Exeter Times, 1915-6-17, Page 3CANADA'S LIAR PRISONERS'
4,000 01? THE ENEMY NOW IN.
TURNED. IN CANADA„
Three Austrians to One German—
Kaiser's Stibjects Give Most
• Trouble.
Canada. has on its hands at pre-
vent four thousand prisoners of
war. They are Located ata series
of camps anti stations from Hali-
fax to Nanaimo, 'Where work is
being done the men are quartered
in camps; where the interned aliens
wno living an easier life, they are
:•jca.tted in stations or barracks.
Phe proportion of prisoners on
the basis of nationality is three
Austrians to one - German. Conse-
quently roughly speaking, there
are three thousand Austrians, one
thousand Germans and a few --la
score or so—of Turks., The Austri-
ans give no trouble whatever ;, the
Germans need more looking after.
Very few, if any, ofthe Germans
aro on outside work.' They belong
to the class whose demeanor gener-
ally is such as to ,call for their in-
ternment in barracks. At Halifax,
for instance, and also. -at Kings-
ton, the internments are neartly
all Germans. The canip:s. are -situ-
ated et Spirit Lake, Que., and
lCapaska•sing, Ont., both on the line
of the Transcontinental, at Petawa-
wa, Valeartier, and Arrow Lakes in
the Banff Park. The stations are at
Halifax, Amherst, Kingston,
Brandon, Lethbridge, Vernon, and
Nanaimo.
Austriaus Clearing Lantl.
'WORM( AND WIA1CNBSS
Often indicate Overwork and a
Nervous
Run flown System.
Overwork and worry have an evil
effect on the system 'and often give
rise to nervousness and sleeplessness.
Other signs include a weak back,
headaches and indigestion. In time,
if matters are neglected, a complete
breakdown of the nervous system fol-
lows. On every hand one can observe
victims of this state of nervous ex-
haustion who are at a loss tc know
what to do with themselves, their
nervous, debilitated state having baf-
fled all ordinary treatment,
If you are a victim of exhausted
nerves, if your symptoms are as de-
scribed above, you need Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills because they are a power-
ful nerve tonic. Their strengthening
action on weak nerves is due to the
fact that they enrich and build up
the blood through which the nerves
are fed. Under the tonic influence of
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills all traces of
nervous weakness disappear together
with the headaches, the insomnia, the
feeling of intense weakness and de-
pression of spirits that mark the vic-
tim of nervous ailments. Here is the
proof. Mr. Henry Marr, Port Felix,
N.S., says: "It gives me greatest plea-
sure to testify as to the value of Dr.
Williams'. Pink Pills. When I began
their use I was a physical wreck; my
nerves were all unstrung, I suffered
from frequent headaches and back-
aches, and was almost wholly unfitted
for work. I had tried several reme-
dies without success, when I finally
decided to give Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills a trial. I took six boxes and
they made me a well man."
What these Pills did for Mr. Marr
they will do for every other weak
and nervous man, if given a fair trial.
Sold by all medicine dealers or sent
by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes
for $2.50 by writing. The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
The largest camp is at Spirit
Lake, where 900 Austrians are en-
gaged in clearing land for a model
farm; at Kepuskasing about 700
are occupied with similar opera
tions. A number of families of the
interned aliens are 'accommodated.
It is stated at headquarters here
that a good number of these peo-
ple plan to take up land and colon-
ize the district after the war. At
Petawawa and Valcartie•r, the Aus-
trians are emlployed in drainage
works or camp improvements while
at Arrow Head National Park
works are in progress.
About 600 Germans are in bar-
racks at Halifax, 250 at Amherst,
and 300 at Kingston. The prisoners
of war are dealt with under the
regulations prescribed by The
Hague Tribunal. They .are served
with food on the same lines as men
at the front. Where they work, an
allow=arice of 25 cents a day is made.
If doing nothing, they do not get
this. -
Strict Reg - nations.
