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Exeter Times, 1915-2-11, Page 3DOWN BY TINE SOUI1lhf SEA bits OL N HAYS • t to 11 • THE MAJU'l'oll: 'rnovLCNOES. • :Items of Interest I?vogn Piaces Lapped by Waves o1 the ' Atlantic. jams Burns, e .C.P,R, brake- man, fell from a moving train at South Bay, N . S,, and was badly injured. The N.B.: Government gave $500 to assist the guides of that provinee in makingan exhibit at the Sports- man's Shw in New York in March, • 'ie Nova Scotia Fruit Growers' Association appointed a committee of fine to take steps to advertise Neve Scotia apples in Great Bri- tain, Burglars made a haul in Oxford, N.S., breaking into the stores of D. G. Woods and A. S. McIntosh. The loss amounted to several thousands of dollars, Mrs, lvlary O'Grady, of Emerson, N.B., died et the age of 98. She left two sons, five daughters, thirty- four grandchildren and forty great= grandchildren, A St, John, N.B. lady offered $500 fol,. Children's Aid Society work, if others would make up the. rest of the $1,500 required to put the work on a permanent basis. At curling, Mkt., Edward Lilly was cutting down a monster birth tree, when it snapped without warn- ing and fell across his body, almost. crushing him to pulp. Giles Smith, who' has just enlisted iri the Newfoundland Reserve, is a. grandson of a British soldier who fought with Wolfe at Quebec in 1760. The 155 years is bridged by three generations. • At St.. John's, Nfld., Francis Meaney, an ex -naval reservist, was found underneath a store, almost frozen to death. Some boys saw his feet sticking out. He. had no home or friends, and had crawled under the store for shelter. . There was, up to, the 23rd• of Jan- uary, a shortage of snow. in the woods of New Brunswick, and gut r- bering operations .are seriously af- fected., One operator had. 2,000,000 feet cut, and : could not move it• owing to lack of sledding. A Nova Scotia skipper, Capt. Publicaver, astonished mariners of Portland, Me., when he took his ship, the W. N. Zwicker, into, that port in a dense fog Without a pilot. Ile was a perfect stranger to the port, too, but made a record that will be long remembered. A party in an auto was going into. Halifax on the St. Margaret's Bay Road, when a ,sentry called on him to stop. The auto kept on and•the sentry shot a hole through a tire, boarded the car and took posses- sion;3rdering the driver to take the car to military headquarters. The collier F•enay Lodge, which loaded at St. John, N.B., for Havre, coaled the fleet of Admiral. Ora - dock before its engagement with the Germans. Before the fleet and collier parted company there was placed on board the latter the per- sonal effects of the officers of the fleet... The collier, after touching at Havre, will deliver the officers' ef- fects to relatives in England. DEN:lMARIK'S EEL FARM. Novel Development Conducted on Zealand Island. A novel Danish development is the eel farm at Neusen, on Zealand Island. A piece of lowland along the Ise Fjord has been converted into a pond of 432 .acres, averaging two feet in depth, and equipment has been provided for pumping into the naturally .somewhat brakish water a supply of fresh water from an ad- jacent canal or of salt water from the fjord. Living mostly in fresh water, the eel has the curious habit of seeking the deep sea, to spawn on .attaining maturity. The eel larvae, drifting helplessly fear from land, develop in- to elvers,. and these seek the fresh water, there to remain until they in turn reach maturity. For stocking the farm, the elvers are trapped as they arrive in the early spring. Through a sluice suf- ficient pure water is discharged to freshen the fjord in the vicinity, and the elvers thus attracted Drawl up the sluice on bands' of twisted straw, provided to paid their passage in the. swift streams. • From the trap at the head of the eluice they are turned into the pond, being first counted. In this way 50000,young eels were captured in 1905, and since then large num- bers have been taken, up •to 300,- 000 in 1913. To get ripe, fully -grown eels for the market, the trop is reversed. Salt water from the fjord is, puanp- ediiA`hto special boxes, and this at- tracts the natured individuals, whose instincts call. to salt water. The output for 1913 was about 13,000 lbs. • ghat About the Deg? The Frenchman didnot like the. look of the 'barking dog barring his way. "It's all right," said his host; "don't 'you know the proverb ; `Barking, clog r` lon't bite yes," said the :Frenchman, "I know ze .provei'be; but ze dog—does he know the proverbe 2" $25G00 FOR A LETTER ®N W 1�E.