation of it,
and it has been shown by investi-
gators to be exceedingly dangerous,
Heretofore we have thought of wood
alcohol as •ciaugerotrs chiefly in re-
lation to its, effects when taken
into the stomach, but it also is very .
injurious when inhaled. Legisla-
tion is urgently called for providing
for better than ordinary ventila-
tion in establishments handling the
wood alcohol, and also for tate label-
ling of all -articles 'containing it.
Regulation has been strongly re-
sisted by manufacturers, particu-
larly those interested in the mak-
ing of perfumes, into which deodor-
ized wood alcohol enters largely.
•
Will Quickly Cure
Any Sour Stomach
Relieves Fullness After Meals
"When I was working around the
farm last winter, I had an attack of in
fiammation," writes Mr. E. P. Dawkins
of Port Richmond. "I was weak for a
Iong time, but well enough to work
until spring. But. something went
wrong with my bowels for I had to use
salts or physic all • the time. My
stomach kept sour, and always after
eating there was pain and fulness, and
all the • symptoms of intestinal indi-
gestion. Nothing helped me until I
used Dr. Hamilton's Pills. Instead of
hurting, like other pills, they acted
very mildly, and seemed to heal the
bowels. I did not require large doses
to get results with Dr. Hamilton's Pills,
and feel so glad that I have found a
mild yet certain remedy. To -day 1 am
well—no pain, no sour stomach, a
good appetite, able to digest anything.
This is a whole lot of good for one
medicine to do, and I can say Dr.
Hamilton's Pills are the best pills, and
my letter, I am sure proves it."
Refuse a substitute for Dr. Hamil-
ton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut,
sold in yellow boxes, 25c. A11 dealers,
or The Catarrhozone Co., Kingston,
Ont.
(lI0GISTJ RED SHORTHORN AND
I•Iolstein Calves. T. J. :lforrison,
Durham.
MISCEtLANEOUS.
1 ANGER, TUMORS. LUB.PS, LTU.,
V internal and external, cured with.
out aiby our home treatment. write
oe bzieforne tae .late. Dr. Beltrnan .mrledieaJ
Co.. Limited. Cellinewnod, Ont.
Delicately
flavoured.
Highly
caneen-
trated.
WHY WORRY l
Choose your variety and
ask your grocer for
"Clark's".
FARMS .FOR SALE,
H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street,,
Toronto.
Ir YOU WANT TO BUY OR skin
Fruit, Stock, Grain or Dairy k'Arrs,
write ii. W. Dawson, Brampton, or 90 • CIO
borne St.. Toronto.
H. W. DAWSON, Colborne St„ Toronto.
rots -SALE.
ATENTS
OF INVENTIONS
PIGEON, PIGEON k DAVIS
eta St._ James St., - Montreal
Write tor information
OILERS
New and Second -band, for heating
and power purposes. Water
Plumes. TANKS AND SMOKE
STACKS.
poL94ti ilaLIMI EoicsTORONTO
Engineers and Shipbuilders.
Georgic's Leash.ac k ery For
Mother (at the breakfast table)—
You always ought to use your nap-
kin, Georgie.
Georgie—I am usin' it, mother;
I've got the•dog tied to the leg of
the table with it.
Sor1. Oranillated Eyelids,
Eyes inflamed by expo-
sure to Sun. [Instead Wind
Eyesquickly relieved by Marine
Eyeil!emedy. No Smarting.
just Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye
Sal einTubes25c. For Betake! theEyefreeask
Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
His Final Threat. •
Driver O'Flaniiagan (to his horse
which refuses to get. up after fall-
ing)—Well,
of all the lazy spal-
peens. Get up, will yez, or Oi'll
drive right over yez l
Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
Foot -and -Mouth Trouble.
Clinton—Did you get in without
your wife hearing you last night?
Olubleigh—No ; nor without my
hearing her, either,
Minard's Liniment Go., Limited.
Sirs, --I have used your Mid:KAi5D'S LINI-
.M,ENT for the past 25 years and whilst I
have occasionally used other liniments 1
can safely sae* that I have never used any.
equal to yours.
15 rubbed between the hands and in-'
haled (frequently, dt will never fail to
cure cold in the head in 24 hours. It
aiso the Beet for brnisee. sprains, etc.
Yours truly,
J.
G. L E9,LTE.
Dartmouth.
On Exhibition.
Briggs -We are coming around
to see you this evening.
Griggs—That's right; but do me
a favor, odd man. Don't -let your
wife wear her new suit; I don't
want my wife to see it just now.
Briggs—Why, man alive, that's
just why we are coming.
LOW FARES TO THE CHICAGO
EXPOSITIONS.
Via Chicago & North ,Western Ry.
Pour smlendid daily trains from the New
Passenger Terminal, Chicago to San
Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego
Ohoice of scenic and direct routes. Double
track. Automatic electric .safety signals
all the. way.
Let us =plan your trip and furnish fold-
ers and dull particulars.
B. IL Bennett, Gen. Agt., '46 Yonge St„
Toronto. Ont.
A man who doesn't exaggerate a
little is seldom an interesting
talker.
Minard's Liniment Curos Diphtheria.
His Report.
"What did they say to you i"
asked little Henry's mother after
his first visit to the new Sunday
School.
"The teacher .saidshe was glad to
see me there."
"Yes 1"
"And she said she hoped I would
some every Sunday."
"And was that all .she said?"
"Xo; •she asked me if our family
belonged to that abomination."
The owner of a barking dog is
always the first to eoinpl.ain about
the ;noise made by the neighbor's
children,
Engine, shafting, belting, pulleys,
etc, from large factory for sale.
Wheelock engine, 18 by 4Z, complete
with cylinder frame, fly wheel, bear,'
ings, etc., all in good condition-
Shafting from one inch to three
inches, pulleys thirty inches to
fifty inches, belting six inches to
twelve inches. Will sell entire o.r
in part.
NO REASONABLE
OFFER REFUSE I),
S. Frank Wilson & Sons,
73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto..
The First of ALL
"Horne Remedies"
"s; jASELINE," in its many
V forms with their innumer-
able uses, is the foundation of the
family medicine chest,
asel"Tn
Trademark
•
It keeps the skin smooth and
sound. Invaluable in the nursery
for burns, cuts, insect bites, etc.
Absolutely pure and safe.
AVOID SUBSTITUTES. insist
on "Vaseline" in original pack-
ages bearing the name, CRESE-
BROUGH MANUFACTUR-
ING CO., Consolidated. For sale
at all Chemists and General Stores.
Illtutrated booklet free on regsert
CHESEBROUGH MF'G CO.
(Consolidated)
1880 CHABOT AVE., MONTREAL
Iltu'd Work.
"I should think you would work,
instead of begging for your living,"
"I do, mum."
"You do? Then why are you ask-
ing me for money?"
`°That's my profession, mum.
But if you knew how hard it is to
pry a dime out of some folks you'd
never accuse me of not working."
You will find relief in Zam-lints I
It eases the burning, stinging
pain, stops bleeding and brings
ease, Perseverance, with Zan-tl
Muir, means cure: Why not prove
this ? au .i3rugg%ata u+ict' Mores.—
600 7io�
SS1T C