The regulations are strict, and
for violation of any of thein, yard,
on degrees of punishment ,are pre -
e ibed. The severest of these is
s'oiitary confinement and a. diet of
bread and water. In rare oalse•s, it
is said, has it been necessary to
take any such rigorous steps. The
discipline on the whole its excellent.
Any difficulty originates from Ger-
mans, who are mare restive, more
given to intrigues and trouble mak-
ing, though nothing very serious
has been attempted. The average
Aust`ii:,, `a. plods ahead, apparently
not wd' ryang much about the war
or its outcome. Some of them aver-
red that they did not know the war
was on until rounded up.
`„Situation in Raoul.
If all the suggestions for intern-
ment were retained, the war pris-
oner population wound be ,swelled
tremend•oulsly. As it is the situa-
tion is well in hand, the more dan-
gerous element, as well. as other's,
are in camp or btarracks. The re-
presentations that mare ought to
be interned, come mainly from
municipalities pressed by problems
of unetn loym'ent. The solving of
this problem must come in ° some
other way than by 'wholesale it-•
ternments.
Delayed Letters.
During the Siege of Paris in 1870,
the German army kept such a
strict guard round the city that it
was impossible for those within to
send mail or messengers to the out-
side world. In order to circumvent
their watchfulness, and to get dis-
patches to the French lines down
the S,etine, an army officer mace an
ingenious ,contrivance. .It pias an
air and water -tight zinc receptacle
for letters --which could be thrown
into the river •and carried by the
current to the French lines, where
it was caught in fish nets. The
system, according to Novellen-
Scrhatz, worked .successfully for a
time.
The Germans eventually discover-
ed the new .carrier .aystem, and in-
beaoepted the messages with nets of
their own. That, of ,00,urse, p:ut an
end to the natter, and when the
siege came to an end, the necessity
•1' any such system came to an
end, too. Ten years later,. a fisher-
man who was casting his net in the
Seine? drew up with the fish a curl -
o110 piece of hollow metal. He open-
ed it with his knife, and found 7'n it
nearly three hundred sealed letters,
dated 1870. Ono of the containers
at least had enloalped the German
nets by being stopped by some ob-
struction in the river, aid had re -
Maimed .there all that tame, Tuve
letters, were turned over to the pos-
tal authorities, and after their long
sojourn ,at the bottom of the Seine,
they were delivered—a decade, late
—to as many of the persons as
Cbulld be found.
THE HUMAN BRAIN.
s By Chas. M. Bice, Denver, Colo.
of the soos,es are found in both
hemispheres 'of the brain, , and
their functions are -congenital, that
is from birth, the seats of the facul-
ty of lepeecll are .found only in one
ofthehemispheres,
1 two
Hence, if these are damaged
after aniddlo life, the hoes is i•rire-
Ine,diablte, and the unfortunate vilc-
ti,tli can never apetak again, though
the corresponding spot in the other
hemisphere be lett intact.
Another strange and remarkable
feature has been discovered, viz.:
that this 'endowsne.nt of the one
hemisphere of the brain is not con-
genital, or beeau,se of its superior-
ity over the other, but because it
was the hemi,spphere that related to
the most used hand of the child. In
all right handed persons it is in
the left brain that the sp,etech gen-
tees are located, and vice versa
with left- 'sanded persons
This demonstrates that brain
matter duels not originate speech,
for otherwise both hemispheres
would have their respective speech
centres. Either heanisphere is
equally good for speech providing
the hand dexterity, right or left,
begins early enough in life to use
it for bhat purpose.
It follows that self -education be-
gins largely with the ,strvtohing
forth of the hand, and is quite dis-
tinct from the elementary functions
of sensation and motion, which are
congenital.
Ou•r ability to lcnow and to re-
cognize what particular objects
mean, and what our senses report,
is not congenital', but is :acquirecl
by us, in the .shine way as speech is
acquired.
