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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1915-10-21, Page 7• From. the Middle West PALE, FEEBLE GIRLS BE "WEEN ONTARIO AND BILI- Weakness Generally Conies on TISII COLUMBIA, Items From Provinces Where Many Ontario Boys and Girls Are Living. as Womanlood, Approaches. Girls upon the threshold of woman- hood often drift into .a decline in spite of ell care and attention. How often one sees girls who have been strong and lively become suddenly weak, de - One -third of the Regina tiro brigade pressed, irritable and listless. It is are now with the colors. the .dawn of womanhood—a, crisis, in The Manitoba Agricultural • college the life of •every girl --and prompt will'have a record number of students measures should be taken to keep the this winter. blood pure and rich with the red tint Saskatchewanfarmers set aside of health. If the blood is not healthy, 5,000 acres on which to grow grain at this critical stage the body is weak •.;• for patriotic purposes. `' ' ened and grave disorders follow. Dr. The estimated loss in the operation Williams' Pink Pills have saved thpu of the Regina Street Railway system sands of young girls from what might for 1915 amounts to $116,875. have been life-long invalidism or an Farmers in Saskatchewan are buy- early death. They are a blood -builder r v -,lig much lumber for the purpose of of unequaled richness, strengthening building granaries to store their weak nerves and producing a liberal wheit. - supply of red, healthy blood which 112is� Queenie Xull, of Regina, has every girl needs to sustain her entered on a five-year course at the strength. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills Manitoba Medical College for the have proved their great value over degree of M.D. . I and over again to young women When the Alberta. Legislature next whose health was failing, Miss Min - meets it may amend the Election, Act so that illiterates will be excluded from voting Rhoda Violet Williams, a 14 -year - pie Duffield, Eramosa, Ont., says:— "It gives me great pleasure to tell you what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have done for me. When I was ap- old North Battleford girl, has passed 'preaching the age of womanhood I • her exams, as associate of the Lon- don College of Music. Convicted of a breach of the Sas- katchewan Sales of Liquor Act, a Regina bartender was fined $200 and sent to jail for a month and a half. Coyotes have become so numerous. :in country districts of the Middle West that farmers are alarmed for the welfare of their smaller domestic animals. Stanley Fisher, an 8 -year-old Win- nipeg boy, didn't know a gun was loaded, and shot and killed a com- panion in showing him what , he wo ld do to a German. The Secretary of the Regina Bur - 'au of Public Welfare, reports that a number of those assisted by the bureau last winter have paid back 'the amounts advanced to them. _The director ,of prosecution, under the new Saskatchewan Liquor Act, leas issued a statement showing Brockville, Ont. that there have been 81 convictions •,w for infraction of the act to date. Doctors of Regina and their friends FOR GRAVES OF HEROES. have colected $1,423 during the past — ;,two weeks for the Saskatchewan. Field No Crosses or Memorials May be Sent Hospital Unit. A total of $40,000 is to Battlefront. { needed to equip the gift. William Short, ex -Mayor of Ed- The British War Office announces mouton, said at a meeting of the that no ere. ses or memorials to mark Development League: "If we are the graves of those who have died to succeed in Edmonton we will have over sea can be accepted for transit. to •sweep away municipal ownership." Durable wooden crosses, treated ; He declared that the city had become municipal -ownership mad. A report of the Saskatchewan De- partment of Agriculture estimates suffered greatly from bloodlessness, or anaemia. My work was a drag to me, I had no appetite and never felt rested in the mornings. I could scarcely walk for five minutes at a time without taking a rest. I was troubled with severe headaches, and things looked gloomy indeed. I doc- tored'for a long time and got but little, if any, benefit. I was advised