HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-2-4, Page 3Highest grade beans kept whole
and mealy by perfect baking,
retaining their full etrength.
Plavored with delicious sauces.
They have eta equal. I
FARMS FOR SALE.
FI. W. DAWSON. Ninety Colborne Street.
Toronto, -
TF YOU WANT TO BUY OB, SELL . A
Fruit, Stock, Grain or Dairy Farm.
write H. W. Dawson, Brampton. or 90 Col-
borne St., Toronto.
H. W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Toronto.
POE SALE.
• EGISTERED SHORTHORN AldD
11u -Holstein Calves. T. J. Morrison.
Durham.
NURSERY STOCK.
�TRAWBERRIES, EASP]3tIRBMS, PO -
1: TATOES. Oaltalogne dree. .McConnell
& Son, Port Burwell, Ont,
MALE HELP WANTED.
'r EARN BARBER 'i'nADE — ALWAYS
1.J sure employment et good 'wages; fel/
weeks required to complete course write
for ,Full particulars and catalogue to -day.,
Meter Baaber College, 219 Queen Eat;
Toront o.
MISCELLANEOUS.
ft ANGER, TUMORS. LUMPS, ETO..
E./ internal and external, cured with-
out
ithout pain by our home treatment. Write
us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical
C.c, Limited. Collinewood. Ont.
ATENTS
OF INVENTIONS
PIGEON, PIGEON & DAVIS
Tia St. James St., - Montreal
Write for information
LMTERN ,TJOR'AL P:OBLTRf
t'?gmci
Makes bens lay more
egg's. Also keeps then,
Bewley owl vigorous. Sold
in 25o., 50e. paeksgesb chat
ore everywhere. write for
our New Bock, "Internauomti
Poultry Guide." Free.
INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOSS C0.
Limited, 5000510, 011T.
RUSSIANS SAY "NICH30I"
NURSE WD:tx'1'D S OF 'THEIR IN.
DIFFERENCE TO PAIN.
Incidents on. the Battlefields and
in the Hospitals Among the
Wounded,
Sister Martin Nicholson, who has
just returned ,to• London (after Miss-
ing wounded soldiers in. Warsaw,
writes of her experiences as follows;
Nichevo 1
If I had gone to Russia knowing
nothing of the language this is the
word I alsould 'have most easily
picked up.
It would be difficult to find an
equivalent in English. In French
it wou:id be beet translated by the
Frenchmen's expressive shrug of
the hshoulder. Nichevo expresses
pert indifference, and I heard
the word first on 'Ube lips of a Rus-
sian soldier in the first Red Cross
hospital at Warsaw. The doctor
had explained to him that it was
necessary to take ,off his.hand.
"Nicihevo 1" replied the .oldier,
whose head was swathed with ban-
dages,.
Tho word 'was •constantly on the
"lips of men broken beyond imagi-
nation. I had previously seen many
terrible cases at the King's Palace
in Brussels, but the condition of
some of the Russian soldiers
brought in from Lode and the
neighborhood was infinitely worse.
The reason was explained to me by
a Russian doctor.
"We have to deal with worse
eases," he said, "because our men
are more difficult to kill. Our sol-
diers are the hardiest in the
world,"
I was inclined to believe him. Let
me take the case of a wounded Cos-
sack with whom I became very
-friendly. Near Lodz this man was
shot in the leg. His wound teas
hastily. dressed by a comrade who,
in his hurry—for .all the time he was
under fierce fire—tied the bandage
far too tight.
The wounded soldier remained on
the battlefield for eight days in the
bitter cold, the bandage cutting
hard into his wound. After a few
days there was the added agony of
gangrene. How he lived was a mir-
acle to me. I do not think any sol-
dier but a, Russian could have en-
dured the agony'. By all the laws
of nature he should have been dead
long ago.
Siberians Hardiest.
The moment he was brought into
the hospital he was told that the
leg would have to be amputated.
There Ares no murmur of regret, n -o
outward expression of the great
pain he must have been suffering.
During the whole time I was at
Warsaw I never saw a single. Rus-
sian soldier break down under pain.
They will stand cutting and ehop-
ping without a murmur—provided•
they have a cigarette, and I believe
if a surgeon had cut off .a finger
by
misteWe the only comment would
be the inevitable nichevo.