It has been disoovere,d that in the
visual space, or area, is a place
Which if damaged, renders the per -
Sen unable to recognize members
of his own family though he can
plainly ,see them. The same is true
if a certain spot be injured in the
brain corresponding to hearing:
the person is unable to distinguish
between the report of a gun and
the bark of a dog. He hears a
noise only, and to him they are all
alike.
The word "Brain," is of modern
origin, and does not occur in the
Bible. The reason is that during
the centuries the Bible was being
written no one suspected filet this
silent and secluded organ had any-
thing to do with thought or feeling.
In those days it was oonsicltered
saeriligions to dissect the 'human
body; nevertheless, it was subject-
ed in rare instances, to the scalpel,
and the existence of the brain,
though they knew not its functions,
was well known.
With the Hebrew's, the heart was
the chief seat of the soul, while ,the
mind •was supposed to be, located in
the kidneys, and all of the tender
emotions were assigned to the
bowels.
When Jeremiah denounced hypo-
crites, he said of them they ha,d the
Lard in their mouths, but not in
their .kidneys; and the Psalmist
says that "His reins (kidneys) in-
ebruot him in the night season's,"
and again, "The Lord trie& the
heart and the kidneys."
Hence, we even .find in English
speech to -ds' the use of the ex-
pression "Two fellows of the same
kidney."
All this sounds strange to mod-
ern etars,but ilf, was the anierosrope
that drove 'animal spirits out of the
body. •In 1833 it was applied by
Ehrnberg, who was the first to dis-
cover the nerve cell in the spinal
ganglion. But Dr. Paul Broca, in
1861, was the first to definitely lo-
cate in the brain, a particular lo-
cality on the cortex for a'rticula'te
speech.. This he located in the
lower and posterior convolution
called the Third Frontal, now
known as "Broca's Convolution."
This was no mere unverified
scientific theory, but the fact was
actually demlo,nstrated by injury in
that part of the brain, and cense-
quentt loss of speech from paraly-
sis. Verily, it would' ale:eim from
this, that the Phrenologists had
some foundation for their "bump-
ology," only they slid not locate the
speech faculty in Broca's territory,
but inside the eyes. They were
possibly correct in hold±` g that the
mind doles not act as a unit, but is
divided into various facultilee,'
:Broca's discovery led to further
investigations, until now the whole
of the c,artex surface off the brain
is mapped out, corresponding to the
different faculties of the mind.
We now know that two other ele-
ments of simple human ,sp,eeeh have
each their distinctand separate
brain localities -,one place devoted
to receiving words thtrough brei ear,
damage tb which is 'rallied word-
deafnelss, though not dead other-
wise; and also a distinct place in
the brain for woods received
through the eye, as in, reading,
damage to which causes the unfor-
bunate victim to b,ecomte wholly
illiterate, though he may •sea and
recognize all other objects of !sight
as perfectly as ever.
It has been found that each of
the five especial senses has its anla-
tomdoal seat in particuter portions
of the brain respectively, and cen-
trally located are to bo found the
*teats' which control the voluntary
mcoven ,terms of every anus lie, este. Of
course, this .its all In the enter
layer of the brain, or torte ---gray
matter.
But it still, more astounding disc
covet? hes been =AS:in Brain-
oiogy.. Whole the anatomical ,eats
THE EARLIEST GUIDE BOOK.
Instructions for Tour That Would
Occupy 3 Years and 4 Months.
The earliest guide book written
in the Englisch language is "In-
structions for Forreine Travell," a
duodecimo published in 1642 by
Jamal Howell.
"As was natural in tdvose days,"
says the London Chronicle, "How-
ell assumes that any one travelling
on the Continent for pleasure was
able to 'etertaine a Cooke, a La -
quay and some young youth for his
Page to parley and chide witiball,
whereof he shall have occasion
enough, and to get some faire lodg-
ings to keep house of himself ; but
sometimes he may frequent Ordin-
aries, for it will much breake and
embolden him.' "
The instructions to provide for a
tour through France, Italy, Spain,
Germany, Belgium, and Holland,
"all which may be clone completely
in three years and four months,
which four months I allow for itin-
ary removals and journeys, and the
those years foe residence e in pieces." In mothers.
