HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-10-7, Page 3From the Ocean Shore
BITS OF' NEWS %'RUM TUB
MARITIME PROVINCES..
Items of Interellt I''rom Places
Lapped By Waves of the
.Atlantic.
At St, John, N. B., a man was fined
$100 or three months for the "pocket
peddling" of liquor,
August showed a decided increase
in the Cuctoms returns at St, John,
NB., a gain of more that,' " $90,000
over August last year.
Lorenzo Rennison, of Albert Mines,
N:$., committed suicide by cutting
his throat. Worry over business
troubles led to the act.
• The Patriotic Fund of Fredericton,
N.B., is being spent at the rate of
$2,500 a month. There is only enough
lef,r one month more.
ut Barry, of Wireless
Gar-
rison
at Newcastle, N.B., was shot
and badly injured when a revolver in
his pocket accidentally exploded.
Ata meeting held in Fredericton,
N.B., Bishop Richardson and other
leading citizens came out boldly in a
resolution asking for conscription.
C. .D. Clayton, Marysville, N.S.,
had his left forearm -so badly mangled
between the cylinders of a card ma-
chine that it rendered amputation of
the limb necessary.
Joseph McVay and Sons, of St.
Stephen, N.B., have been awarded
the contract of dismantling the Sus-
pension Bridge over the Reversible
Falls at St. John.
At Gagetown, N.B., the Kincaid
House, an old landmark, was torn
down, after standing for 100 years.
In one of the rooms was found an
old Bible dating back to 1811.
Five cents was all that remained of
a money package ' containing $500,
which formed part of the registered
.contents of the mail bag stolen from
the mailroom in the rest house at the
Union. Depot, Moncton, N.B.
At Canterbury Station, N.B., three
young men were charged with steal-
ing liquor from John Murphy. They
were let go for lack of evidence, but
Murphy was then charged with 20
offences against the Scott Act.
At Antigonish, N.S., Lewis Mc-
Lean, an innocent bystander, was
shot at a wedding celebration where
guests were discharging revolvers on
the streets. The bullet went through
the fishy part of his shoulder.
Notwithstanding the financial de-
pression, Amherst, N.S., has added
this year to. her already large area
of `permanent streets, ,16,000square
feet of concrete streets, 12,000 lineal
feet of curbing and gutter, and 2,500
square feet of concrete sidewalk.
W. B. A. Ritchie, K.C., has been
appointed chief recruiting officer for
the Maritime Provinces with the rank
and pay of a lieutenant. He will re-
main in Halifax for three months de-
voting himself wholly to the business
of stimulating recruiting.
At the 62nd annual meeting of the
Medal Society of Nova Scotia,
held recently, the public were warn-
ed that "many patent medicines con-
taining large amounts of alcohol are
neither foods nor stimulants as ad-
vertised." They also recommended
that alcoholic liquors should only be
used under advice.
Premier Clarke, of New Bruns-
wick, received a letter from Prof. T.
C. Copeland, of Harvard, containing
a contribution to the Patriotic Fund.
The letter said the contribution was
"for hospital, relief or whatever will
give most aid and comfort to my
friends and neighbors of St. Stephen
in the field—or families left at home.
I wish I could do more. God save
them, and England, and the allies."
The New Glasgow News says a
story has come to light of a German
agent who toured Cape. Breton some
time ago, holding up to the ' manu-
facturers pictures of glowing fur-
naces and giant industries which he
would build with capital at his dis-
posal and in this . way he secured
much valuable information relative to
the resources and presentindustries
of Cape Breton. After satisfying
himself he "blew away" and . was
heard tell of no more. It . is now
stated that he was a German spy.
AUSTRALIAN FAUNA.
Foxes and Feral Cats Have Done
Much Mischief.