A Siberian these troops axe the
hardiest'of the lot—was brought in -
the hospital with both legs and
one of, his arms badly broken by
shrapnel. It was necessary to am-
putate all these limbs. A little af-
ter the operation I spoke to the
man. "Give me bask two legs; one
arm will do, and I will go back to
the fight for the Little Father," he
said. ].could give many other in-
cidents of the Russians' indifference
to pain, but they would make too
gruesome reacting.
TheRussian soldier, with all his
hardiness, has the heart of a child.
This same •mean, who had faced great
agony without flinehing, cried like a
child later when shown some little
kindness. Tears come to the men
very easily, but never as a result of
pain. Their tears are the result of
deep emotion—and this combination
of hardness and deep feeling is
surely one of the most extraordi-
nary traits in the Russian charac-
ter !
.The wounded found on the field of
battle are usually lying on their
backs, their faces turned to heavers.
The reason was explained Very sim-
ply to me by a wounded Siberian.
`'You see," be said, "we believe
God is on our side, and we like to
die facing Him. So when we are
badly hit and we feel that all is up
we try to fall on our backs."
^ Before going to Russia I was in
Brussels, arriving there the same
clay as the Germans. At first I was
ordered to take care of Belgian
wcuuided prisoners, and later sent
to the King's Palace, which had
been turned into a hospital, to look
after the German wounded.
The wounded German is far more
difficult to deai with than the
wounded Russian, and. the two hos-
pitais presented a vivid contrast.
The German breaks down very easi-
ly and is restless when suffering.
The German soldier is easier to
handle than the German officer, who
will fight against an operation and
sometimes become a .pitiable object.
el
Mike Square Deal:.
"Look here I" said an excited
man to a druggist. "You gave me
."You
morphine kr quinine this morn-
' "Is that .sol" replied the drug-
gist, "Then you o -we me twenty
&v( cents."
Few self-made Hien live long
enough to•finish the job,
ADIOS' EVERY ONE
NEEDS A TONIC
Almost everyone -- snarl, woman
and child ---needs a tonic at some
thne. it is often said that a ma -n is
lazy because he takes little or no
interest in his work; but the truth
is he is not well. He needs a tonic.
The sarin, is true of a woman who
dose not' hustle over her home work,
but only feels fit to be in bed. She
is not merely tired, but i11. A dull
pain in the head or back,'poor appe-
tite, loss of strength with IOW ;spirits
arid loss of interest in life show that
you need a tonin to ,brace up the
nerves and give you a, new lease of
life, The proof ins that when the
right tonic is taken all the trouble
quickly disappears. The one tonic—
the only tonic --for weak and ailing
men, women and children is Dr.
Williams' :Pink Pills, which speedily
bring back abundant ; health,.
strength and energy, They !have
done this in thousands and thou-
sands of cases as is proved by the
following.. Mr, Ed. A. Owen, Bur-
dett, Alta., ,says :—' `About. two
years ago my •heairth was ' in ' to
wretched ,condition. My whole sys-
tem seemed to be run down and the
doctor se•erned puzzled at my condi-
tion. I had no appetite, exertion
would leave me breathless, and I
was troubled mush with dizziness.
A•ll the medicine I took did me no
good, and I was steadily growing
weaker. My mother urged nue to
try Dr, Williams' Pink Pills; and
before I had taken them very long
I began to feel like -a new man, and
continuing their use, I was restored
to complete health. I now recom-
mend them to all run down in
health as they are the best medicine
I know of."
Sold by all medicine dealers, or
by snail at 50 cents a, box or six
boxes for $2.50, from The Dr. Wil-
liams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont,
e .
VISION.
•
Dr. James L. Hughes, Toronto.
To see is greater than to know,
So I shall pray
That I may see a clearer glow
Of truth each•day.
•
Though I know all that man has known
Blind I maybe;
There is some glory I alone
1 -lave power to see.
My vision,- I., must surely see,
Or fail to do
My work to make the future be
More grandly true.
Faith should be ever turned to sight,
So I shall try
To find new stars to give fresh light
On life's wide sky. .
A Test for Maple Sugar.