{: ONE? CAN �r �[ �� ,U YOU Thirteen Prizes to be Awarded in a Letter Writing • Competition Some years ago the pr. Williams' Medicine Co., of BrookvilleOnt,, .a. series of prizes tis resi- dents of the Province of Ontario for the best letters describing cures wrought by the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People. Hun- dreds of 'letters were submitted in this competition and yet there must have been thousands of other users of the pills who slid not avail them- selves of the opportunity to win .a prize. To all these another letter - writing cumpetition e is offered. Thousands of cures through the use of Dr. Williaans' Pink Pills have never been reported. These will furnish the material for the letters to be written in this contest; .There is no demand upon the imagination; every letter must deal with facts and facts only;' The Prizes, The Dr. Williasns' Medicine Co., of Brockville, Ont., will award a prize of $25.00 for the best letter received on or before the lst day of March, 1915, from residents of On- tario, on the subject, "Why I Re- commend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills." A prize of $10.00 will be awarded for the second best letter received; a prize of $5.00 for the third best letter, and ten prizes of $2.00 each for the next best ten letters. The Conditions. The cure or •.benefit from . the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills des- cribed in the letter may be in the writer's own case, or one that has come ender his or her personal ob- servation. More than one cure may be des- cribed in the letter, but every statement must be literally and ab ,solutely true. Every letter must be signed by the full names and •correct address of the person• sending it. If it des- cribes the cure of some person other than the writer of the letter, it must also be signed by the person whose ,cure is described as a guar- antee of the truth of the statements made. The writer of 'each letter must state the name and date of the pa- per in which he or she saw this an- nouncement. Fine writing will not win the prize unless you have a good case to des- cribe. The strength of the recom- mendation and not the style .of the letter will be the basis of the award. It is understood that The. Dr. Williams' Medicine Co. shall have the right to publish any letter en- tered in this contest if they desire to do so whether it wins a prize or not. The contest will close on March 1st, 1915, and the prizes will be awarded as soon as 'possible there- after. Do not delay. If you• know of a dire write your letter NOW: Observe the ,above conditions Care - felly or your letter m.ay _be thrown out. Address all: letters as follows;: The DT. Williams' Medicine Co., Drockville, Out. • Letter Contest Department. a• , GERMANY IS BEATEN. Y. t 1. IVltlltt, I ,. Petr. Believes Raiser's y I±orf) . 're Becoming Weaker. LbideSyd.enhame who is a noted authority on military subjects, con- tributes to the London Times an article 'reviewing the, situation at the end ofesix months of war. "No „reasonable grounds for any reversal of the verdict ,of the past six months," he says, "can be sug- gested. Relatively to the allies the Germans must ' grow steadily weaker in men and material. Every plan of their strategists than come to naught. The surprise which the Germans held in store has not ma- terialized and their vaunted Zeppe- lins are beginning to be regarded .as failures. "The inspired propaganda to which we have grown accustomed is peculiarly significant of the con- fidence in German arms and Ger- man valor having left. Victories have to be invented for popular con- sumption, and frantic efforts are be- ing made to break the solidarity of the entente and to -enlist the United States champions of everything that they were created to prevent. "The ruthless barbarity shown to non-combatants, the deliberate vio- lation of all international conven- tions, framed to ,promote humanity in war; the mendacious reports spread by all available agencies; the violent diatribes directed, itgainst Groat' Britain --even the high honor preferred upon the ob- scure author .of the `Hyman. of Hate' --combine to tell their fate to any student of psychology. "When the leaders of a great na- tion resort to methods of this kind itis a sure indication that they be- lieve their cause to•,be lost. Neither nations • nor individuals villify op- ponents•whom they feel able to over- come, Germxany, though still en- conqueredr is beaten, And if the. ,allies remain steadfast, sparing no effort and grudging no sacrifice, the forces already at work will corn- plete what the Germans' lack of success on land and. sea has be- gun," CAI'T. WILMOT S. NI.CJLOLSOl . Na _al 11ero Always Lands in the Thiele of Things. In the battle in the North Sea the cruiser "Aurora," the first of 'those exceedingly fast vessels which have been completed and which are teem- ed "destroyers of destroyers," was in action with the Gorman cruiser Holbert, and left her in a sulking condition. The captain of the Aurora is Wilmot S. Nicholson, a Sootchxnan whose parents, General and Mrs. Nicholson, live at St. An- drews. As commander of the 'Hogue he was mentioned in des- patches for the. 