to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and did so, and after taking them for a time, felt better. I continued taking the Pills until I had used six boxes, when I felt like a new person, and was again enjoying splendid health. I would strongly advise any girl who is weak or run down to try Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills." You can get these pills from any dealer in medicines or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 froni The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Winter Afternoea 7,?rock, The approach of cold weather not only makes the high collar more popu- lar but increasingly appropriate and sensible. The high collar has a dig- nity about it that is pleasing, yet it lacks that rigidity and stiffness so patent in styles of the past. A mo- del which would make a most becom No. 9082, ing afternoon frock is Ladies' Home Journal Pattern No. 9082, which con- sists of a waist with a back extend- ing over the shoulder forming a shal- low yoke effect, while the deep front yoke has a standing collar with ap- plied tucked sections, which are ex- tremely novel. •The full-length sleeves are finished with a band and circular cuffs. The three-piece gath- ered skirt is perforated for trimming sections, and is lengthened by a bias hem. Cuts in sizes 32 to 42 inches, bust measure, size 36 requiring 41/s yards 42 -inch material with 2% yards 42 -inch chiffon. Patterns, 15 cents each; can be pur- chased at your. local Ladies' Home Journal dealer, or from The Home Pattern Company, 183-A George St., Toronto, Ontario. with creosote and legibly inscribed, , are already in position on, or in pre- way that drawing pain, eases, Instant- paration for, all known graves, and las makes the feet feel good at battIeGum in addition all known graves are care- Gst a Qom' "ay tom' the total yield of wheat in the pro- fully registered. Numbers of graves vince at 133,490,027 bushels, of oats are well within range of hostile shell at 113,884,821 bushels, of barley at fire, which would as effectively de - 8,972,107 bushels, and of flax at 5,- stroy iron as wooden crosses. The 000,000 bushels approximately. former could not rapidly be replaced, A Winnipeg firm had an old safe whereas the latter could be re -erect- which'` lad not been opened for ed immediately approach were pos- years, a combination being lost. It sible. was thought the safe contained noth- Further, many graves are in close ing but old books. An expert opened proximity to the enemy and can only he safe and found nearly $800 in be approached at night; therefore ood money inside, which had been the weight •of the cross to be erected entirely forgotten. is an important factor. Going to a fire, a• $300 horse, be- These reasons make it necessary longing to the Winnipeg Fire Des that during the war only the regula- partment, was killed when a fire truck tion wooden crosses should be erect - collided with a street car. ed over graves. The farmers of Saskatchewan will I. give the Government 100,000 bushels HEALTHY CHILDREN of wheat as a patriotic gift. The wheat will be made into flour and A child's health depends upon the sent to the Imperial Government. state of his stomach and bowels. If Homestead entries in Western they are kept regular and sweet the Canada for the first seven months of little one is sure to be healthy. 1915 totalled 10,279, a decrease of 6,- Baby's Own Tablets are the mother's 843, as compared with the correspond- best friend in keeping her little ones ing period of last year. There were well. They act as a gentle laxative; 2,945 fewer entries in Saskatchewan, ace absolutely safe and are pleasant 3,002 fewer in Alberta, and 145 fewer to take. Concerning them Mrs. David in British Columbia. In Manitoba Label, Ste. Perpetue, Que., writes:— the entries this year have totalled 2,- "M9 baby was so troubled with consti- 850 as compared with 2,092 last year. pation that he could not sleep day or es DII`I'ER. night.. I gave him Baby's Own Tab - HOW SANDSTONES ' lets and now he is a big healthy boy." Unlike in Composition Are Our Sands The Tablets are sold by medicine deal- ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from of Which They Are Composed. The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co;, orris