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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-7-27, Page 3FROM RI G WAT L People moving from one 1:1ace to an- other are very subject to diarrhoea on account of the change of water, change of climate,, change of diet, etc., and what at first appears to be but a slight looseness of the bowels should never be neglected or some serious bowel complaint will :be sure to follow," The safest and quickest cure for diarr- hoea, dysentery, colic, cholera, cholera r niorbus, cholera infantuin, pairs in the stomach and all looseness of the bowels is Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw - 'berry. Mr. Ernest Jeffery, Moose Jaw, Sask., writes: "A few years ago, when I first came out to Canada, I went to the har- vest field to work. Somehow or other the water did not agree with me. I had the darrhoea so had that blood was coining from me, and I thought my last days had come. One of the harvest hands advised me to take Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry, and before I had used the bottle I was able to go to wo: k again. 1\4y advice to all is always keep a bottle of this wonderful diarrhoea cure on hand." "" Dr. Fowler's" bas been on the -market for the past seventy years, and has been used in thousands of Canadian homes during that titne, and we have yet to hear of a case of bowel complaint where it has not given perfect satisfaction. The genuine "Dr. Fowler's" is manu- 1sie lectured only l y the T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Price, 35 cents. SIIORTAGE OF DOCTORS. Medical Corps Has Taken 11000 and Wants 4,000 More. The British Government is calling for more doctors for the army, Sur- geon -General Sir Alfred Keogh has appealed to the medical profession to '"mobilize" voluntarily, other wise, it is suggested recourse will have to be had to medical conscription. A Lon- don coddespondent of the Associated Press says many of the doctors in private practice at home object to mobilizing, evert voluntarily. Many members of the British Medical As- sociation maintain that the army has already all the doctors it requires, if it would only learn how to employ them to the best advantage. Some of them even suggest that bhe War Office should learn how to do it from Ole the enemy. One authority says: "Already the Royal Army Medical Corps has taken 11,000 doctors from private practice and they are asking for another 4,000, making in all 15,- 000. This 15,000 medical officers in the permanent service gives a total of 16.500 to attend to an army of about 4,000,000. The Germans, for an army of 10,000,000, have 14,000 medical officers, "The position at home is serious, as• there are only 80,000 medical men and women in practice. With 15,000 tak- en away, no more than 15,000 are left to attend to a population of 41,000,000 men, women and children. How grave the position is may be suggest- ed by recalling that more than 500,000 Industrial casualties occur in this country every year, which is hugely heavier than the casualties at the British front in a year of the present war." It is maintained that the whole pro- blem could be solved without with- drawing any more doctors by a reor- „aye; ganization of the Royal Army Medical Corps, Among the reforms they urge are: Substitution of the army, for the division as the medical unit, no doctors being thus kept idle be- cause their division is not in action. Adoption of a new system of hospitals at the front and abolition of field am- bulances. It is estimated that the latter change alone would save 1,500 doctors in an army of 1,000,000 men. Relesae of doctors for home work when there is no work for them to do at the base hospitals. Under modern conditions it is always known when an atback is imminent, and the staff would have 24 hours to return to their base. If you must put them in pasture please don't put them ins pig pasture HAD KIDNEY THOLE For SEVERAL MONTHS D; ASPS KIS NCY PILLS CURED HIM. ,.Mr. Fred. Stevens, Raymond, Alta., writes: "I aim writing to bear my testi- mony of your wonderful medicine. I had suffered for several months with kidney trouble, I had been under the doctor's care for two months, when I read your advertisement. I at once purchased four boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills, and' when I had used two boxes of them I was cured. 