'seamanlike manner i>) which he took the Arethusa in tow on a pitch dark night after the naval action at Heligoland on Aug- ust 28th, It was in that same spirit of ren- dering aid to a helpless ship that led him to endeavor to rescue the Cressy, when she was torpedoed on September 21st, and when his own Capt. Nicholson, Who seems to find fighting every- where. cruiser, the Hogue, was also sent to the bottom. Captain Nicholson was one of the fortunate ones on that occasion, and soon afterwards he was made commander of the Au- rora. Numerous adventures have been the lot of Captain Nicholson during his 27 years in the navy. He joined in 1887 and two years later was on the Calliope at Samoa, when that vessel alone, by excellent seaman- ship of her captain, ste•am.ed out of, the harbor to safety while seven other men-of-war of other nations were driven ashore. Later he was coinnlander of the Prince George' when she was rammed in a. gale of wind in the Bay of Biscay, and hav- ing to do with the interior econoauy of the ship, he contributed largely to her being saved. In 1909 he gained his captaincy, and for some years held an appointment with the Admiralty. • The high esteem in which he was held t as apparent when he wa!s ap- pointdd to the Dreadnought as Flag Captain to Admiral Sir Charles Briggs, -then commanding the' Fourth-I3attle Squadron. This was his last appointment prior to that on the Hogue. 1 SENSE ABOUT FOOD. Facts Worth Knowing. It is a serious question some- times to know just what to eat when a person's stomach is out of order and most foods cause trouble. Grape -Nuts food can be taken at any time with the certainty that it will digest Actual -experience of people is valfeable to anyone inter- ested.. A -woman 'writes: "I had suffered with indigestion for about four years, ever since an attack of ty- phoid fever, and at times could eat nothing but the very lightest food, and then stiffer so with my stomach I would wish I never had to eat anything. "I was urged to try Grape -Nuts, and since using- rtt I do not have to starve niyseIf 'aky,. `Mere, but I can eat it at anytitn!e and feel nour- ished and satisfied, dyspelisia is a thing of the past, and I ;am now strong and well. "My husband also had an .experi- ence with Grape -Nuts. Ile was put under the doctor's care, but medi- cine did not seem to do him any good until he began to. leave off ordinary foods and use Grape - Nuts. It was .surprising to 'see the change in hint. He grew better right off, and naturally he has none but words of praise for Grape -Nuts. "Our boy .thinks he cannot eat a meal without Grape -Nuts, acrd he learns. so fast, at school that his teacher comments on it. I am satis- fied .that it is because of the great nourishing elements in Grape - Nuts." This .mother' is right. Grape - Nuts food is ascertain and' remark- able rebuilder of body, nerves and brain. "There's a Reason." Ever read the above letter? A new ono appears frosn time to time, They It All Started JA Nova Scotia Case of 11'4D1Tltil) 1 (DI' Wl * Amputations 1IAl't'wa<!ii' . ti ict From cit Cold Interest to ,� / y t in li�ro a Rad diel l DDterest All t (Dime a' i comparatively Small, % ATFORD MAN 1?OUN» 1tELII; . IN DODD'SKIIDNEY PILLS. I1r.: folit. Taylor, Sr., Alter Suffers lag for Two Years, 'felly; of the Benefits Ile Got From Doiltl'. Kidney Pills, Watford, Ont., Feb. 8th (Special). --Mr. Robert Taylor, Sr., a very estimable man living here, is telling his friends that the I1ain in his back, from which 'he suffered for ,some time, leas disappeared, and that he gives all the credit to Dodd's Kidney Pills. "My trouble. !started with e cold," Mr, Taylor states, "and though I was treated by a doctor 1 gut no permanent relief. I had cramps., in my mueeles and stiffness in my jorrgts, my sleep w,as brukcu and unrefreshing and 1 perspired freely wit!li the least exertion. 