The sketch, made from a gown de-
signed by Mme. Hillquist of the Fash-
ion Art Leagu, is made of novelty
organdie, with sleeves of net, and side
panels of net in the little coatee. The
three-tier ruffle is pointed, the sleeves,
the collar, the jabot effect at the neck,
all give "point" to the general effect
of points and angles.
Embroidered batiste is used as a
foundation for the skirt, and salmon
color chenille rosebuds ornament the
upper ruffle of the tier. The girdle is
crushed apple green silk knotted in
the front and with a • big bow at the
back.
Fortunes of War.
Will quickly euro
any Sour Stolid
Relieves Fulness After Meals,
('
When I was working around the
farm last winter, I had an attack of ia-
Jlamination," writes Mr. E. P. Daw-
kins, of Port Richmond. I was weak
for a long time, but well enough to
work until spring. But something
went wrong with my bowels far I had
to use salts or physic all the time, My
stomach kept sour, and always after
eating there was a pain and fulness,
and all symptons of intestinal indi-
gestion. Nothing helped me until Ie
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 I am well—no pain, no sour
stomach, a good appetite, able to di-
gest 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. All dealers,
or the Catarrb.ozone Co., IKingston,
Ont.
There's "Point" to
The Point Gown
The "point gown" is what a design-
er of smart summer wear showed me
the other day when I asked to see
some of the new things, for summer—
some of the models that may be ac-
cepted as correct for mid -summer
days.
And the point of the fashion news
she gave me is that the gowns we'll
be wearing in the dog -days will be
just as cool and bewitching as the
-Dolly Vardens worn by our grand -
meant something more than a
month's skip through Europe.
'I
SHE .QUIT
But It Was a Hard Pull.
' It is hard to believe that tea or. cof-
fee will put a person in such a condi-
tion as it did this woman. She tells
her own story:
"I did not believe coffee caused my
trouble, and frequently said I liked it
so well I would not, and could not,
quit drinking it, but I was a miserable
sufferer from 'heart trouble and ner-
vous prostration for four years." (Tea
is just as injurious as coffee, because
it, too,contains the health -destroying
drug, caffeine.)
"I was scarcely able to be around,
had no energy, and did not care for
anything. Was emaciated and had a
constant pain around my heart until I
thought I could not endure it,
"Frequently I had nervous chills
and the least excitement would drive
sleep away, any any little noise would
upset me terribly. I was gradually.
getting worse until finally I asked
myself what's the use of being siek all
the time and buying medicine so that
I could indulge myself in coffee?
"So •I got some Postum to help me
quit. I made it strictly according to
directions, and I want to tell you that
change was the greatest step in my
life. It was easy to quit coffee be-
cause I now like Postum better than
coffee.
"One by one of the old troubles left
until now I am in splendid health,
nerves steady, heart all right, and the
pain all gone. Never have any more
nervous chills, don't take any medi-
cine, can do all my house work, and
have done a great deal beside."
Name given by Canadian Postum
Co., Windsor, Ont. Read "The Road
to Wellville," in pkgs.
Postum comes in two forms;
Postum Cereal—the original form—
mug be well boiled. 15c and 25c
packages.
Instant Postum—a soluble powder
—dissolves quickly in a cup of hot
water and, with cream and sugar,
makes a delicious beverage instantly.
30e and 50o tins.
Boll kinds ate equally delicioua
and cost about the same per cup.
"There's a Reason" for Postum.
„ -sold by Grocers.°tiir,Ward?'tt I:WWteoiz Used h
Girl (reading letter from brother
at the front)—"John says a bullet
went right through his hat without
touching him."
Old Lady—"What a blessing he had
his hat on, dear."
Instant
Relief
Paint on Putnam's,
Corn Extractor,
night, and corns feel'
better in the morn -1
ing. Magical t h el
way "Putnam's"'
eases the pain, destroys the roots,'
kills a corn for all time. No pain.