rer Lack Applied hi 5 Seconds Sore, Material; feet. from corn -pinched toes can be cured by Putnam's Ex- tractor in 24 hours. "Putnam's" eoothes Decomposed rock can be solidified Brockville, Ont. • again, either by applying great press _ e+ sure or by injecting cement, or by Ineffective Economy. doing both. Thus sands are formed' Boswell, in his classic "`Life of into sandstones, clays become shales, Johnson," tells the following concern - and calcareous deposits yield lime- ing the opinion of his friend on the stone. Aside from their cementing subject of thrift: "I told Him that at materials, sandstones differ in compo - a certain gentleman's house where sition exactly asdid the sands of there was thought to be such extrava- �vhich they are composed. Sandstone gance, or bad management, he was may nearly pure quartz, or quartz living beyond his income, his lady had and feldspar, or quartz,feldspar, and objected to the cutting of a pickled mica, and it may vary in texture from mango, and that I had taken an oppor- eJilte' fine to the coarse. Some sand- stone is so coarse that it will hold tunity to ask the price of it, and found six quarts of water to the cubic foot, it was only two shillings, so here was sand underground deposits of , such a very poor saving.""Sir, Sir, sandstone form excellent reservoirs, that is the blundering economy of a which may yield a neyer-failing sup- narrow understanding. It is stopping ply of water. An erkose sandstone onehole in a sieve from thequicksilver region of Cali- 'y . ' forma; made 'up of granite detritus, ai uarfz �,s1� Your Doctor 'was found f rp contain q ortlo;- f claw, obligoclase•, • biotite, muscovite, hornblende; titaiite,, rutile, tourma- about this food' '' formulae. Its, . Dr. line And'apatite. In sliort, "all the -Jackson's Roman Meal. 80% whole eocksicepshig minerals that can in any berries of wheat. 35% whole berriee way sili!vi„S,e tete destruction or grind- of rye; both granulated;, not crushed. ng- ftpV::a z,oelt may. be found.in 2.5%d' deodorl7dtd'and,,, tasteless flax- sands, and. therefore, iii.: sandstones... 10 0' �• heat bran. :It makes .. � seed and % ,�' a • � ro1. or cook_ , .• delightfulp' tt brownpo rri l ge,' pan- , 'Cakes), sead aitl•abake :products. ' The Wife DoyltneW ••that 'Yoh Xt nourishes' beiten thin meat, pre - have no:t lci"ssed :me for over'a .week? 'Aosellt-minde�. • d _ vents °intdigestiozl,,tnd' .posztivaly' re ''• Professor DIi2 ' he°nn I wonder who in ,the world I Heves eonsti"fia.tinn en" "looney back.t'. have been kissiki; VICEROY OF INDIA. Lord Hardinge Must Hold the Office For the Winter. Lord Hardinge, Viceroy and Gover- nor-General of India, whose term of office under ordinary circumstances would expire in November, will not be called home until March. The Gov- ernment has requested him to remain in India throughout the winter, as the political condition of the country is far from satisfactory, due to the up- heayal of the European war, which has incited some of the well-known revolutionists to renewed plotting. Lord Hardinge's life has been jeo- pardized several times recently, but a new Viceroy going to India at this time would encounter even greater risks. Lord Hardinge was created Baron Hardinge of Penhurst when he was appointed to India in 1910, marking appreciation by the Government of a Fong diplomatic career in which he served at home in the Foreign Office as Under Secretary and as Ambassa- dor to Russia. His career as Viceroy of India has been attended by those strange personal tragedies which of- ten seem to come to men in their highest honors. His life was attempt- ed several years ago by a revolution- ist, and he would have been slain if Lady Hardinge had not thrown her- self before him as ashield. About a year ago Lady Hardinge came to England to undergo an operation, her husband being unable, through offi- cial duties, to accompany her. She died under the operation, and was buried in the family plot of the vil- lage cemetery near their English home. A few months later the Vice- roy's eldest son, Lieut. Edward Charles Hardinge, a former page to King Edward, fell upon the French battlefield, and was buried beside lits mother. Who Lord