1 had .at- tacks of rheumatism and eciatiea•, and though 1 tried many medicines i found no relief till I tried Dodd's Kidney Pills, I must say they were a great benefit to me." =' Mr. Taylor's troubles came from his kidneys. The diseased kidneys failed to strain the uric acid out of the blLod and the reselts were as he has stated. Dodd's Kidney Pills put the kidneys in working order, the uric acid was strained out of the blocd, and the truubles went with it. Hatifax wends Out a Messr,ge of Help to Many People. Halifax, r. Iallla;.x N SDec.15—When hen ][) � W intex viewed at her borne at 104 Argyle St, Mrs.Haverstock was quite willing to talk of her peculiarly unfortunate case, s "I was always 'blue" and depressed, telt weak, languid and utterly unfit for any work. My stomach was so disordered that I had no appetite. What I did eat disagreed. 1 suffered greatly from .dizziness and sick heacl- acha and feared a nervous breakdown; Upon my druggist's recommendation 1 used Dr. Hamilton's Pills. "I felt better at once. Every day I improved. In six weeks I was a well woman, cured completely after differ- ent physicians had failed . to help me. It is for this reason that I strongly Purgeill. ' sufferers with stomach or diges- tive troubles to use Dr. Hamilton's Dr. Hamilton's Pills strengthen the stomach, improve digestion, strength- en the nerves and restore debilitated systems to health. By cleansing the blood of long-standing impurities, by bringing the system to a high point of vigor, they effectually chase away weariness, depression and disease. Good for young or old, for men, for women, for children. All dealers sell Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. a• } 1)r. Henri de V'nrigzay of Paris says that in the present war the air ,q b wu 1 1 are in tat ns few ith those of the wars of forty <lr' pelicately " fifty years a>. Sur`georls new 'mire flavoured -- to make no minor .amputations. Out R'ighiy of seven thousand wounded. lnei, concen- fur example, who: were received at Crated; the Vichy Hospital • in November, only six hundred amputations were made—an average of twenty a day. In the Franco-Prussiara War in . 1870, the ratio between the number of wounded.and the number of am- putations was at least forty leer cent. The decrease is awing tc the fact that the emergency treat- ment on the field has been so I %earn improved that the danger of irfeo- 'tion is almost entirely done away !with. Aeeordingto theArngy azrd COAL FAMINE A WAR DANGER Diminished Supply May Be Offet by 1)imin ION Demend. A coal famine in the grip of win- • tee may add its terrors to the situ- ation in continental Europe. The degree of•interruption to eoal min- ing in Germany, Austria-Hungary, France and Belgium is not known outside those countries. The inter- ruption to this essential business is no doubt negligible in Great Bri- tain and. Russia. Coal mining is very likely prostrate in Belgium, but the production of the coal mines in that eountry, 32, 000, 000 tons a year, is not an important factor, es- pecially now that the industrial life in' that country has been annihi- lated. Coal production in Germany - 280,000,000 tons a year --has proba- bly been safeguarded by the syste- matic and thorough German gov- ernment despite the need for able- bodied men as soldiers. Austria- Hungary has a normal annual eut- put of 57,000,000 tons, and the indi- cations by many persons are thought to point to the derange- ment of this •supply. The coal pro- duction of France is 45,000,000 tons a year, and with the need of that country forevery man ,capable, of bearing arms, curtailment of the coal output there may. be .appre- hended. Russia brings' to the sur- face of the earth on the average 23,- 000,000 tons a year. The great coal digger of Europe is Great Britain, where annually 332,000,000 tons are brought from out of the. earth, The slackening of industry in Europe and consequent slump in the demand for coal for manufac- turing, for locomotive driving and ship driving may avert & coal famine and the production may not fall be- low the demand for domestic or house-wareiing purposes in : tlhe countries at war and those neutral countries which in times of peace have depended for coal on the countries at ',wen On the other hand, there may be a stimulation of industry in those neutral countries, and hardship may be experienced in driving the wheels of the factories and mills, Italy is an illustration of this. She educes only 700,000 tons of coal a year .and is dependent mainly on importation. Great Britain, be- cause of overtime work in many in- dustries on account of the war and because of the non -interruption of her. Aver -sea trade, is probably burning more coal than in normal times and has less to export. Coal experts, however, incline to the belief that in Europe the dimin- ished supply will be offset by the diminished demand and that the people of the fighting eountries— those who have been left at home— will not suffer from a coal famine. In the neutral countries dependent on the importation of Boal—Italy,. Greece, Sweden, Denmark and Nor- way and the countries of South America—there may be a demand for coal which will make a terrible pull on the coal shipping capacity of Great Britain and. the United States. are gonulrie, true, and fall Of humeri ED interest. ISSI'I•—'71.