Cure guaranteed. Get a 26c. bottle of
"Putnam's" Extractor to -day.
4.
She Was Sure.
The Girl--"Fred—tell me, would
you love ,me devotedly if my father
had lost all his money?" Fred—
(anxiously)—"But he hasn't lost it,
has he?" Tho Girl—"No." Fred—
"Of course I would, you silly child."
The Girl—"Oh, Fred, I ,was sure you
loved me for myself alone!"
A Thoughtful Old Soul.
"My dear, I've an idea," said old
Mrs. Goodart to her caller. "You
know we frequently read of the sol-
diers making sorties. Now why not
make up a lot of those sorties and
send them to the poor fellows at the
front?"
BRITAIN'S DEBT TO INDIA.
Speaking at a meeting of the In -
dive), Section of the Royal Society
of Arte, London, the Marquis of
Crewe said it wasimpo,ssable for
us to reiterate too often our Irene
of the debt we owed to the people
for every" of India for the part they were Usk-
%) rt
and
ya11ood
�
Shoe Dealeips
ra, 4y' c1' egi..diwii ei
eix+-
o 1��ieh�det nt�} on
''hat is "1)eath Tick"'t
Superstitious people, even in this
enlightened .age, regard the tick-
ing sound of a certain kind of
beetle with terror, believing that
it "clicks the hour of death." Tlie
name "de.adlwlatch" has been ap-
plied from time immemorial to the
sound made by this ,small insect as
it burrows in wood,
The beetle in question is an in-
sect of the genus anobium, there
beingseveral varieties, to all of
whicthe name deathw•ateh is pop-
ularly given, as well as to their
peculiar sound. The body of this
insect is firm, not more than on:e-
fourth of an inch long, its head is
rounded, the thorax arched. Itis
said to make its sounds generally
in the night, but probably this
idea has ariseii from the fact that it
is 'only in the silence of the night
that the slight sound becomes au-
dibl,e.
Anyone who has watched through
the night hours by the bed of one
who is dangerously ill can readily
understand how the faint tick, hick
within the woodwork of the wall
came to be regarded as a sound of
evil omen. In order to make this
peculiar noise the insect draws in
the antenna and intermediate legs,
and, resting principally upon the
median legs, strikes its head
against its :support by a sort of
rocking ,notion.
The deathwatch beetle has the in-
variable habit of feigning death
wihen seized or disturbed. The sim-
ulation is so persistent that waheah
iimmersed in water, or even in al-
cohol, the insect remains perfectly
immovable, and will allow itself to
be burned alive rather than betray
itself. The tick made by the death-
watch resembles that made by tap-
ping the finger nail upon the table
—so much so that the insect may be
led to recommence his sounds by
doing this.
•
MINARD'S LINIMENT is the .only
Liniment asked for at my store and
the only one we keep for sale.
All the people use it.
HARLIN FULTON.
Pleasant Bay, C.B.
By gleans of the microscope, the
very faintest sounds, such as the
fallof aeather or a very delicate
»ieee@ o tissue -papery may be die•
iinetly beard. I
Reminders.
"Cuttem, the tailor, reminds me of
a clergyman."
"He doesn't me; he reminds me of
a bill I owe him."
ing in this ,stuupeiidous world strug-
dle. We could not expect the or-
inary sinall trader or cultivator
in India, whose affairs at ordinary
times ds fended in their vicissitudes
upon the caprices of steason or mar-
ket, to regard with complete indif-
ference ever result which might be
brought home to flim -personally
through this remote and gigantic
convulsion. It was, therefore, the
Government's most serious duty
to attempt as far as possible to
temper to these people such results,
It was the Government's hope that
it might be possible throughout this
long (struggle to continue the policy
so far pursued of not imposing any
fresh taxation upon the people of
India. It was exceedingly difficult
in the oircunnstances of Indiato
devise any system of raising fresh
revenue by taxation which did not
hit the very poor classes. His Lord-
ship .also pointed out that anybody
in India with capital to invest,
who would take a share, large or
small, in a Government rupee loan.
was not merely assisting the devel-
opment of the country, but was po-
sitively assisting in the prosecution
of the war. The limitations impos-
ed.upon the issue of capital in our
market here were founded on the
fact the maintenance of British cre-
dit stood only seeond in its effect
on the prasecdtion of the wax to
the continual supply of men and
munitions. Therefore the investor
in India who would come to the
front in this way was doing a pub-
lic service.