The native wild animals of Austra-
lia are being rapidly exterminated.' In
the Scientific. Australian recently, Mr.
eeeer. H. Le Souef_wrote that foxes and
feral cats—both these needlessly •in-
troduced into the country—have done
much of the mischief. "The fox," he
remarks, "will in course of time over-
run the whole of Australia,—it has,
overrun half of it already,—and • in
consequence all ground game . .
will suffer severely. The loss to Aus-
tralia cannot well, be computed ' in
cash. Besides native game, the
fox destroys young lambs, ' turkeys,
geese, dicks, and other "domestic' poul-
try. r:I%emoving„the timber and scrub,
drainil'g the swamps, and putting up
miles of wire fences have led even
more quickly to the destruction of
many of the native animals. Wire
fences alone have killed thousands of
emus and kangaroos, which, -ince they
have been prevented from making
their customary migrations in search
of water, have been doomed to ' die
wretchedly of thirst.
r
reT
GREATLY
DISCOURAGED
ED
OVER BABY'S I.LNESS
Mrs. J9sdt au Gats 'e Notre Dame
e
...
des Bois, Que., writes: "Last autumn
ourbaby was very sick and we were
greatly, discouraged. The doctor did
not seem, able to help him, and we be-
gan using: Baby's Own Tablets, which.
soon made him a fat, healthy child,"
Thousands of other mothers give
Baby's Own Tablets the same praise.
The Tablets regulate the stomach and
bowels, break up colds and simple fe-
vers, expel worms, cure colic, and
snake teething easy. They are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 25
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
THOSE STRIPS OF COLOR.
What the Narrow- Ribbons Mean on a
Soldier's Coat.
When a man is in khaki it is im-
possible for him to wear _the medals
he has won, so a small piece of the
ribbon on whichthe medal is suspend-
ed, and which differs in color, accord-
ing to the decoration, is worn on the
left breast above the pocket of the
tunic. By the colors of these scraps
of ribbon a civilian who knows any
thing about decorations can tell what
medals a soldier is entitled to wear,
and incidentally what campaigns he
has been through, for every survivor
of a campaign is awarded a special
medal at its conclusion.
The Crimean veteran would wear a
ribbon with a broad, light blue stripe
between two narrow yellow stripes.
It might he mentioned here that on
every medal -ribbon the stripes are
vertical.. The man who fought in the
Indian 'Mutiny would wear three
white and two red stripes placed alter-
nately, in the Egyptian campaign
three blue and two white stripes
placed alternately, in the Matabele
campaign four orange and three blue
stripes, in the Sudan a broad yellow
and broad black stripe divided by a
narrow' red stripe, and in the South
African campaign, for which there
are two medals, two red, two blue, and
an orange stripe, or a green, white,
and orange stripe, or both.
The former—the Queen's medal—
was awarded by King Edward soon
after his mother's death in 1901, and
the latter, known as the King's, in
1902, to be worn in, addition to the
Queen's by men completing eighteen
months' service in South Africa dur-
ing the war. The Sudan medal was
awarded by Queen Victoria in 1898 to
the men who carried out the opera-
tions under Lord Kitchener, which led
to the re -conquest of the Sudan.
Apart from the foregoing 'medals,
there are a number of special decora-
tions. The ribbon accompanying the
Victoria Cross, the most coveted of
these special decorations, in plain
crimson for the army and blue for the
navy; the Khedive's Star ribbon is
plain blue; that of the Long Service
and _ Good Conduct medal, which was
instituted by William IV., and is
awarded after eighteen years' service
in the British army, and carries with
it a gratuity of $25 on discharge, is
plain red; that of the medal for Dis-
tinguished Conduct on the Field, which
carries with it a gratuity of $100 on
discharge, or an increase of 12 cents
a day on the pension. is two red and
one blue stripes, while of Roberts'
Star, which bears the words, "Kabul
to Kandahar, 1880," has one red, one
yellow, and one blue, and two white
stripes.
A DOCTOR'S EXPERIENCE
Medicine Not Needed In This Case.
It is hard to convince some people
that tea or coffee does them an injury!
