HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-5-20, Page 3FROM BONNIE SCOLANQ,
N OTES OF INTEREST FROM UJ$
BANKS, AND MUDS.
What Is Going On in the Highlands
and Lowlands of Auld
Scotia.
Holyrood Palace le againopen to
the public.
Bellshill contribution to the War
Relief Fund alnoun'tta to $i1,b95,
It has been decided to hold Cane
nock annual horticultural .show as
newel.
•Owin.g to thee. war Grangemouth
Cricket Chili has been left with
only two players,
The lie i p
1cln�ent has taken place
of. Mr, William Bruce, Postmaster
at Stonehaven, after °42% years
service,
The Edinburgh Tramway Com-
mittee have recommended that au'
experiment he niado with self-pro-
pelled cars.
.'.t the annual meeting of Kirk -
hall Bowling Olub, Caxnbusltang, it
was decided that no nvatoheus be
played this season.
The death -ice announieed of Lady
Muriel Boyle, younger daughter^ el
the 'sixth Earl of Glasgow, at the
age of 42 years.
Rossleigh' s Garage, Edinb urg{h;
was the scene recently of an out-
break of fire in which a stock of
over 200 new cycles were deistroyed,
An interesting Greenock person-
ality has pleased away in the person
of Mr. Robert Iserr, who completed
his 100th year last May.
The military authorities have de-
clined the offer of Glasgow corpor-
e•tion to convert the Kelvingrove
A *ritaGalleries into a military hospi-
tal.
Mr: David Ritchie, who has been
a director of the Union Bank of
Scotland for over thirty years, has
resigned his seat on ,account of ad-
vancing age.
A demonstration was held recent-
ly on Glasgow Green protesting
against the high prices of food and
fuel. A resolution was adopted
eliding en the government to take
charge of :supplies and moans of
transit.
The lace factory at Newm•ilns be --
longing to Stewart, Moir & Muir
has been destroyed by fire. The
loss is roughly estimated at about
$150,000.
The death has occutrred of An-
drew Scott Mutable, burgh officer
of Kirkcudbright, as the result of
a fall down a flight of stairs within
the town hall.
Ninety per •cent. of the sons of
the Scottish manse are .slhown by am
official roll to be serving in either
of the two .arias of the forces of the
British Crown.
The death has occurred tilt Crieff
of Dr.' Ge urge Duncan of Keraig,
Loekailsh, in his 84th year. He
served as medical officer for the
combined parishes of Lochalsh,
Kentail and Glenshiel for more
thw half a century.
s1. BsTITt T1i FOR PICRIC ACID
Engineers Announce Discovery of
New Explosive.
Military engineers 'announce the
discovery of an explosive substance
which, they assert, may be used as
a substitute for picric acid. The
price of picric acid has become pro-
hibitive .es aresult of speculation.
Picric acid is the finalprodn•ct of
the direct nitration of phenol, and
is usually prepared by the nitra-
tion of the mixture of phenol sul-
phonic acids obtained by heating
phenol with concentrated sulphuric
acid. The more important picric
powders 'are melinite, the Fr'en'ch
explosive, believed to be a rnixture
of fussed picric acid and gun -cotton;
lyddite., the British service explo-
sive, and ,ehim'ose, the Japanese
powder, both supposed to be identi-
cal with the original melinite;
Brugere's powder, a mixture- of
fifty-four plaits of ammonium pic-
rate and forty-five parts of salt-
patre; 'Desi.gn•o11•e's powder, cam -
posed of pota,esiumi picrate, salt-
petre and charcoal, and emnmen:site.,
WOMEN'S WEAKNESS
A.Nb HEALTH PERILS
Anaemia. Comes :so Gratefully
That the Victim. ScarceirRe-
. - allies the Hoke the Trot.**
Has
Upon Her 'Until
Almost in a Decline.'
1Von iAn'e work is more weaaran,
than man's because it 'la s•ta ilei$, t
every waking boar. There in no.
eiglht •.or nine hour dray.., for,,' the
breadwinner's wife, and often eisa
toils under the greatest diffieudity
because her ,strength is below what
it should be, Me woinaan who is
indoors all day is very oiften cares
less about. what site eats and does
not keep her blood up to the mark..