4.
THE ONLY MEDICINE
FOR LITTLE ONES
Baby's Own Tablets are the only
medicine for little ones, being guar-
anteed by a government analyst to be
absolutely free from injurious drugs.
They are pleasant to take, act mildly
but effectively, and always relieve
constipation, indigestion, colds and
simple fevers and regulate the stom-
ach and bowels. Concerning them
Mrs. Donald Ettinger, Georgefield, N.
S., writes: "Baby's Own Tablets are
the only medicine I can get that al-
ways do my little ones good, and I
always keep them in the house." The
Tablets are sold by medicine dealers
or by mail at 25 cents a box from The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ont.
4.
In Authority.
"Your boy said that when he got
to town he was going to tell some
of those city folks where they got
off."
"Well," replied Farmer C'•orn-
tossel, "that's what he's doin'.
He's conductor on a street car."
Zeep Minard's Liniment in the house.
Law Takes Its Course.
"Prisoner, have you anything to
say?"
"Only this, your honor. I'd be
mighty sorry if th' young lawyer you
assigned to me was ever called upon
to defend an innocent man."
LOW FARES TO THE CALIFORNIA EX-
POSITIONS VIA CHICAGO & NORTH-
WESTERN RY.
Four splendid daily trains from the Now
Passenger Terminal, Chicago to San Fran-
cisco, Los Angeles and San. Diego. Ohoice
of Scenic and Direct Routes through the
best of the West. Something to see all
the way. Double track. Automatic elec-
tric safety signals all the way. Let us
plan your trip and furnish folders and
full particulars. B. H. Bennett, G.A., 46
Yonge St., Toronto, Ontario.
Expert in Silver Linings.
Hall—Blythe is a pretty optimis-
tic character, I hear.
Wall—I should say so. If he fail-
ed in business, he'd thank Heaven he
had his health; if he failed in health,
he'd thank Heaven he had his busi-
ness, and if he failed in both he'd
say there was no use having one
without the other.
Not a Ford Joke.
Mrs. Ryan—"They do be afther
sayin' that old man Kelly has got
locomothor ataxy."
Mrs. Murphy—"Well, he's got the
money to run wan av thim if he
wants ter, but I'd rayther have a
good horse any day."
The Persians used not to punish
murder if it was a first offence.
TOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOId
Try kimr4le Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery
Eyes ondd Granulated Eyelids; No Smartie ---
just Eye Comfort. J Write, for Book of the Eye
y ree.il Free. Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
Real News.
"I notice that you publish a verse
from the Bible every day," said the
caller to the editor of the newspaper.
"Do your subscribers ever read it?"
"Should say they do," replied the
editor. "Why, it is news to most of
them."
Looney With Love.
"Miss Butey is not at home, sir.
Will you leave your name?"
"Do you think she would take
it?"
Is the. 'best, reedy
kno ••for isarab`
beat~ ries les, 'eczema;
sore feet, stings an
;Misters. A skin food .
Druggists and tStrres.- 50c.r
What a Million
Mothers„Avoia
,
.mi, - 1
oe tban a Million f
mothers have Intuitively
known the dengers of polson-
ousSydestroyors. They'have
know that such preparatienec
RCntAi7t ar8eA Cin deAdiy Itan•6'.'
titles. They have re lfzett tti4
peril to little ohiidean that ac-
companiesthe use affix pole Qua. ',
cote
But forfrom thosearegent who havetssue not
learned of these dangers, we
of ,..
the Child Betterment Magazine.
which comments upon thirty-five
cases of children being Poisoned
last year:
"The danger to children is
great, andthe dangerto adults
is by no means inconsiderable."