�a.. } AVIATORS' NARROW ESCAPES. Flying Against Wind Is An Almost Stationary Mark. Some of the British military avia- tors tors have lately had very narrow escapes owing to the effect of the high winds which have been blow- ing. It must be remembered that if an aeroplane which does, say, sev- enty miles an hour in calm air, goes up in a wind which at high alti- tudes is blowing perhaps at sixty If you have any muscles that are miles per hour, its speed against strained and weak, that are frequently that wind will only be about ten ! subject to rheumatic pains; if yet, miles an hour, whereas if it turnslfuse to go away—get busy with Ner- have any painful swellings that re - and flies with the wind, the wind- viline. This is the very so o v rt f trou- Navy Journal, each French soldier now carries his own iodine, and the British .soldier will soon be follow- ing his example. Every :man. will have in his kit a small capsule of iodine, in a shape so simple to ap- ply that the wounded man or his neighbor caii dress a slight wound instantly. The importance of this -immediate dressing can hardly be overestimated, for small wounds, from bullets, •shrapnel, or frag- ments of shell, if not attended to, are quite as likely to become infect- ed as more severe unes. Painful Si leHHfngis Reduced tiisciiIar Strains Ended Such i':c^plea Now Quickly Rubbed A., y by Powerful Remedy. • speed will be added to its own i ble that Neeviline is noted for curing speed, and it will then be doing, quickly. "I knave proved Nerviline about 130 miles per hour—just as t s'imply a weeder in reducing a hard, the speed of a boat on a river is de- painful swelling. It followed an in- creased or increased when going fury I received in my left leg and against or with the current. caused me great pain and discomfort. When an aeroplane is tang The muscles were strained and sore, against the wind, it thus offers an and no other remedy gave the ease almost stationary mark, The Ger-and comfort I got from robbing on mans of course know this as well Nerviline. There is a soothing, pain- , as the British do, and therefore! relieving power about Ne•viline that er- appntly hold their fire till they I senile reduceddutheswelluched the rant of ing, ing, itl aredestroy- see the machine is flying against ed the pain, It brought my limb back the wind, and as a result they are to perfect condition." The experience now getting very much closer to ! of Mr. Bowen, whose home is in Mid - their targets than they did during' diesex, is not unusual. Thousands are the early part of the war, when the Proving every day that muscular pains weather was practically calm for ; of every kind, chronic rheumatism, weeks at a time. lumbago, neuralgia and sciatica will yield to Nervfline when nathin else . The consequence is that when g British pilots are flying against the can pmoP siblymrcure. Nerviline is an nearly forty years- with great success. The large family size bottle costs 50c., trial size 25c. at all dealers. e: Polar Theory. ""I wonder why so many men seem to enjoy polar exploraotion `"I don't know," replied Mr. Growcher, "unless it is because they like to find a place where they are not perpetually ad - and certain cure. That's Putnanm's. monished sibout catching cold or Use no other, 25c. at all dealers. tracking snow into the front hall." 1' wind, and find the shells Doming too ld ti fa 'ly pain remedyused close, they promptly turn and sail off down wind, and then, of' course, their :speed is so terrific that, it is almost impossible to hit them. Are Hard Times Coming? Yes, for the man that wears tight boots, but his corns are relieved quickly by Putnam's Corn Extractor. No pain Looking. Friend What are you doing for a job? Another—Looking for one. Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. Around the World. Mazie—•tArtie, where are we going our honeymoon? on Artie—Around the world, darl- ing, They're going to ,give it in seven reels at the picture show." The Nova Scotia "Lumber king" says: I consider MINARD'S LINIMENT the best LINIMENT in use. I got my foot badly jammed lately. I bathed it well with MINARD'S LINT MONT and it was as well as ever next day. Yours very truly, T. G. AleMULLEN. A youth always wants to marry a pretty girl because his parents want him to marry a sensible one. Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Eta. Family History, Miss Curley kept a private school and one morning was interviewing a new pupil. "What does your father do to earn his living?" the teacher asked the little girl. "Please, ma'am," was the prompt reply, "he doesn't live with us, My mother suppoets me." "Well, then," asked the teaches, "how does your mother earn her living?" • "Why," replied the little girl in an artless manner, "she gets paid for staying away from father,'" Little Mary's mother Was writing a hitter to het sieter• one day, and Mary, .whe did everything her' mo. ther did, •aa 'erritiet also. As she began sii 7caokerl up and asked : " eniMa,,;, crow; de .you spell `aunt' ---••'the kind: that ain't a bug?". Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. Troublesome Devotion. 'Is she a member of many after- noon clubs f" "No, poor thing, she isn't. She's married to one of those husibands who insist on coming home to all their meals." YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murlae Tit eRemed for Red. Weak, Watery EyesandGranutated Eyelids; toSmertin Just Eye Comfort. Jwrtte for Book of the Eye by mall 9`ree. arurine Tye Remedy co., Chicago. No Doubt. "Carl you, tell Inc which class of people live the longest?" "Why, centen•aria.ns, I believe." Minard's Liniment Cures target In Cows, A young lawyer had been appoint- ed to defend a negro who was too poor to employ counsel for himself. Eager for ati acquittal the young attorney challenged several jurors who, he said, might have a preju- dice against his client. "Are there any others ?" he whispered to the negro. "No, boss," said the de- fendant, "but Ah wants yo ter challenge dant Judge. Ah'se been convicted undah him several times now and Ah think he's got er pre- judice ergainst me." auas WHY WORRY I Choose your variety and your ask your grocer for "Clark's". FARMS FOR SALE, HToro, W. Dnto. AWSON, Ninety Colborne Streit, Tr 'YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL A Fruit, Stook, Brain or Dairy Parrta.. write H. W. Dawson. Brampton, or 90 Ool• borne St., Toronto. H. W. DAWSON, Colborne St, Toronte,, NURSERY STOCK. j TRAWBERRIES, RASPBERRIES, PO. • TATOES. Catalogue free. McConnell& Son, Port Burwell, Ont. MALE HELP WANTED. y HAHHN BAttEER 'ilt 1Th — ALWAYSJ sure employment at ;cod wages; ktt.W weeks required to complete course write for full particulars and catalogue to -day. Meier Barber College, 219 Queen East, Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS, CANCEE. TUMORS. LUMPS, LTU.. tJ internal and external, cured with.. out rain by our hems treatment. Write as before too Iate. Dr. Belli -nen Medical m Co., Limited. Collin:mood. Ont. Grocery BUSINESS IN TORONTO for sale with stare and dwelling, well established, good location. Doing good business which can be large- ly increased. $3,000 will handle. On- tario Realty Co., 20 Yonge St.. Toronto. E �T 1 New Wheelock 18 x 42 Automatic INN e Complete operating condition, flywheel, frame, belt, cylinders and all parts. Can be shown running at present time. Will sell at less than half cost price. S. FRANK WILSON & SONS 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto �$, TEllegiEE=133211P1723EMM....atie THE Scientific Treatment �1 OF BOILER FEED INAT-ERS Comprises knowledge of the water conditions, application of the correct reagents, careful supervision as to quantity awl regulation of treatment. Such thorough, scientific handling of Boiler Water pro- positions, results in the preven- tion of scale, corrosion, pitting and foaming, and consequently a great raving of money. Individual analysis of water from your own boilers by cur chemist will be made free of charge if you are interested in ridding your boilers of scale. DEARBORN CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED. Engineers. Chemists. General Offices and Works: 1220-1230 DUNDAS STREET Toronto, Canada. What Is Your Mirror's Story You can't have a beautiful complexion for the asking. REMEMBER t The ointment you put' on your child's skin gets into the system just as surely as food' the child eats. Don't let impure fats and mineral coloring matter (such as many of the. cheap ointments contain) get into your child's blood l Zara- Bilk is purely herbal, ;No 'pois- onous'coloring. Use it always. 50t. Box at 411 Druggists and Stores. Tradema k COLD CREAM Made in Canada H used regularly will remove blem- ishes, and make the skin smooth, clear and sound. Vaseline hold Cream contains no animal or vegetable fats. It is sterilized in the remaking and deli- cately perfumed. "Vaeeline" preparations are for sale at all Chemists and General Stores. AVOID SUBSTITUTES. . Insist on "Vaseline" in original park - ages bearing the name, CI-IESE ]ROUGH MANTI FACT UR - IN G YR-ING CO., Consolidated. Illustrated booklet free on rrguert CHESEl3POUG}! IVIF'G CO. (Consolidated) ISM CHABOT AVE., MONTREAL,