They lay their bad feelings to almost
every cause but the true and unsus-
pected one.
But the doctor knows. His wide
experience has proven to him that, to
some systems, tea and coffee are in-
sidious poisons that undermine the
health. Ask him if tea or coffee is a
cause of constipation, stomach and
nervous troubles.
"I have been a coffee drinker , all
my life, and when taken sick two
years ago with nervous prostration,
the doctor said that my nervous sys-
tem was broken down and that I
would have to give up coffee.
"I got so weak and shaky I could
not work, and reading an advertise-
ment of Postum I asked my grocer if
he had any of it. He said, 'Yes,' and
that he used it in his family and it
was all it claimed to be.
"So I Quit coffee and commenced
to use Postum steadily, and in about
two weeks I could sleep better and
get up in the morning feeling fresh.
In about two months I began to gain
flesh. ' I weighed only 146 pounds,
when I commenced on Postum and
now I weigh 167 and feel better than
I did at 20 years of age.
"I am working every day and sleep
well at night. My two children were
coffee drinkers, but they have not
drank any since Postum came into the
house, and are far more -healthy than
they were before." Name given by
Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont.
Postum comes in two forms:
Postum Cereal—the original form
-must 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.
30c and 5,tc' tins.
Both'" ]cit}i s.,axe. equally delicious.
and cost Omit, the same per cup.
"There's -x Reason" for Postum.
—sold by Grocers.
APTITUDE FOR LANGUAGES.
Russian Woman Knew Only Five, Bu
Knew Them Well.
Writing, of the aptitude of the Rush
signs for acquiring languages, Rich-
ard Whiteing tells in the current num-
ber of the Bookman of a woman he
net in that country:
"I knew of one,” he says, "who had
four, languages, besides her own, at
her tongue's end—English, French,
German, Italian. She spoke in them
and wrote in them. And she had
something to write about—a basis of
scald Studies, in history, literature,
,
and the commerce of life. She thought
in then:, wrongly enough sometimes,
as I thought in my turn, but that was ,
merely matter of opinion. The thesis'
was there, coherent and four square,
with the power to hold her own in
it. She was obsessed with the idea
of a superior caste of mind, to which
she and her intellectual: set belonged,
With all this she was a most accom-
plished musician, and had filled the
Queen's Hall more than once for con-
certs given in her own name.
"I have a certain hesitation' in say-
ing all this, because it may seem
founded on mere recollections of my
reading of prodigies of the past, our
own Admirable Crichton or the Con-
tinental Pico della Mirandola. As a
lad, Crichton is said to have known a
dozen languages. I wonder in how
many of them he could have deceived
the native. Gilbert Hamerton used to
say that no more than two can ever
be acquired in that perfection.
"The peculiarity in this lady's case,
as a, Russian, was that she was one
of many, only less richly endowed.
And I . hasten to add, still with the
purpose ofsaving myself, that the
union of qualities precluded the mark-
ed bias for one that makes for suc-
cess."
Joints Quit Aching
Soreness Goes Away
NO MORE STIFFNESS, PAIN
OR MISERY IN YOUR BACK
OR SIDE OR .LIMBS!
Wonderful "Nerviline" is the Remedy.
A marvelous pain : reliever.
Not an ordinary liniment—just
about five times more powerful, more
penetrating, more pain -subduing than
any thick, oily or ammonia liniment.
Nerviline fairly eats up the pain and
stiffness in chronic rheumatic joints,
gives quick relief to those throbbing
pains, and never burns or even stains
the skin.
"Rheumatism kept my joints swol-
len and sore for ten years. My right
knee joint was often too painful to al-
low me to walk. In this crippled tor-
tured condition I found Nerviline a
blessing. Its warm, soothing action
brought relief I had given up hoping
fbr. I rubbed on quantities of Nervi -
line and improved steadily. I also took
Ferrozone at mealtime in order to
purify and enrich my blood. I am to-
day well and . can recommend my
treatment most conscientiously.