Hardinge'e. successor will eventually be is 'a question which no one ventures toanswer with any de- gree of •authority. The Viceroy of India has infinitely more power in that country and more deference from its people than the sovereign has .in England, as the Oriental demands 'a stronger, more autocratic hand tp. rule over him, and his mind is more susceptible to the trappings of sever- eighty. Manners' in Business. "If you'd assume a more genial • meaner you wottld get along better. jr business." "" pr "Hula! '; I tz�ied iG„-epee and every- body I xlet'•wiinted .to borrow money,'; "Accord lig," 'esindiaiz,n'iythologyy• the earth is,,supported by.eight White'elet At 'all grocefd, 10 cents'•'and''25.cents, p aYits r ' es, sees, ,., • • Wonderful Miracles:Worked Yorked Oii %Vcitk Stored s By Dr.. Iiiliiuilton's i 1s There are despairing men and wo- AN INGENIOUg.WliTE'R COO El Butter and Other Things Kept Cool In Sumpter. , Pierre Lord has discovered that an ordinary flowerpot can be utilized to men by the thousands in this Cityr'keep butter, water, and other thing whose stomachs keep thein in con- cool during the hottest of summer stant misery that can be quickly ree oasts stored to , vigorous health by Dr. ° Hamilton's Pills,' We know of no An ordinary flowerpot will serve other medicine that possesses the the purpose well, in fact any clay jar, power to kindle into new life the ex- or common unglazed, earthenware pot, Insisted energies of chronic stomach sufferers. There is an extraordinary will answer. All that is necessary is power in Dr. Hamiltons Pills that to moisten a eloth with strong salt searches out the weak spots, that braces up the delicate glands and cons -water and keep it over the top of the plex workings of the stomach and : flowerpot. The ends should drop bowels. There are invigorating, down into a soup dish or basin in stimulating tonic ingredients in Dr• , Hamilton's Pills which are derived which the flowerpot should stand. from powerful juices taken from This draining dish must be kept full rare herbs and roots, and these are of water all the time. A dark, cool scientifically combined with other pantry is a good place in which to medicinal products so as to assiast in; keep the clay pot or jar. a harmonious and proper working of f iLlITy COMPANY ONTO asNNIpeaRC9N ft0,0 asriRs ice•.,. . ::-w:.acl"• MADE IN CANADAA' "'v7fit' AostaP . YEAST A MAKE PERFECT 8Ri A Bread made in the home with Royal: yeast will keep fresh and moist longer than that made with any other. Food Scientists claim that there is more nourishment in n pound of good homemade bread than in apound of meat. Consider the difference in cost. E.W.GILLLTT COMPANY LIMITED TORONTO, ONT WINNIPEG MONTREAL. Problem in Composition. Light -Fingered. "You seem to be having a struggle At a dinner given by the Prime the entire system. The ingredients Anodic wa is to wrap a y layer oover that letter." of Dr. Hamilton's Pills, coming from the great storehouse of Mother Na- ture herself, can be relied upon to be harmless. Guaranteed results fol- low to all who use Dr. Hamilton's Pills for Stomach Weakness, Gas, Sourness, Headache, Biliousness or Constipation. Seekers of the better health can not do better than invest 25c. in this health -bringing family medicine. 4i PLAN "BOOK OF GRATITUDE." Refugees in London to Print Their Thanks to Britain. Among the thousands of refugees who have received help and hospital- ity from the British Empire are many of Belgium's most distinguished au- thors and artists, and their gratitude is finding spontaneous expression in a volume of international interest which is now in preparation. This is en- titled "A Book of Belgium's Grati- tude" and is under the patronage of King Albert. Among the important subjects to be dealt with are the neutrality of Belgium and the British guarantee, the Belgian relief fund and the orga- nization of hospitality of this coun- try, the help given to the Belgian army and the work of repatriation, the support given by English art to Belgian art, the English bar as com- pared. with the Belgian bar, the tri- butes paid by English poets and wri- ters to suffering Belgium, Belgian re- fugees in London and other cities, at the universities of Oxford