It becomes thin and poor, which
makes ihe,r weak, headachy, tired,
breat(hletss and )liable to pains in
the back and Irides, the scourge of
her sex. New blood will do won-
ders for the woman, .who, is tired
out, who aches all over when she
rises in the morning and feels un-
aoeountably depressed. She can
gain new blood now, and drive
away the pains and aches and
tiredness. if 'she will take Dr. Wit
hams' Pink Pills, They have work-
ed marvels for other women and.
will do the ,sain'e for you of you are
weak, hired, dapre,ssed or suffering
from backaches or siileaches. Mrs.
Elmer .0. Taylor, Calgarry, Alta.,
says "I wits so run down with
anaemia that I could 'scarcely walk
without aid. I was mob able to
leave the house. I had no color,
no appetite, and was constantly
troubled with hetadaachtels, dizzy
sp'e'lls and a general d�ieinclination
to move about or do anything. My
friends did not think I would get
better, and even the doctor was
apprehensive. I was constantly
taking medicine, but it did not do
me a pal'twale of goody: One day a
friend asked me if I had tried Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills, and, I decided
to do so almost las a forlorn hope,
After I had used afew boxes theme
was a decided change fox the bet-
ter, and people began to ask what
I was taking, the change was so
noticeable. As I continued the
Piles my color came bta,ck, I could
'eat my meals rie.gula ily, the head-
aches and dizzy spells ceased, I
gained in weight .and took a new
interest in life, my cure being
complete. I have told many sickly
women and girls what Dr. Wil-
liam& Pink Pills did for me and
urged them to take them and
shall continue to do so., knowing
what a, splendid medicine they
are."
Every weak and tailing woman
who will follow Mrs. Taylor's ex-
ample ,and give Dr, Williams' Pink
Pills a Lair trial will find new
health and'strength through their
use. Sold by all medicine dealers
or sent by mail at 50 cents a box
or six boxes for $2.50 from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,. Brock-
ville., Ointt.
Chalmers' Patriotism.
When Napoleon was threatening
Great Britain Thomas Chadme: s
(who was then parish minister of
Kilmany) joined a corps fornied to
prevent the Fremeh from landing at
St. Andrews. He held two offices in
the •corps—those, of Lieutenant and
Chaplain. And 'from his pulpit he
delivered war sea -amass more impas-
sioned than many that are heard to
day. "May that day," he cried,
"when Bonaparte ascends the
Throne of Britain be the last of any,
existence ; viay I be the first to'as-
cend the scaffold he erects to ex-
tinguish the worth and Ispiritof the
country; may my blood mingle with
tihie blood of patriots ; and may I
die at the foot of that altar on
which British independence is to be
the victim."
IiEE]P YOUR BABY WELL
s
T1
0
0
Even when thawed rand cooked is
frozen beats have been found to
M
c
m
c
others can keep their little
nes happy and healthy by the coca-
ionse al uof Baby's Own Tablets,.mere is no minor ailment of little
nes that the Tablets will not cure,
and above all they are absolutely
ale and positively no lnju.ry can
result from their use. Concerning
them Mrs. Henri Huard, Kingston,
nit. , writes : "There is •n o medicine
know of Iso good for little ones as
Baby's Own Tablets. They have
ertainly been of great slervice to
e." The Tablets are 'sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
ants as box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
.14
A young couple were observed as
soon as they entered a railway car-
riage, and immvediately put down
as a bridal pair. But they were re-
markably ,self-possessed, and acted
like odd anarried folk, so ttiiait after
a :short tilne the etcher pesscrigelre
began to doubt their belief, after
all. As the train moved out, how-
ever, the young man rose to remove
his overcoat, and a shower of rice
fell out. The passengers :smiled
broadly. But even that did not
affect e•youth,
who alsosmiled,
d
and, turning to his self-possessed
partner, remarked ,audibly "My
goodness, May, I've put on the
bridegroom's overcoat 1
Some New Facts:.
contain a poison deadly to live
stock.