A quick way of determining the
purity of maple sugar, which has
recently been put into practical
use, depends upoe the difference in
electrical resistance of impure and
pure sugar. Standards of resist-
ance were determined by sending a
current through a solution of pure
sugar, and then by making similar
tests with sugar adulterated by the
ordinary methods. It is not only a
simple matter to determine whether
the sugar is or isnot adulterated,
but the form of adulterant is also
usually indicated by the degrees of
resistance.
OUR NATIONAL 'DISEARI-
Cansed by Tea and Coffee'.
Physicians know that drugs will
not correct the evils caused by tea
or coffee and that the only remedy
is to stop drinking it. .-
A doctor says:_.:
I was a coffee drinker for many
years, and often -thought that I
could not do without it, but after
years of suffering with ow national
malady, dyspepsia, I attributed it
to the drinking of coffee, and after
some thought determined to use
Postum for my morning drink. (The
effects on the system of tea and cof-
fee drinking are very similar, be-
cause „they each contain the drug,
caffeine.)
"I had the Postum made careful-
ly according to clirectione on the
pkg. and found it just suited my
taste. -
"At first I used it only for break-
fast, but I found myself getting so
much better that I had it at all
meals, and I am pleased to say that
I have been relieved of indigestion.
I gained 19 pounds in 4 months and
my general health is, greatly im-
proved.
"I must tell you of ayoung lady.
She had been in. ill health for many
years, the vital forces low, .with but
little pain. T wrote her of the good
that Postum did me and advised her
to try it.
"At the end of the year she wrote
me that she had gained 40 pounds
in Height and felt like herself
again."
Name given by Canadian Postum.
Co.Windsor„ O'nt. Read "Thio
Road to Welllville, in pkgs.
Posts= eomies in two forms:
Regular. Postliin — mast •be. well
boiled. 15c and 25e packages.
Instant Postum—is a .solub•le•pow-
der. A teaspoonful dissolves quick-
ly in a cup of cold water,. and with
cream and sugar, makes a delicious
beverage Instantly. 30e and 50c
tins.
The cost per cup of both kinds is
about the same.
"There's a Reason" for Postum.
-Sold by Grocers.
New British Chief of Imperial Staff:
The photo shows Lieut -Goin. Sir
James Wolfe Murray, K.C.B., ap-
pointed chief lof the Imperial Gen-
eral Staff in succession to the late
General Sir C. W. H. Douglas, G.
C.B. Born in 1853, the new chief of
the Imperial General Staff was edu-
cated .at Glenalmond, Harrow, and
the Royal Military Academy . at
Woolwich. He entered the Royal
Artillery in 1872. As Br•evet Lieu-
tenant-Oolonel he served in the
Ashanti War of 1875, being in cora-
mend of lines of communication,.
He was commanding lines of com-
munication in Natal during the
South African cannpaign, and was
twice mentioned in despatches.
Colonel in 1899, he was created K:
O.B. in the following year. He was
Quartermaster of India in 1903-4,_
Master -General of the Ordnance
1904-7, and, in command of the 9th
(Secunderabad) Division, India,
1907-11.
BABY'S BATTLES
Baby's battles for he,a1th can be
easily won if the mother will con-
stantly keep at Maned the means of
aiding her little ones when the
emergency may arise. Baby's Own
Tablets should be found in every
home where there are small chilr
dren. The Tablets are a gentle but
thorough laxative. They break up
colds ; relieve 'croup ; prevent con-
stipation; cure indigestion; pro-
mote sleep, and in fact cure all the
minor ills of little ones. They are
Bold by •all medicine dealers or by
mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont. '
COMMANDER SAMSON.
Kaiser Offers $5,0Q0 for Him, Dead or
Alive.
"A flying Captain Kettle," is the
term applied to Commander Samson
by his colleagues in the British Naval
Air Service, for the brilliant aviator,.
with his ' small, well -knit frame and
pointed beard, hears . a remarkable
resemblance to the well-known sea
captain of fiction. His feats in the
present war have so impressed the
Kaiser that he has offered $5,000- re-
ward to anyone who. will bring hint to
Berlin alive or dead.