(Signed) C. PARKS,
Prince Albert.
Not an ache or pain in the muscles
or joints that Nerviline won't cure.
It's wonderful for lumbago and
sciatica; for neuralgia, stiff neck,
earache and toothache. ` Nerviline is
simply a wonder. Best family lini-
ment known and largely used for the
past forty years. Sold by dealers
everywhere, large family size bottle
50c., small trial size 25c. Refuse a
substitute, take only "Nerviline."
HOW HE LOST HIS FISH.
A Fisherman Had An Experience
With a Bear.
An Easterner was spending his first
summer in the West where he had a
good opportunity to indulge in his
favorite sport of trout fishing. One
afternoon he had been unusually suc-
cessful, but just as he was setting out
for camp with a heavy string of fish
he caught sight of a great pine that
had blown down, and was lying with
its top in the water just the place
for hooking a monster trout.
Pushing along to the fallen pine, he
climbed upon it by dint of hard
scrambling, holding on as best he
could with his rod in one hand and his
string of fish in the other. The tree
was close to the bank, and the stream
was running bank full. He was in the
midst of the branches, crowding, on-
ward, when suddenly an immerse bear
rose up close beside him.
There was no hesitation. To run
was impossible. On the impulse of
the moment the man dashed his string
of trout full in the bear's face. In
doing so he lost his balance, and the
next instant there was a tremendous
splash, and he disappeared in the
rushing water.
The fisherman emerged some dis-
tance farther down the stream, and
scrambling to the bank, looked back.
There on the pine sat the bear, in-
tently watching the hole where he had
disappeared. He did not . gn back to
inform her that he was not there, but
made for camp at good speed.
More Than Pleased.
• Having fallen into pecuniary dif-
ficulties the landlord• decided to in-
crease the rents of his tenants. Meet-
ing one of them shortly after, he
said: "Mike, I have to inform you
that after the end of this year I am
going, to raise your rent," "Troth,
then, your honor," said Mike, "I'm
more than pleased to hear it, for I'm
at my wits end to know how I'ni go-
ing to raise it myself."
If i
Thin,
RunoDepressed,
1
T4
ds
The wear and strain of life has
tended in recent years to produce
nervous debility in a large percentage
of our population. Thousands are de
feeted'with a feeling they can't ex-
actly describe. They are always tired
and droopy, lack ambition, have poor
appetite, look pale and suffer from
depressing headaches and insomnia.
This condition is full of peril. It is
the stepping stone to invalidism, the
beginning of a shattered constitution..
We Advise everyone in this condition
to take a good medicine at once and
try to get well while yet there is
time. Probably no better advice can
be given than to use regularly Dr.
Hamilton's Pills which have become
famous in restoring the sick to good
health. A general toning up of the
system at once takes place. The
Whole body is vitalized by richer and
purer blood. The appetite is increas-
ed, food is digested and naturally
strength rapidly increases, Headaches.
go because the bowels are regulated
and all wastes are carried off. There.
is no experiment about using Dr.
Hamilton's Pills because they cer-
tainly restore the sick as a trial will
quickly prove. Just as good for the
old as the young, and suitable to the
needs of men, women and children.
This grand family medicine should be
in every home.
JIUMPER. DRESSES CHARMING.
With the advent of the full skirt
and loose -fitting garments have de-
veloped many good-looking and novel
style features, not the least interest-
ing and charming of which is the
jumper dress, suitable for afternoon
wear. A delightful model is shown
herewith in Ladies' Home Journal
No. 9087.
Pattern No. 9087. This frock is made
to be slipped on over the head or fas-
tened on the shoulder, and is confined
at a low waistline by shirring or belts,
and is embroidered with. No. 14732,
and costs 10 cents. The underwaist,
having either fond or short sleeves,
is attached to a three-piece gathered
skirt, lengthened by a ruffle. Pattern
cuts in sizes 32 to 42 inches, bust
measure, requiring in size 36 7%
yards 86 -inch material, 1 yard 36 -inch
lining for upper part of skirt.