More than 24,00,000,000 tons of
coal remains to be taken from the
fields in Wales, according to geo-
.logists.
A newknife invented for the use
of eleotricia+ns is equipped with a
gauge indicator that measures the
size of wire.
Twenty-five to thirty-five pound's
of 'soot for every inhabitant in Lon-
don falls during the course of a
year, according to careful esti-
mates. u
B•ritislt oncluras is COW in com-
munication with the rest of the
world. A wireless •station has been,
estab lished .et Bellize,
.e t'
7
Want znt a safe candlestick s,r•c1c Y Drive
small n,ail into the bottom of a.
candle to . make it float upright,
then place it in a tumbler of water.
The highest temperature ever
known in a human being was re-
oo,rdred in the. case of an Italian
recently, A victim of lung disease,
hie temperature was 138.
The copper mines of C ,ypr ups•, in
ancient time amsong the richest in
the world, allay be reopened.
Yy'Oris OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU
Try Murillo Rye Remedy for Red Weak, Watery
tries and Gritnulated Wends; o 6 ...
�� . Red,
martin
fugt^1Oye Comfort, ) Write for Book of the Eye
bbymall Free. Marine rips Remedy Co.,Chicago.
The Americans want but little
L -fans Bulows 1
MONEY IN LIVE STOOK..
The Canadian 1!`arnler Will Benefit
•'ily the War,
Mr. Randolph Bruce, a well-
known rancher in Western Canada,
has just returned from iihismpae with
many interesting opirnioea as to the
effect that the war will have on the
Canadian farmer. The immense
slaughter of nettle for the avlinriets
in the field will, he thinks, very
shortly cause a great increase in
the prim of beef, and those ,farms
els who are raising cattle will make
more money even than those who
are raising wheat at a ,cbodlar-fifty
per bushel, Every .effort .should be
made to raise eattttL•e for the market
in as barge. quantities and as quick-
ly as postsible. Mr. •Bruce agreat
believer in alfalifa .as the most satis-
fectory food for the rapid raising
of cattle for beef,
In this connection it is interest-
ing to note that flattening young
stock is becoming 'very popular in
the United States where the mar-
ket for beef is increasing so rapid-
ly that, more study has been paid
to methods of increasing produc-
tion.
In the early days cattle were
kept on the ranges from theele to
five years. Experience, however,
has shown. that the, us,e of thor-
ough -bled bulls incl the consequent
improvement in the quality and
maturing ability of merlloet cattle,
together with heavier grain feed-
ing, has made it possible to put
jest as much beef on the market
at from 13 to 20 months olio,. Ex-
perts are of the opinion filet with
the continued improvement of
breed stock it will be possible to
market at an even earlier date.
Among the ,advamttages• of earlier
finishing of •c•attle, the following are
mentioned by some of the, leading
cattle hien : Firstly, younger cattle
make heavier 'gains of beef on a
similar amount of feed than old
cattle,; Secondly, the money invest-
ed is turned fester, being turned
over in eigihtteen months,, where
formerly it took from three to five
years; 'llhirdly, heifers under two
years old well as readily as steers
and finish more rapidly.
As the census statistics prove
without ;sthadtow of doubt, the value
of beef cattle in Canada is steadily
increasing. In 1901 there were
3,167,744, valued at $54,197,341, or
an average of $17.12, taking the
good with the, bac). In 1911 there
were 3,939,257, valued watt $86,278,-
490, or, an average of $21.90, an
decrease of $4.78 per head. M=r. H.
S. Arkell, Assistant Live Stock
Commissioner for the Dominion
Government, says that never in our
statistical history have prises at-
tained so high a figure, either for
cattle on the, hoof or for meat in
the butcher elhop, as to -day. What
it will be next year, when the full
effect of the war is felt, no one can
tetld.
Wit and Wisdom.
In reply to .a suburban Sunday
School teacher a Ismail boy stated
that "an epistle is the -wife of an
apostl•e!"
Beide-to-be—"Dae ye ken, Jean,.
I've saved twa potion's." Brides-
maid -to -be —` `Leezie, I'an dootin'
he's talin' ye for yell sillier."