Commander Samson• is one of our
cleverest naval`. -flyers, .and a . short
time back he dfdr muoh-,to organize:the
Naval Air .Service . of " Great Britain,
which is generally recognized to be
the most efficient in the world. When
the commander first became associat-
ed with this branch of the service it
practically existed -only in the form of
a blue -papered docket resting in. a
pigeon -hole at the Admiralty.. That
was little over a year ago; and now
the British seaplane service is a solid
bulwark between Britain and its foes.
Night and day- its members' are •guard-
ing Britain's shores from invasion by
hostile aircr rft, as well as conducting
transports' across the English Channel,
Commander Samson has•had muck to
do with this rapid growth: In addi-
tion to being a clever organizer and
commander of men, this famous naval
man is a born flyer, and few men can
handle the great 120 horsepower sea-
planes of the navy so skillfully.' These
machines weigh over one ton, and they
have to be landed on ocean rollers at
a speed of sixty miles an hour. On
one occasion. Comander• Samson,
through the reflection of the waves,
misjudged the drop to water and div-
ed underneath it. The force of hitting
the water at high speed crashed him
against the engine at his back, but,
though stunned by the fall„ he man-
aged to fight his way through the
wires and struts which threatened to
strangle him and reach the surface
alive.
His past training as a sailor has
resulted in the commander developing
into a typical "handy . man." In the
early days of the war he forsook his
flying for a short while and tools com-
mand of an armored motor -car. It
was this vehiclewhich s succeeded in
annihilating a brigade of German cav-
alry by dashing into them at a great
speed, mowing many down with the
car itself, whilst the gunners behind
the shot -proof walls accounted -for the
rest. ,
Although bearded, Commander Sam-
son is in the early "thirties," and he
is considered to be the ideal type of
aviator, for the recklessness of youth
in his case is leavened by the expert-
.ence of years.
It costs more to revenge injuries
than to bear them.
"What are you anyway,"
contemptuously inquired Mrs.
Peek during the quarrel, "a man or
a mouse" "A Iran," answered
Henry Peck bitterly, "If 7' were .a
arouse I'd have you up on that
table right now yelling for help."
1She Was In Bed
For Seven Weeks
TER T
TIYEN DODDD?'S KIDNEY PILLS
CURED MADAME BEItUBl'].
Montreal Lady Tells How, After!
''our Years' Illness, She ''Mnd a
Complete Cure For All Dier
Troubles.
Montreal, Que., Feby. let (Spe-
eial)--Madame J. Baptiste Berube,
residing at 1393 Logan Avenue, this
city; asserts that after four years'
suffering from kidney disease she
has been completely restored to
health by Dodd's Kidney Pills.
"I had a paiin in my Weft side
around the heart," Madame Berube
sage in her statement. "I suffered
constantly. with Thea tsehe and back-
atclhe, and for seven weeks I was in
bed with kidney disease and fec,ble-
ness. The doctor could not help ane,
so I decided to try Dodd's Kidney
Pi11s,,
"After the first :box I was grime
better: I continued to use Dodd's
Kidney Pills till now` the, palpita-
tion has left me, and .I am a well
woman, table to do my work. Dodd's
Kidney Pills cured inc and I recom-
mend them to altl persons who suffer
as I did."
Notice how many women are rising
to tell their suffering sisters they
can find relief in Dockl'a Kidney
Pills, !Bhe reason is that nine -
tenths of women's ills spring from
diseased or disordered kidneys.
Every woman whose kidneys show
signs of weakness should use Dodd's
Kidney Pills.
s+ -
Navigation Explained.
The Gurkas, who came front India
to France to take their place in the
British • firing line, were sometimes
very amusing during the long voyage
to Europe. When they had been at
sea two whole days without seeing
land, writes an English officer to the
London Times, they became very much
disturbed in mind. "Without doubt,
the captain of the ship has lost his
way," they said, but they counseled
together and decided at last that all
was well. Some one asked them hew
they reached this decision. They led
him to the stern of the vessel and
pointed to the long wake of water
boiling behind them, and said with a
smile as broad as the greatness of the
discovery, "Without • doubt he follows
the path."