Patterns, 15 cents each, can be ob-
tained at your local Ladies' Home
Journal dealer, or from the Home Pat-
tern Company, 183-A George Street,
Toronto, Ontario.
GERMAN STUDENTS IN THE WAR
Percentage Is Large, But Most Insti-
tutions Continue Courses.
The percentage of German students
actively engaged in this war is great-
er by far than in any other war in
history. And withal, with the excep-
tion of four forest academics, all
German colleges have maintained
their regular winter and summer ses-
sions. The lists of matriculated stu-
dents, however, have been markedly
depleted.
In the fall of 1914 there were matri-
culated at the country's 22 universi-
ties, 11 technical colleges, 5 business
colleges, 3 veterinary colleges, and 6
agricultural and mining colleges, 64,-
710 students, while 79,077 students
were attending the 52 German high
schools. Of these matriculated stu-
dents there have been enrolled in the
army of 36,000 university students,
8,000 technical, 6,000 business, 300
ED. 7.
ISSUE 41--'15.
veterinary,. 800 agricultural;, and Ep0
mining.
Of the 4,000 female students ape.
00 b
0 y e e •
have become sick
b c
proximately
nurses. From Koenigsberg, which
contributed, the
t d largest contingent of
students, 1,057 out of 1,280 went to
the front. 01' technical students tak-
ing part in the war Danzig supplied
the largest proportion, e3 out of 12
students, or 90 per cent.
The students matriculated at the
Berlin University for the current
summer term of six months, or a
semester, numbered 8,010, compared
to 8,047 of last summer. In reality
only 2,300 male and female students
actually attend the university. In
Munich 5,701 students are matrieu-
fated this summer semester, of which
number 3,957 were granted leave of
absence to serve in the array or sani-
tary corps.
Thus far the mortality among the
students of Germany has been as fol-
lows: Bonn, 2 lectors and 113 stu-
dents; Freiburg, 3 adjunct professors;
3 assistants, and 117 students; Goer-
tingen, 7 lectors, 8 assistants, and 142
students; Heideiburg, 78 students;
Jena, 112 students; Kiel, 24 students;
Leipzig, 8 lectors and 260 students;
Munich, 10 students; Tuebingen, '9
lectors and 130 students.
The Technical College of Berlin,
which during former summer semes-
ters 2;200 students attended, shows a
matriculation this year of 2,013, of
which number not more than 302 are
in attendance, while about 1,710 are
doing military service at the front.
0
Dro
ut
„ n Instant
Relief
Paint on Putnam's
Corn Extractor toe.,
night, and corns feel
better in the morn-:
ing. ° Magical the;
way "Put;nam'a"
eases the pain, destroys the roots,
kills a corn for all time. No pain.
Cure guaranteed. Get a 25c. bottle of
"Putnam's" Extractor to -day.
)14
CROSS ROAD FOR CANADA.
Winnipeg Trying to Get Concrete
Highway for Canada.
Reports from Winnipeg state that
Central Western Canada will have a
Federal Highway, if the project be-
ing urged by the Winnipeg Board of
Control is carried out.
This project contemplates the con-
struction of a concrete highway from
Winnipeg to Calgary, to go thorugh
the more thickly settled territory
tapped by the Canadian Pacific Rail-
road.
The thousand miles of highway
through the provinces of Manitoba,
Saskatchewan, and half way into Al-
berta, will be financed by the munici-
palities through which the roadway
would pass. Several appropriations
also will be sought from the provin-
cial Governments. The project has
been received with the greatest en-
thusiasm in a number of the larger
cities along the proposed route.
It has been pointed out by the pro-
moters of the highway plan that the
land values of the prairie provinces
would be greatly enhanced by the
building of a permanent concrete
highway, such as the Lincoln High-
way, which has had such a wonderful
effect upon the general road building
in the United States.
Russia Buys Large Quantities of Tea.