Brown—"Jones is certainly tied
to his wife's apron-lstrin'gs." Smith
—"Well, in these days, he is lucky
if he has a wife with apron -
strings'."
"Before my marriage I told hes
all any past life. Don't you think I
showed a wonderful courage1"
"Yee, and ss. still more wonderful
memory."
Caller (viewing the baby)—"Do
you think he is going to resemble
his father 7" Mother—"I shouldn't
be surprised. He keeps me up even
She, (sentimentally)—"I was en-
gaged to him three years—three
beautiful, happy years—end them it
all elided." He—"I suppose you
married him then. i"
No one is likely to live for one's
own country if one is ignorant of it
ignorant of its: glorious history,
of its :heroes and heroines, of, its
present perils and its great posssi-
bilities.
"Remember this, young man," he
said, "only lunatics' and rattle-
brained idiots are certain of any-
thing now -a -days. Wise men hesi-
tate." "Are you quite sure of
that?" "Absolutely certain,"
A clumsy carver once sleet a
goose into a lady's lap. His apol-
ogy was better than his carving.
"Am, madam, how potent your
charm's are; they attract not the
living but also the dead!"
Mrs Ryan -"They do be after
sayin' that old man Kelly hays got
loeomothor ataxy." Mus. Murphy
—"Well, he's got the Money to run
wan :av thine if he -wants ter, but
I'd raythern have a good thlorsle any
day.'
"Many a damsel wtho i5 a kitten
with men is acat with women,"
says Mr, Gelett Burgess. "The cus-
tody of the child used to keep des
co•rdant ma,rrued couples, together,
but now," eays a cynic, "it is the
automobile,"
A person entered an inn with. a
dog and an Irishman asked what
breed :t wlas, The otvaner looked
the questi'one'r insolently up and
down, and then' replied with a
drawl:—"It is a crows between an
ape and an Irishman" "Faith,
thin, we're both related to the
beast," was, the reedy retort.
Assassin's were first heard of in
Persia about 1090.
Says They ate
The Very Hest
Iii, j. A. RILL TELLS vain
DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS
DID FOR DIM.
He Suffered for Four :)Month~ from
Kidney Trouble but round Quick
Relies: When He Used Dodd's
Kidney .Piles.
Sixty -Nine Corners, Ont., May
17th (Special). I. know that
Dodd'e Kidney Pills lane the very
beet of medicines." Such is the
statement made by Mr, J. A. Hill,
a well-known resident, of this place.
"I was sick for six months,' Mr
Hi 11 continues. "My troubles
staribed frown a. cold that seemed to
settle in lny book. My joints were
stiff and I had cramps in my mus-
cles, my appetite was fitful and I
was heavy and 'sileerpy after metals.
I had a, bitter taste an my mouth
and I was always. tined tend ner-
vo•tte
"I used four boxes of Dodd's
Kidney Piles, and the great benefit
they did neve its whet makes me say,
'They are the best of niediciites.' "
• Dodd's Kidney Pills cure sick
Kidneys, and Mr, Hill's symptoms
are the symptoms of Kidney dis-
ease, consequently he found quick
relief in Dodd'is Kidney Pills. They
always cure Kidney dieeeste.
Rules for the Baby.
Keep the ibaaby's bib dry if you
have to make sixty changes an
hour, Give him not a scrap of meat
before his third birthday. Save
him from the kisses of friends.
Keep the sun out of his face in his
carriage. Keep his head above •the
clothes in the cradle, that he may
net breathe his own breath over
again. Lay him down to sleep on
his side, and frequenttly change
from one side to the other. Train
him to keep his mouth closed by
gently pushing it shut while he is
sleeping. The air is filled with
germs, .dust and dirt -L -elements
that are not good for human lungs.
Never bandage him too tightly,
especially in the morning after his
hath and before his meal. Con-
sider how you would feel if, after
being (bandaged as tightly as you
could well support it, you were
then to eat a Ihearty breakfast.
.j.
A Firm Reliever in Destiny.