Granulated Eyelids,
onu Eyes inflamed by expo-
sure to Sun, Dust and Mad
quickly relieved by Marks
►rye Remedy. -No Smarting.
just Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye
$alveinTubes 25c. ForBookolfheEyerreeask
Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co.. Chicago
Wellington's, Blunt Phrase.
• • Certainly most of Wellington's re-
marks about the British soldier are
not likely to be. echoed by any com-
mander-in-chief of the present day.
But there is one, uttered to Mr.
Creevey before the battle of Water-
loo, which with all, its bluntness is
thoroughly appropriate to the posi-
tion to -day. They were watching a
British infantry soldier entering a
park at Brussels, "There," said the
Duke, pointing to the man; "it all
depends upon that article whether
we do the business or not. Give me
enough of it, and I am. sure."—
..L' onclon Chronicle.
Minare's Liniment` Cures target In Cows.
Another Rumor.
"Lhave some astonishing news
for you, Maria," said Brown. "In
addition to the war Britain is on the
eve of agreat strike, in which thou-
sands upon thousands of hands will
be involved." "What a dreadful
tiring !" ejaculated his unsuspecting
victim. ' "When is it to take place 1"
'This very night, my dear," an-
swered Brown, gravely. "At mid-
night thousands of clock hands will
point to the hour and it will strike
twelve."
INFORMATION FOR INVENTORS
Messrs. Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis,
patent solicitors, Montreal, report
that 99 Canadians patents were is-
sued for the 'week ending January
12th, 1915, 73 ;of which were granted
to Americans, 18 to Canadians, and
8 to residents of foreign countries.
Ile TTatl.
"Have you ever thought seriously
of marriage, sir ?"
"Indeed, I have; • ever since the
ceremony."
• A. Wind's Fancy.
"The (wind," said Mrs. Tlvickem-
bury, "was blowing at a terrific
Velocipede.", -
EDr 7. ISSUE G•—'15.
4111rib (d Muscle rains
anished b I erulli e
IT CURES RHEUMATISM.
Thousands of people, chuck full of
the joy of living—happy, glad; bright
people, that Nerviline has cured of
their pains, all tell the same wonder-
ful story of its power to drive out the
aches and tortures of rheumatism and
kindred ills. -
"My goodness, but - Nerviline is a
miracle -worker," writes Mrs. Char-
lotte Chipman, mother •of a well-
known family -residing at Mount -
Pleasant. "Last month I was so crip-
pled up with sciatica and muscular
rheumatism as to be almost unable to
do abit of liouseeyork. My joints
were so stiff and the mucles so fright-
fully sore that 1 oven cried at times
with the pain. For years we have
used Nerviline in our family and I
just got busy with this wonderful,
good old liniment. Lots of rubbing
with Nerviline soon relieved my mis-
ery and I was in a real short time
about my work as usual."
No matter where the ache is, no
matter how distressing the pain you
can rub it away with Nerviline. For
forty years it has been curing lum-
bago, sciatica, back -ache, colds, chest
trouble and all sorts of winter ills.
Keep a large 50c. family size bottle
handy and you'll be saved lots of trou-
ble and have smaller doctor bills.
Small trial size 25c. at dealers every-
where. -
AI •
"Doctor" Jellicoe.
When Mr. Churchill told the Bri-
tish House of Commons that the
"health of the sailors was nearly
twice as good as in times of peace
he raised a .cheer and a laugh. He
might have added that - "Doctor"
Jellicoe was very largely responsi-
ble for this happy state of affairs,
for certainly no commander-in-chief
has ever more jealously watched
over his naen than the present com-
mander-in-chief of the grand fleet.
His first care is food supply, sec-
ond clothes, and third recreation;
and Lady Jellicoe seems to be act-
ing as a remarkably energetic mem-
ber of his "staff" on shore to see
that he gets all' he wants in the way
of comforts fur his "ehickens."
The Cigarette and War.
The cigarette has already figured
in many stirring scenes, and even
in the shadow of death it has been
Tommy's close friend. Who will
forget the gallant eornmander of the
Formidable going down coolly
smoking his last cigarette? Who
will forget the sailors lighting their
pipes when they knew their ship
was doomed? "Give us a smoke"
has been the last words of many. a
dying hero. It has brought a smile
to the wounded Tommy and. has
comforted him in pain and hunger
since the war began.