The Canadian demand for Indian
and Ceylon teas increase yearly.
and if one adds to this the many
other contingencies brought about by
the war, it can readily be understood
why the cost of tea is increasing.
Russia is taking enormous quantities,
and their buyers pay the very high-
est prices. The abnormal buying
has forced quotations up over 10e a
pound higher than nine months ago.
INDUSTRY AND SOBRIETY.
A Man Need Not Be a Servant All
His Life Long.
I do not believe that the principles
of life have changed in 40 years,
writes John Williams Streeter. I do
not believe that an intelligent, able-
bodied man need be a servant all his
life, or that industry and economy
miss their rewards, or that there is
any truth in the theory that men can-
not
annot rise out of the rut in which they
happen to find. themselves. The trou-
ble is with the man, not with the rut.
He spends his time diligently search-
ing for an outlet or in honestly work-
ing his way up to it. Heredity and
environment are heavy weights, but
industry and sobriety can carry
heavier ones. I have sympathy for
weakness of body or mind, and pa-
tience for those over whom inheri-
tance has cast a baleful spell; but I
have neither patience nor sympathy
for a strong man who rails at his con-
dition and makes no determined effort
to better it.
Ingenious.
At one of the military camps some
reeruits were being put through the
riding test. One man didn't know
much about, horses, but trusted to
luck to get through.
He had not properly adjusted his
Saddle, and on mounting he swung—
saddle and all—right under the
horse's body between its legs, where
he was suspended for a few seconds.
"Hi, there," yelled the noncom.,
in derision, "call that riding, do
you1" •
"Oh, no, sergeant," was the in-
stant answer, "that's a new trick for
the Dardanelles. ,.tiding under here's
fine protection from the sun." --Lon-
don Tit -Bits.
•
Minard's Liniment Cures 181rns, Etc,
�,,�e����lrlu�a�uRrl�ul li!!kORl AHNIl1 110AI t�1MMMrIM igt
�`
J.P
wrti.
V
AKING
Amp Avow
oN1rAI x!s NO ALUM
Makes pure, delicious, healthful biscuits,
cakes and pastry. it is the only welt -
known strictly high class 'baking powder
made in Canada, selling at a medium price.
Read the label
. o ILLETT COMPANY LIMITED
WINNIPEG
TORONTO, ONT.
MONTREAL
010101 0l1111010117rilll Mill ,I,IOU in 1:On
RAVAGES OF RUST, Cautious.
A Corps of Painters Are Constantly
Employed on Forth Bridge.
Few people comprehend the extent
of purely normal wear and tear. Lon-
don Tit -Bits says that one large rail-
way system suffers a lose of more than
eighteen tons of metal daily, due sole-
ly to the effect of rust. Thus far, the
only known preventive is to keep the
metal surface always covered with a
suitable paint. Some idea of the
costliness of this remedy, however,
may be gained from the fact that it
requires about x'1;000 annually to
paint one large railway bridge alone.
A typical case of this kind is the
Forth Bridge, on which a corps of
painters are constantly employed,
since the weather makes repainting
of one end of this large structure ne-
cessary before the . workers have
reached the other. Although experi-
ments have demonstrated that pure
iron surrounded by oxygen does not
rust, and that some acid, especially
carbonic acid, is necessary for the pro-
duction of rust, the secret of manu-
facturing rustless steel and iron re-
mains to be discovered.
'
Constipation Relieved or
"Money Back." No Drugs.
Dr. Jackson's Roman Meal is sold
with this guarantee. It is simply a
most delicious food. It makes por-
ridge, pancakes, and all baked pro-
ducts. All may be eaten hot without
distress and nourish better than meat.
Be sensible, at least try it. Costs
little, only 10 cents and 25 cents. At
all grocers.
Ambach Wood Lightest Known.