A sergeant of a, Scottish regiment
is a firm believer in destiny. No
amount of argument with his more
skeptical comrades can shake his
belief in the slightest, he invariably
alesding the controversies with the
rather illogical assertion that
"when aman'•s last day comes it
comes." The evening:. before the
battle at Mons, when preparing to
take a stroll, he was noticed by a
corporal, a persistent opponent of
the destiny theory; to quietly slip
a revolver into his pocket. "Hel-
le 1" shouted the corporal, who .saw
a chance of ridiculing the sergeant,
"what are you taking the revolver
for 1 It'll no' save ye if your time
has oome." "I ken that," replied
the sergeant after a moment's hesi-
tation, "but, ye see, I micht fa'
in wi' a German whose last dray
has come."
INSOMNIA
Leads to Madness, If Not Reme-
died.
"Experiments satisfied ane, some
5 years ago," writes a Western wo-
man, "that coffee was the direct
cause of the insomnia from which I
suffered terribly, as weld its ex-
treme nervousness and acute dys-
pep•siia." (Tea is just als injurious
as coffee, because it, too, contain's
the health -destroying drug, caf-
feine).
"I had been a coffee drinker
si.noe ohildh•ood, and did not like to
think that the beverage was doing
me all this hartni. But it was, and
the time came whien• I had to face
the fact, and protect myself. I
therefore gave up 'coffee, abruptly
and absolutely, and adopted Pos-
bum for my hot drink at meals.
"I began to note improvement in
my condition very soon after I took
oln Polstutm. The change proceeded
gradually, but surely, and it was a
matter of only a few weeks before
I found myself entirely relieved—
the ne vousnesas passed away, my
digestive arpperatuss was restored
to normal efficiency, and I began
to ,sleep restfully and peacefully,
"These happy conditions have
continued during all of the 5 years,
and I am' safle in. saying that I owe
them entirely to P•ost.um, for when
I began to drink it I oeased to use
medicines."
Name given by Canadian Po•stum
Co.,. Windsor, Ont. Read "The
Read tta Weiiville'," in pkgs.
Post=comes in two forms:
Postum Cereal-•tJ,le original form
-must he well boiled. 15e and 25c
packages.
Instant Postnm—a soluble pow-
der—dissolves quickly in a cup of
hot waxes', allele, CG i•un crG'aai51 and
sugar, makes ar delicious ,beveratge.
instantly. 30e and 50e tine.
Both kinds are equally delietous
and •c'ost labouat the sante per cup,
"There'e a Reason" for Pest nns
—sold by Geooers.
WEA
rat
EVERY 5P®
A 1 DRECREATIO
BOLD Etir A.I.L GOOD Sa 0E DEALERS
WORN BY EVERY MEMBER u OF THE FAMILY•
°kms:.,
Germs Like Girls.
"Fathers and mothers, lucky
enough to have both boys and 'girls,
know how clean the girls keep
them.selvets, end how the boys dis-
regard dirt. From earliest child-
hood the little girl's hands and face
are washed, and she ,evades dress
stains, combs her hair, s,nd tries
to look nice. But every normal
boy, up to the age of fourteen ,rev-
els in dirt, and looks forward to
the Saturday night bath with vir-
tuous contempt or dread. But buys
do not suffer infeetioue diseases as
much as girls. This was brought
out in an investigation made of
8,900 children of cull ages and sexes.
We requested the mothers them-
selves to report what diseases their
children had had. Girls had had
more infections than boys of the
same age. This goes to support the
modern -view that dirt and disease
have no necessary relation. It is
not the dirt boys revel in that does
harm. It is the germs in other peo-
ple's bodies that should be dread-
ed. The girls encounter infection
mors than the boys because they
are more sociable, meet other chil-
dren more, and associate with them
more intimately than boys do .
'F
When a Woman Sure:'is
With Chro!1'e 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 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 poinsons,
probably there is no remedy so suc-
cessful as Dr. Hamilton's Pills. For
all womanly irregularities their merit
is well known.
Because of their mild, soothing, and
healing effect, Dr. Hamilton's Piles 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.
Retroactive.
Doctor: : "You have nervous dys-
pepsie, same as Brown had. His
wars caused by worrying over his
butcher's IWile. I directed him to
stop worrying."