and Cam- bridge, in the country districts and in the factories. The book will be. printed in French and English. Off and On, Oftener Off. The general was inspecting a regi- ment the colonel of which was a very bad horseman. The battalion, says The Tatler, was formed up'in quarter column, and as the commanding offi- cer gave the order, "Advance in col- umn!" the band struck up the regi- mental march, with the result that the colonel's horse plunged and kick- ed furiously, and he was very nearly unseated. As the leading company was near- ing the saluting base, the captain glanced round to see if his men were marching well, and was horrified to see the whole of the front two ranks bunched up in the middle and every man watching eagerly the command- ing officer's efforts to retain his seat. "Ease. off, there!" he shouted an- grily. "No, 'e ain't," cried a recruit, "but 'e soon will be!" HARD ON CHILDREN When Teacher Has the Habit. "Best is best, and best will ever live." When a person feels this way about Postum they are glad to give testimony for the benefit of others. A school teacher writes: "I had been a coffee drinker since my child- hood, and the last few years it had injured me seriously." (Tea produces about the same effects as coffee, be- cause they both contain the drugs, caffeine and tannin). "One cup of coffee taken at break- fast would cause me to become so nervous that I ,could scarcely go through with the day's duties, and this nervousness was often accom- panied by deep depression of spirits and heart palpitation. "I am a teacher by profession, and when under the influence of coffee had tostruggle against crossness when in the school room. "When talking this over with my physician, he suggested that I try Postum, so I purchased a package and made it carefully according to the di- rections; found it excellent of flavour, r urlap round a porous; jar, The wa- "Yes; I want my wife to think 1 ter is placed in the jar and exposed miss her, but I don't want her to get to a current of air on a dark window to feeling so sorry for me that she'll sill, with the windows open and the hustle home." shutters closed. The water inside the porous receptacle percolates in a mi- croscopic moisture to the outer sur- face. The burlap wrapping maintains suck a slow rate of evaporation that the pot is kept cold, and that cools the contents. Guest Colds and hoarseness Quickly Rubbed Away "Nerviline" Gives Speedy Relief and Cures Over Night. ninard's Liniment Cures Dandruff, So It Seems. "Into each life some rain must fall." "The poet who wrote that must have had last summer in mind." Minaret's Liniment Believes sereuraigia. Ruskin in the Kitchen. Ruskin not only preached the gos- pel of efficiency, but when the exigen. cies of the occasion demanded he practiced it also. In her entertaining Got a cold? book of riininiscences, . "Thirteen Is your voice raspy—is yourchest Years of a Busy Woman's Life," Mrs. congested or sore ? Alec Tweedie says that her father, If so, you are the very person that Doctor Harley, a well-known London Nerviline will cure in a jiffy. 1>hysician, was a great friend of Rus- Nerviline is strong and penetrating. kin's, and often stayed at Brentwood. It sinks right into the tissues, takes One night Ruskin asked Doctor Har- out inflammation and soreness, de- ley whether he liked tea or coffee be- stroys colds in a truly wonderful way. fore he got up. Rub Nerviline over the chest—rub on "A cup of tea," he replied. lots of it, and watch that tightness disappear. Nerviline won't blister, it sinks in too fast—doesn't simply stay on the surface like a thick, oily lini- ment would. If the throat is raspy and sore, rub it well outside with Nerviline, and use Nerviline as a gar- gle diluted with warm water. Just one or two treatments like this and your voice and throat will be quick normal again. Just think of it—for forty years the largest used family medicine in this country—Nerviline must be good, "Why don't you choose coffee?" "Well, to tell the truth, I have lived so much abroad that I don't fancy English coffee; it is generally so badly made." His host said nothing. The next morning Doctor Harley was awaken- ed, and a strong smell of coffee per- meated the room. Turning