The lightest wood in existence is
believed to be the wood of ambach, a
leguminous plant that grows near
Lake Chad and on the tributaries of
the Upper Nile. The tree, which is
sometimes called the pith tree, often
attains a diameter of six inches in the
two or three years of its life. At
that age it dies, and another shoot
starts from its roots.
Minard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
Before and After.
"Why, Sharpe, I'm glad to see you
so lively again. You were quite
lame when I last met you."
"Oh, yes; I was awfully lame then.
But that was before I got a verdict
of $1,000 against the railway com-
pany."
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
A Slight Misunderstanding.
The aged lady next door had been
quite ill, so one morning Willie's mo-
ther said to her small son: "Run over
and see how old Mrs. Smith is this
morning." Willie reparted, but in a
few moments he came running back
and said: "She says it's none of your
business." "Why, Willie," exclaimed
his mother, "what did you ask her?"
"Just what you told me to," said
Willie. "I said you wanted to know
how old she was."
"Had you the. audacity, John," said
a Scottish laird to his servant, "togo,
and tell some people that I was a
mean fellow, and no gentleman?"
"Na, na, sir," was the candid answer;
"you'll no catch me at the like o'
that. 1 aye keep my thoughts to me-
self."
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited,.
Dear Sirs,—I can recommend MI»
NARD'S LINIMENT for Rheuma-
tism and Sprains, as I have used it
for both with excellent results.
Yours truly,
T. B. LAVERS,
St. John.
Also Embarassed.
"Hello, Bill! Glad to see you. I
just got back from my vacation."
"Sorry, old man. I can't lend you
a cent. I'm just going on mine." '
A8inard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
Logical.
"Now, Pat, tell the class why words
have roots."
"I guess, ma'am, that's the only
way the language could grow."
.Mair raiz SALE.
yr LOOXING FOR A FARM, CON-
sult mo. I have over two hundred on
nay fist, located in the best sections of
Ontario. All sizes. 11. W. Dawson.
Brampton.
AGENTS WANTED.
429 DAT ALSO COMMISSION FOR
etArd Local Representative. Either Sex.
Experience unnecessary. Spare time ac-
cepted. Nichols, Limited, Spadina Ave.,
Toronto.
NEWSPAPERS i'on S a.r,n.
DROF1T-MAIeING NEWS AND • JOB
Offices for sale in good Ontario
towns. The most useful and interesting
of all businesses. Full information on
application to Wilson Publishing Com-
pany, 73 West Adelaide St, Toronto..
MISCELLANEOUS.
('1 'CER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC.
L! internal and external, cured with-
out pain by our homs,treatment. Write
us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical
Co., Limited, Collin wood, Ont.
mem RICEsEi T SOE lel. TO ATTEND l
SEL JOTT
Yonge and Charles Sta., Toronto,
The demand for our graduates during
August and September was Lour times
our supply. Commence now. Calendar
free. W. J. ELLIOTT, Principal.
Will reduce Inflamed, Strained,
Swollen Tendons, Ligaments,
orMuscles. Stops thelanaenessand
pain from a Splint, Side Bone or
Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair
gone and horse can be used. $2 a
bottle at druggists or delivered. De-
scribe your case for special instruc-
tions
nstructtions and interesting horse Book 2 M Free.
ABS NE hl • JR., the antiseptic linimentfor
mankind, redimes Strained, Torn Liga-
hents. Swollen Glands, Veins or Muscles`
eals Guts, Sores, Ulcers. Allays pain. Pile*
61.00``8boniest dealers ordelivered. Book "Evidence" free.
W. F. YOUNG, P. O. F., 516 Lymans Bldg, Montreal, Gan,
!Marbles and Absorbine, Jr.. are nada In Caaada.k
Perhaps you have been sending your supply of
Milk to a local factory,—then you do not know the
advantages of sending to the Largest and Most
Up -to -Date Dairy in Canada. LET US TELL YOU.
WRITE NOW for information and copy of contract.
Give your shipping station and railway.
ityDela C It
SPADINA CRESCENT
TORONTO, ONT.