Stranger : "Yee, and now he's
cured, and I'vee got it. I'm his
butcher."
Before 1854 the duties of the Sec-
retary of State fox the Colonies
used to be carried out by the Sec-
retary of State for War.
So powerful is the jaw of the
swordfish that it has been known,
in attacking vessels, to pierce
through copper sheeting and oak'
planks to a depth of ten inishee.
Had ship's anchor fall vn any knee and
leg, and knee swelled up and for ex days
I oould not move it or get help I then
started to use MNAJID'S LINZIS1F.rNT
and two 'bottles cured me.
PROSPER FERGUSON.
Seventy-two thousand oriminad,s
were executed during the thirty-
eight yearns' reign of Henry VIII.
Of the many kinds of catarrh, one
is 'entirely •due to the pollen el daf-
fodils,
Minard's Liniment teambermais'a Friend.
Buildings in Japan are very
slight in structure because Japan
is more subject t0 earthquakes then
any other oountry.
The term "capital puni"shmtent"
refers to the obsolete punishment
of beheading, which affected the
head, or "caput," of a person,
ED. 74 ISSUE 21---'15.
WAR ON FLIES.
Elimination of Breeding Places
Is Urged,
Elimination of breeding places
for flies instead of waiting for thlem
to grow large enough tobe killed.
with ;swatters, is urged,
"The dirty, dangerous, disease -
spreading fly already has made its
appearance in small numbers' ,anal'
as the warm weather advances will
be with us in countless millions.
The fight of extermination should
be etarted now.
"The most •effective way to fight
the dangerous house fly is to des-
troy the pieces wherein it breeds.
When you swat the breeding place
you are e+:watting flues by the whole-
sale. If only a few persons Lis ai
neighborhood are careless about
this important matter, the snnmanaun-
ity still will be pestered with flies.
It is a great deal easier to remove
the conditions that cause the flies
than it is to try to destroy them.
with swatters and poison after they
are with us."
Here is a fly -killing mixture
which is recommended:
"To a pint of milk and water of
equal parts add two table,spoonfuls.
of formaldehyde. Place in shallow
plates with a square of bread in
the centre of each plate, The bread
furnishes places for the flies to
alight, and es it absorbs the mix-
ture the flies will feed from it more
readily than from the edges of the
plates. It is a good plan to place
palates cuntaining the poison just
outside the kitchen door, where the
flies usually swarm to get in. The
flies seem to like it and it kills them
quickly."
34
Corns Instant
Relief
Paint on Putnam's
Corn Extractor
night, and corns feel
better in the morn -I
ing. Magical t h el
way "Put,nam'a"'
eases the pain, destroys the rants,'
kills a coin for all time. No pain.;
Cure guaranteed. Get a 25e. bottle ort
"Putnam's" Extractor to -day.
.5
Too Bad Murder's Forbidden.
"How much are those mousse -
colo red shoes 1"
"Seven dollars."
"Why are they so high"
"European war."
"I thought the Suedes were neu-
tral 2"
Out Out
Ask for Minard's and take no other.
A True Prophecy.
"My doctor told me I would have
to quit eating so much meat."
"Did you laugh him to scorn i"
"I did at first; but when he
sent in his bill, I found he was
right,"
Minard'e Liniment used by Physiaiaae..
"One of my daughters. has tonsi-
llitis," exclaimed Mr. Growler,
"and the other has sprained her
wrist." "That's hard luck." `;Yes;
nothing seems to work out in the
way it ought to. The one who
sprained her wrist sings, and the
one with a sort throat plays the
pilin."
What a Alitlion
Mothers, Avoid
Mare thea a Million careful
nzotilers have utuftively
known,
destroy, Tts heyknown that snail preparations.
contain arsenic in deadly quan,
titles. They have realized the
peril to little children that se,
companlesthouse offiy poisons.
But for those who have not
learned of these daggers, we
quote from a recent issue of
the Child Betterment Magazine,
which comments upon thirty-five
cases of children being poisolied
last year;
"The h e dan er to children is
great, ndthe anger to adults
Y lneonsiderable.