DEATH REPORTED
An old offender that hung on for years.
Nothing touched his stony heart but Put-
nam'e Corn Extractor and out he came.
root, s.em and branch.. All corns cured
just as quickly when Putnam'e is used;
try it, 25c. at all dealers.
KET'i bE 'VALLEY RAILWAY.
Links Up the C.P.R. with United
States Raliways.
What the completion of the Kettle.
Valley Railway will mean to- trans-
continental traffic, both freight and
passenger, was explained by Mr. J.
J. Warren, the president of the
company, who has been spending a
few days' east. For years past. the
Canadian Pacific Railway has been
wrestling with the problem of reduc-
ing grades in the- Rocky Mountain
section, and it is probable that it
willin
continue ue ta>' struggle
for gg years
to come. Even in days when ex-
pension work is necessarily restrict-
ed and curtailed, orders are given,
tor example, to push the work on
the Rogers Pass tunnel to comple-
tion. But with the Kettle Valley
Railway and the Kootenay Central
Railway in operation the Canadian
Pacific will, have alternative routes
from the main line, which should at
once- make much more economical
the handling of trains to the Pacific
Coast. The Kettle Valley line in
Southern British Columbia, which
links up with railways in the United
States, and with the 0.1.11adian Peel -
fie, which has running rights over
it, will make, an admirable alterna-
tive route by way of the Crow's
Nest Pass, as its grades nowhere
exceed 2 per cent., while the Koote-
nay; Central has an average grade
of less than 1 per cent. The 'Kettle
Valley line will also be.- of great
value to the fruit growers of the
Okanagan Valley, as it touches
Penticton' and Snmmerland, and
puts them into direct touch with the
mining districts of Southern British
Columbia. As a scenic route the
line should prove attractive to tour-
ists, as the southern end G•f the
Okanagan Valley; is by fax the most
picturesque portion of this favored
section of British Columbia. By
early summer the full passenger
service grill. be in operation, and
Mr. Warren expects that a large
volume o° the transcontinental tra-
vel will b ; diverted to his line.
Once a :'erryman was asked by a
timid lady in his boat whether any
persons were ever lost in that river.
"Oh, no," said he. "We always
finds 'em again the next day."
Minard's Liniment Cures Oiphteorla
• It's a shame what bad little boys
think, of good little boys.'
TOWN iS SAVED GY RAIBB1.
l Promised German General That People
Would Be Good,'
Rabbi Salorrton Bamberger, of 'Luau-
lreim, a email town near the frontier
of Alsace, says the Hebrew Standard,
has been instrumental in paving the
town from destruction by the Ger-
mans, Some of the inhabitants having
been found guilty of espionage in the
interests of France, the German gener-
al imagining that there were several
more traitors, threatened to burn the
town.
The inhabitants became so terror
stricken that Rabbi Bamberger decided
to make a personal appeal to the gen-
erel to spare the town. Attired in his
canonicals and wearing his Tallis and
Tephillin, the octogenarian rabbi pro-
ceeded to the general's quarters and
offered himself as a hostage *or the
loyalty of the population. He/ 'aid-
ed the general of God's pr se to
Abraham that Sodom would be 'spared
if ten righteous men could be found.
The general was so touched by the
rabbi's earnestness that he decided to
abandon his cruel intention, at the
same time refusing to accept the
rabbi's offer to be hostage for the
townspeople's good conduct.
-.,1.
Up in the Air.
"What are Betty and Jack quar-
relling abclut now?"
"Oh, it's one of those wireless
quarrels, I guess,
"Wireless quarrels? What doyou
mean?"
"Words over nothing, you know."
T 'F
'hen a Woman Suffers
With Chronic Backache
There is Trouble Ahead.
Constantly on their feet, attending
to the wants of a large and exacting
family, women often break down with
nervous exhaustion.
In the stores, factories, and on a
farm are weak, ailing women, dragged
down with the torturing backache and
bearing down pains. .
Such suffering isn't natural, but it's
dangerous, because due to diseased
kidneys.
The dizziness, insomnia, deranged
menses and other symptoms of kidney
complaint can't cure themselves, they
require the assistance of Dr. Hamil-
ton's Pills which go direct to the seat
of the trouble.