In the December issue of the
Michigan State Medical Journal,'
an editorial on the same subject
cites 47 cases and goes onto state:
"Arsenical fly poisons aro as
dangerous as the phosphorus
match. They should be abol-
e ished. There aro as efficient
and more sanitary ways of
catching or killing flies. And
flypoisons, if used at all,
should not be used in homes
where there are children, or
where children visit."
L 1r17V'bW LEFO'
"The Saaitaryp PlyoDeatroyer"
Noa-eoisoeoue
Catches the Germ With 11re Fly
Made in Canada by
THE O. & W. THUM CO.
Dept. 2b3 Walicervillo, Ont.
American Address:
Grand Rapids, Mich.
(50)
Different Now.
"I used to think that she sang
beautifully."
"Now ?"
"Now with the warm weather here
and all the windows open it's dif-
ferent."
ifferent."
Minard's Liniment Lnmberman's Priend
Easily Achieved.
Mr. Jackson—De doctor dun tell
me, Chloe, dat if Ah ain't careful
Ah'll have to be spendin' twenty-
four hours a day in bed.
Mrs. Jackson—Huh! Dat would
jest be addin' a couple ob hours s
day to yo' regular occupation!
Ask for Minard's and take no other.
In the United States census of 1870
a record was obtained of the father
of a family who had named his five
chidren Imprimis, Finis, Appendix,
Addendum, and Erratum.
FARMS FOR RENT.
TF LOOI{LNO FOR A FARM. CONSUI/B
J. lie. I have over Two Hundred on my
list, located in the best sections of On-
tario. All sizes. H. W. Dawson, Brampton,
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
9 �� ANTED LADY OR GENTLEMAN OF
good standing in every neighbor-,
hood of Ontario and Quebec Provinces, to
obtain lint of reliable people who are in-;
terested in earring money during these
war times on purchases of staple. mor-
chandise selected from illustrated rata.'
logue of established Montreal Depart-,
mental Store. To the right persons -we
offer attractive remuneration. Write im-
mediately. giving name, residence, exper-
ience, with references. Character is el
more importance than experience. Ad-
dress P. O. Box 443, Montreal.
MISCELLANEOUS.
CANCER. TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC.. i
CANCER.
and external, cured with- ,
out pain by our home treatment. Writs .
us before too late. Dr. Hellman Medical •
Co.. Limited, Collingwood. Ont.
America a 5,.odud 4 Cycic Marine Motor"
C,•eto. 4 Cyitndor 13 to ao H.P. 1001100t 0a1101.
Icy. Silent Operation. No vlbralton. 00000
like the llnaM Mown Car engine, catromalr
eeonomlcat on fuel. Used .a atnndard 000 ,-
` mnn1 h oVer 60 00r cont. Of the ,torld•t
'�Y len 00000 to 6700 drpen ung On2 ibp"mOntucet.
�T�Gr""-""� 00004TH P00. CO. Dept,' hint Mlrk.
CUTTE 'a & FOSTER
UT AND
BOAT T S
Ford owners write for
our catalogue.
SEARS -CROSS
Speedometer Station.
179 Queen Street West,
TORONTO, ONT.
d
Freight Petpadd to ala Railway Station int'
ntario Iterhgth 16 F�. are a rte.!).
111 ll �' Depth' 1 F1, s _tn. ANY 110,TOR l'1TS. '1
l" "dii iiia p"rices' "oil re' uest. Get 'cite Quota
$yec"T1iei-P No. tB env t mm�erolal and Pleasure uacbe.0
'01* -- "The Penetang Line Cb
oats and Oanooe.
THE GXDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, P t`NETAi`vG4 C.
t1trreofans. Ia. ._... ISSrrE 21i- '15..