To the December issue .of the
Michigan State Medical Journal,
f'eiiu . an editorial on the same subject
cites 47 oases) and goes onto States
"Arsenical fly poisons are as
dangerous as the phosphorus
!' l4 match, They should be abol
!shed. There are as etfioient
and more sanitary ways of
catching or killing flies, A ad
ley poisons, if used' at all,
should not be used in homes
where there are children, or
where children visit,"
A'
TTieSanita yPIyDestroyer"
Non -Poisonous
LEFOOT
Catches the Genn .Ff./WA the F1y
Made in Canada by
THE O. &W. THUM CO
Dopt.283 Walkerville, Ont,
American Address:
Grand Rapids, Mich,
(SS)
The man who marries a cook
takes long chances. Cooks have a
way of quitting their jobs on the
least provocation,
Seep Minard's Liniment in the house.
The Simplon Railway Tunnel is.
about twelve miles long.
SEED POTATOES.
t1 ARLY IRISH COBBLER POTATOES
.1 .14 specially selected and Government
inspected for eeed. Only limited quantity.
Price, One Dollar per bushel f.o.b. Bramp-
ton. Also Connoisseur's Pride and New
Snow, two excellent new potatoes. Pries.
Two Dollars per bushel. Special prices
for large quantity. Cash must accom-
pany all orders. E, W. Dawson, Bramp-
ton.
�QTORT31 WESTERN GROWN SEBI1
1_11 Potatoes. Extra Early S•oneadion.
New Early Short Reason. Manitoba Wore-
der or Whits EIephants. Five pounds One
Donor postpaid. T. E. Bowman, Aides,
syde, Alta.
NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE.
flROPIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB OF-
floes for sale in good. Ontario towns,.
The most useful and interesting of azo
businesses. Full information on applicoa
tion to Wilson Pu:blisning Company, 73
West Adelaide St., Toronto.
MISCELLANEOUS.
ANCER, TUMORS, - LUMPS, ETC.,
!LI internal and external, cured with- '
out pain by our home. treatment. Write
us before too late. Dr. Bell:aan Medical
Co., Limited, Coll!ngwood, Ont.
OUTTEN & FOSTER
ArncHd'x .•,• 4 C M Ni tor'
Cyble..aCy ndet• to 7t FLA $IRhffrt aQlYni•
+.lay .+eUen1 opent ovlb loo, Qontrola
- Uke tbo pacer Motoi'CNcr tln M.q, �amremob
, economical an trail; Viced or�,Nandard a ul .
Op ,went byaFta Wliar %ou'i' thuese
•Iead,np boat 9 d i$1t ? 'l on rcbue.t.
•peO to rJcgd ;calla; oitooglpmam
iRp etn,bifQ... . ,0q• .._ ?®atroitt 31ch.
Ford owners write for
our catalogue.
SEARS -CROSS
Speedometer Station.
179 Queen Street West,
TORONTO, - ONT.
yes a:.>:...—r..---•.,,
Cay e 8 iffs5 Motor oat
THE PETERti"OROUGH LINE.
If any canoe can give you satisfaction, it is a "PETERBOROUGH."
Always and ,ever the acme of service, model, strength and fin-
ish. Over fifty styles aid sizes. Write for catalogue. The latest canoe
is the Peterborough canvas covered. Ask for illustrated folder. Skiffs
for the popular Outboard Motors, Power Launches, all sizes and pow-
ers. Get folders telling all about these.
i'p@E PETERBOROWJI CANOE COMPANY, LIMlTEP,
PETERBOROUGH, ONT.
"Over$tOrn" V eo±'to: e pi➢
Motor of �4. a
Freight Prepaid to any Railway Station in
Ontario. Length 15 Pt.,n.
Beam a Ii't, � I ,
Depth
� 1 Ft. 6 In. ANY MOTOR FITS.
•S eclfioatian Na, 2i3 g'1vin� engine ;risco oa ro; uaoi. Get *Ur .quotations
p -
:an --"The Penetang Line" Commercial and Pleasure d.1 unio1ieati, Row
iroats and Canoes,
T1113 GII LBY BOAT CO.0 LIMXTE1. PBNETANG CAN
l