To give vitality and power to the
kidneys, to lend aid to the bladder and
liver, to free the blood of poisons,
probably there is no remedy so suc-
cessful as Dr. Hamilton's Pills. For
all womanly irregularities their merit
is well known.
Because of there mild, soothing, and
healing effect, Dr. Hamilton's Pills are
safe, and are recommended for •girls
and women of all ages. 25 cents per
box at all dealers. Refuse any sub-
stitute for Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Man-
drake and butternut.
'Unfair Advantage.
James—The rain falls alike on the
just and the unjust.
•Jones—True, but the unjust roan
is generally provided with the just
man's umbrella.
The 'publisher of the kept Farmer's
paper in the Maritime Provinces in 'writ-
ing to us statics:
I would say tha.t I do not know of o'
medicine that has stood the test of time
like MIINAhD'S LINIMENT. It hat- been
an unfailing remedy in our household
ever since I can remember, and has out- ,
lived dozens of would•+be competitors and
imitators."
His Discovery.
"I find," confessed skimpy little
Mr. Meek, "that I do the house-
work easier and quicker when my
wife is not at home to help me."
MInard's Liniment Cures Colds, Eto.
Oris Way Out.
"•I wish I knew how to get rid of
trouble."
"I'll help you out. I know a fel-
low who's ahs ays looking for it!"
IOW FARES TO THE CHICAGO
EXPOSITIONS.
Via Chicago & North Western Ry.
Pour splendid daily trains from the New
Passenger Terminal. Chicago to San
Francisco, Los Angeles and San Diego
Choice of scenic and direct routes. Double
track. Automatic electric safety signals
all the way.
Let us plan vour trip and furnish fold-
ers and full particulars.
B. 11. Bennett, Gen. Agt., 46 Yonge St.,
Toronto. Ont.
The Cause.
"How did you lose your hair?"
"'Worry : I was in constant fear
that I was going to lose it..'
Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
When a bit of .sunshine hits ye,
. After passing of a. cloud,
And a fit of laughter gits ye,
An' yer spine is feeling proud,
Don't forget to up and fling it ,
At asoul that's feeling blue,
For the minute that you fling it
It's a boomerang to you.
You don't have to be a high flyer
to demonstrate that riehes take
unto themselves tcisess..
OIL S
New and Second-hand, for heating
and power purposes. venter
Flumes. TANKS AND SMOKE
STACKS.-
C OLON lt.IilImiT iliiCSTtD6ilDlrro
Engineers and ShIpbulldern,
001.
HA, ti: NESS
Prices must go up this
eprir.F, as leather es ad.•
vancing rapidly. Buy now
11 before the advance.
CATALOGUE FREE
Gives factory to farce
prices on Haruess,lrar-
ness Parts, Hardware and
Horse Goods.
TheliALLIDAY COMP AN Il Limited
FACTORY uIsTRIBUTons
HAMILTON. - CANADA
Hew Wheelock 18 X 42
Automatic Valve
Complete operating -condition,
flywheel, frame, belt, cylinders
and all parts. Can be shown
running at present time.
Will sell at less than half
cost price.
S. FRANK WILSON & SONS
73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto
rsr
it
d
01,
1
ea
�
OR colds in the chest or sore
throats; for rheumatism or
stiffness; for sprains and cramps.
Capsicum "Vaseline" brings
quirk relief.
CAPSICUM
o '
v
r
e
Trade= k
Mad. in -Canada
It does all that a mustard plaster
will do. Is cleaner, easier to apply,
and will not blister the skin.
There are many other "Vaseline"
preparations—simple home . sonic -
cites that should be in every family
—Carbolatecl "Vaseline," en
antiseptic dressing for cuts, insect
bites, etc.; "Vaseline" Analgic,
far neuralgia and headaches; pure
"Vaseline, for piles, chilblains,
etc., and others,
AVOID SUBSTITUTES, Insist on "Vast -
line" In original packages bearing the name,
CNit513naouoS MANUP'ACTUa1NG CO.,
Consolidated. For sato at all Chemists and
General Stores, Free booklet en request, .
CHESEBROUGl-1 MP'G CO*
(Consolidated)
1880 Cl•HAr3OT AVE., MONTREAL