to a ser- vant, he asked, "Is that my cup of tea?" 1 "No, sir, it is Mr. Ruskin's coffee." must quickly relieve and cure a hun "Mr. Ruskins's coffee! What do dred ills that befall every family. Try you mean?" 1 it for earache, toothache, coughs, "The master was up early. He les LOOKING FOR A FARM, colt-- �ult me. I have over two hundred on Minister of a little kingdom in Buri- tania, a diplomat complained to his host that the Minister of Justice, who had been sitting on his left,had stolen his watch. "Ah, he shouldn't have done that," said the Prime Minister, in tones of annoyance. "I will get it back for you." Sure enough, toward the end of the evening, the watch was retut'ned to its owner. "And what did he say?". asked the diplomat. "Sh-h t" cautioned thehost, glanc- ing anxiously about him., "He doesn't know that I.have got :it`back." REMEMBER ! 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 Zam- Buk is purely herbal.. No pois- onous coloring. Use it always. 50c. Box at 411 Druggists and Stores. Foll CH FARMS FOR SAME. colds, sore chest, hoarseness and plus- roasted the coffee himself, he ground rr.y list, loated in the best sections of cular pains in every part of the body. the coffee himself, and he made the ; Ontario, all sizes. H. W. Dawson, Large family size bottle, 50c.; trial coffee himself, and he hopes you will Brampton. size 25c. at all dealers. Place for Them. like it." NEWSPAPERS ron SALE. OFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB Alcohol Gives Way to, Tea. _iLOffices for sale in good Ontario The restriction of the sale of spirits towns. The most useful and interesting p of all businesses, Full information on for the first time seeing life-preserv- in England has resulted in a greatly application to Wilson Publishing Com- ers, asked what they were, and being increased consumption of tea, and • pang, 73 West Adelaide St.. Toronto. even though the new laws regarding put thim in the hospitals, where peo- An Irishman on board a steamboat Mls told, remarked: "Thin why don't ye ple is dyin' and dyin' all the toime?" -- ent taste for nature's stimulant—tea. Undoubtedly the consumption of tea She (viewing the flagship)—What is increasing throughout the world, and will continue to increase at a does he blow that bugle for ? greater rate during the next few He—Tattoo. years, and until the supply can cope She—I've often seen it on their with the demand higher prices for arms, but I never knew they had a tea must be expected. special time for doing it. Funeral Under Fire. CELLANEOlis the use of alcohol should be relaxed after the war a large percentage of people will have acquired a perman- Barbarities of War. We believe MINARD'S LINIMENT is the best: Mathias Foley, Oil City, Ont. Joseph Snow, Norway, Me. Charles Whooten, Mulgrave, N.S. Rev. R. 0. Armstrong, Mulgrave, N.S. Pierre Landers, Sen., Pokemouche, N.B. Brigadier McKenzie, of the Salva- tion Army, who is one of the chap- lains with the Australian forces at the Dardanelles, has frequently been under fire. He conducted the burial service at the interment of Colonel Onslow Thomson's remains. "It was very gratifying to finds our colonel's body," he writes. "We buried it at nine o'clock, after dark, as it lay in an exposed position. I had to kneel down and keep my head and body in a crouching position while reading the burial service. Hundreds of bullets swept over us while this was going on." Victoria's Wedding Shoes. The announcement offering for sale Fair-haired people usually possess the wedding shoes of Queen Victoria between 140,000 and 160,000 hairs on recalls the fact that Her Majesty was the scalp. a keen collector of historical relics. At a sale held in November, 1899, she commissioned a well-known dealer to secure for her a walking -stick carved to represent "Wisdom and Folly," once the property of Prince Charles Edward. The royal agent had carte blanche, and the stick was knocked down to him for £160. This was a monstrous price when we consider that shortly before the young Preten- der's dirk, with flint -lock pistol at- tached, realized only £3 15s.; whilst the great Rob Roy's claymore, made by Andrea Ferrara, with its shark's and nourishing. skin grip and all, went for £37 16s. "In a short time I noticed • very At the Stuart Exhibition organized in London some twenty years ago a number of most interesting exhibits came from Queen Victoria's collec- tion. • gratifying effects. My nervousness disappeared, I was not irritated by my pupils, life seemed full of'sun- shine, and my heart troubled me no longer. . "I attribute my change in health and •spirits to Postum alone." Nazne given by Canadian Postum Co.,. Windsor, Ont. Little Girl ---"Please, Mrs. Brown, Postum comes in two forms: mother wants to know if she can bor Post lm Cereal—the original form ---row a dozen eggs. She wants to put must be well boiled. 15c and 25c them undea alien." packages. I Mrs.I3rown-"So you have got a Instant Postum–a soluble powder hen,have you, my dear. I didn't know --dissolves quickly in a cup of hot youmother kept hens." water and with cream and sugar, Little Girl --"No, she doesn't; but r I makes a deliciotts beverage instantly. , Mrs. White is going to lend us a hen 30c and 50c tins.', !that is going to sit, and mother Both kinds are. equally delicious and. thought if. you'd lend us the eggs we Cost about the ‘same. per cull.c ould find the nest ourself." "There's ie'e, s a Reason" 'for Postum. • .--sold by Grocers. zvxiirara's xdnintent for • sale overywiseee. Minard's Liniment Cures Burns, Etc, Wants to Know. THICE SWOLLEN GLANS that make a horse 'Wheeze, Roar, have Thick Wind or Choke -down, can be reduced with also other Bunches or Swellings. oblister, no hair gone, and horse kept at work. Eco- nomical—only a few drops required at an ap- plication, $2 per bottle delivered. Book 3 M free. A8SOIt8IN1, JR., the antiseptic linhnent for mankind, reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful, Swollen Veins and Ulcers.$l and $2 a bottle at dealers or delivered. Book "Evidence"' free. W. F. YOUNG, P.O. C„ 516 l,ymans OIdg., Montreal, Can, Absorbint Jird AbsorbInc, Jo, are made In Canada. BD. 7. ISSUE 43---15. pry ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC. 'LJ internal and external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited, Coilingwood, Ont. THE RIGHT SCHOOL TO ATTEND 1 ELPO T T Yonge and Charles Ste.., Toronto. The demand for our graduates during August and September was four times our supply. Commence now. Calendar free. W. 3. ELLIOTT, PrincipaL 1 t PPE CATAH ItiA 1 I Will Gladly Tell You How—FREE. HEALS DAY MOT It is a new way, It is something abso- lutely different. No lotions, sprays or sickly smelling salves or creams, No at- omizer, or any apparatus of any kind. Nothing to smoke or inhale. No steaming, or rub- bing or infections. No electricity or vibration or mas- sage. No powder: no plasters;. no keeping in the house. Nothing of that kind at a1l. Something n e w and different— something delight- ful and hellthfuI —something' • in- stantly successful. You do not have to wait, and lin- ger, and pay out a lot' of money. You can stop it over night—and I will gladly tell you how—x ZZB. I am not a doctor and this is nota so-called doctor's prescription—but I am cured, and my friends are cured and you can be eared. Your suffering will stop at once like manic. ATdit FREE—You Can Be Free my catarrh made me i11. It dulled my mind. It undermined my health and was weakening nny will. The hawking and coughing made pie obnoxious to all, and my foul breath made even my loved ones avoid me secretly. My delight in life was. dulled and my faculties impaired. 1: knew that in time it would bring me to an untimely grave because every ma- ment of the day and night it was slowly yet surely sapping my vitality: I ut 1 found a cure, and r am ready .10.tell you about it «"BEE. Write me promptly. RISK JUST ONE CENT Send no money. .fust your name and address on a postal card. Say: "Dear Soni 'Katz, Please tell me•how you cured your catarrh and how I can cure nine. That's all you need to say. I will under- stand, and T will write to you with corn- pleto information, resem, n.t once, I: o not delay. Sena the postal card or write me a letter• to -day. I)orl't think of turn- ing this page until you have asked for this wonderful treatment that can do for you what it has .done for mo. R2534. SANt 7�A�CZ, Zoom 143 itfutttai Cat, - - • Toronto, Onto