1 have recommended this treatment to several of my friends." When you ask for Doan's Kidney Pills see that you get "Doan's." The wrapper is grey and our trade mark "The Maple Leaf" appears on every box. Doan's Kidney Pills are 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25; at all dealers, or railed direct on ,receipt of price by The , Milburn Co,, Limited, Toronto, Ont. When ordering tlfi.'cct specify "Doan's." Leftover Luncheons. Useful Hints. "It isn't worth while getting any- Always use ice water when mixing thing in just for my lunch," says the piecrust. housekeeper who's alone all day, and When broiling chiekens, lay them so she takes the proverbial cup of , skin side up. tea or coffee and any odd "left -overs" Carrots and peas put together and that happen bo be in the pantry. It's seasoned are a very good summer an unappetizing meal and a hurried dish. one, and, therefore, nearly as bad as A.11 bacon is improved by having no meal at all. It is a foolish habit boiling water poured over it before likely to lead to headaches, weariness frying• and frazzled nerves, and quite un- A delicious and economival dessert necessary, even in these days of is stewed figs and boiled rice served "high cost of living," for there is now together, used to buy anything fresh. The Tea jelly can be made in the same left -overs can be transformed with way as coffee jelly, and it is a plea - very little trouble into something sant change. savory and tempting. A teaspoonful of vii egar put into Take that tablespoonful of cold home-made candy will p event it from cereal, for instance. It wouldn't be being sticky. Preservg"cherries and blanched al - particularly inviting as a luncheon inonds are a delightful addition to dish in its left -over state, but it could the fruit salad. be, kneaded with enough flour to make Use fresh green grape leaves to a pliable paste, shaped into two thin place on top of pickles in crocks in - small cakes, and fried to a golden stead of a cloth. brown, or baked on a gridle. Served Milk bottles should be filled with on a very hot plate, with a little but- cold water the instant the milk is tak- ter and maple or golden syrup, they en out then they wash easily. would be delicious, If you use a brick for an iron lunch -for -one person. The tiniest Scallop shells are a boon to the stand, your iron will remain hot Ion - ger than with the ordinary iron stand. scrap of cold fish -even a dessert- Grapefruit seeds will grow and cur ., spoonful -can be mixed with a couple make' a pretty ornament for the ; „ of tablespoonfuls of nicely seasoned breakfast table in winter, white sauce and baked in a battered Put a tablespoonful of ammonia in - TIIE SUNDAY SCHOOL INTERNATIONAL LI,4;SON JULY 30. Lesson V. -The Word of the Cross* 1 Cor. 1. 1 to 2. 5. Golden Text. ---Gal. 6. 14. Verse 18. Them that are perishing us who are being saved (margin) -The text is a most un- fortunate mistranslation, ignoring the significant Greene tenses altogether, The Newt",,esbament represents "per- dition" N lvation" as future, fully atte • only when probation is over. E , et twice, where salvation is described as ideally complete by God's grace, Christians are always "being saved," -traveling on the nar- row way that leads to life. 19. Paul uses Iso, 29. 14 as express- ing and endorsing the thought. ?x"s°' ""'' -; 20. Scribe -The Jewish Scriptare scholar. Disputer of this age (mar- gin) -Not world as below. Paul , appeals from the fashionable philo- sophy of the day to the wisrom of philosophers had more than ever dis- ;1�aj,t, 4�n�t ��ti: the future which will know. gusted Paul with more human was � ,est .� .Y 21, In the wisdom of God -It isp' r o e dom. He. the learned and cultured 0.. ��, .,(� . ";a F Y `+, based entially ordained that knowledge rabbi would be a man of one idea. baonly on conceit and arrogance And him -Not as the wonderful must always fail to gain any true ap- Teacher and Worker of miracles, the prehension of God. The law has been illustrated in the history of the winsome Example, the supreme Flow - church as well as the world: Jewish er of humanity, but as crucified. The -Baltimore I.merican. theology and Greek rhetorical spec- cross must come first in every thee- ---- ' -illation failed, and everything since logy that is going to save risen. Unable To"' Step Or Do Any Wo rk1 SUFFERED FROM HER NERVES. ' Mrs. Thomas Harris, 8 Corrigan Kinigston, Ont., writes; "I had been te constant sufferer, .for many years, with my nerves, and was unable to sleep at • night, or do any work through the day. 1 at last decided to consult a doctor and find out what was really the trouble. The first one told tme 1> would have to go under an operation before I would be well, but 1 would not consent to this. One day I took a fit of crying, and it seemed: that if anyone spoke to me I would have to order them out of the house. I must have been crying two hours when my Insurance agent carne in. He advised me to try a box of Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and 1 at once seat to the drug store and got two boxes, and before 1 had them taken I felt like a different person. I have told others about them, and they have told me they would not be without them. I am very thankful I started to take Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills." Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills see 50 cents per box, or 3 boxes for $$1.25, at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. THE STO RM IS ON shell, If the top is dotted with tiny to a quart of water and wash your bits of margarine or sprinkled • with brushes in it. Never put soap on a grated cheese, so much the betber. hairbrush. Odds and ends of cold ve etables A little powdered alum rubbed on g gilt braid or lace, restore the bright - after it has been such as potatoes, cauliflower, sprouts brushed well will or carrots, can be mixed with sauce ness. Alum should be left on for a in the same way, seasoned with a few hours, then brushed off. sprinkling of cheese and baked to a Often the yoke of an egg will re - golden brown. Half a baked potato move stains from wash goods. The can be transformed into a tasty in- egg should be applied before putting dividual dish. It may not be very into the wash. substantial, hut, being hot and savory, Left -over macaroni can be retook- It is earnestly to be hoped that the it will probably make the person en- ed by putting in a dish with cream epidemic of infantile paralysis which joying it eat plenty of bread and but- sauce and a little minced green and is raging in New York and has spread ter, or be ready for a satisfying sec- ond course of bread or biscuits and cheese. Cold peas, beans or potaboes make a splendid basis for a cupful of hot cream soup. Mash the vegetable, season to taste, add enough fresh milk to make the amount required and boil for a minute or so. A tea- spoonful of cream will add nutrition. A slice of cold lamb should be cut up very small and cooked for seven or eight minutes in half a cupful of white sauce (made rather thick), sea- soned to taste, and served on hot toast. Cold meat may be served up very temptingly in jelly. Cut it into neat cubes, pour over enough gelatine to cover well and leave till set.. Turn it oub, cut into squares and mix with a coifple of young lettuce leaves, finely shredded, or any other salad, and sprinkle with some mayonnaise sauce or cream salad dressing. To make the jelly, dissolve about half a sheet of gelatine in a gill of nicely seasoned stock or water. In athousand ways the odds and ends can be so resuscitated that they will stimulate the appetite and make the lonely "snaeh" a pleasant meal. ITS VICTIMS INFANTILE PARALYSIS STILL A DREAD MYSTERY. Almost Invariably Leaves Some Ter- rible Mark After It and Re- . coveries Are Rare. How To Wash Woollen Goods. To wash woollen goods successfully the water should be soft and warm, not hot, and of uniform temperature throughout the operation. Only the milder soaps should be used and these not applied direcbly to the fabric. If much dirt is present, a volatile alkali such as ammonium carbonate may be added to the wash water. The scrubbing to which fabric is subjected should be gentle, and the wringing through loosely set wring- ers. Once washed, the goods should not be allowed to lie about wet, but should be immediately hung up to dry preferably out of doors, if. the air is dry and the. temperature above freez- ing. The reason for this careful treat- ment is faun,,' in the peculiar nature of the wool fibre. Its outer or epi- dermal layer is made up of minute serrations which are arranged in some such manner as the scales on a fish. Now these scales are softened and opened up by hot water and by such alkalis as are found in the harsher soaps. In this softened con- dition the pressure due to hard scrubbing is sufficient to cause the serrated edges of the fibres to inter- lock or felt. Felted fibres are usual- ly hard and brittle. This is because the alkali which has helped in fel- turing process has removed from the cells certain fatty substances which serve to make the fibre soft and pli- able. Fabrics which have become hard and felt have not only lost their attractiveness, but also most of their usefulness as a protection from the cold. This latter quality is due to • the "air blanket" which forms in bhe spaces Between the fibres, for 'quiet air is, as we know, a very poor conductor of heat, and cold. When the fibres have become felted these air spaces flare last and conse- quently the fabric, is no longer able to materially aid Ole !Indy ase retain its heat. mouth secretions are wiped away by that has worked in the same spirit. mother or nurse, the fingers of these The Foolishness of the thing preach - persons readily become contaminated. ed (margin) -With daring irony, Paul LIVES WERE BLIGHTED. The care of other children by persons appropriates the term used by the Su - with contaminated fingers may there- perior Person. "They may laugh 'Then Old Love Missive was Found fore lead to the conveying of the in- who win," and as Paul knows theand fectious micro-organism indirectly gospel is God's plan, he can afford to The French have a classic case of from the sick to the healthy. This repeat with proud satire what clever danger also exists in connection with men choose to say about it. To -day mail delay. A timid man, who could not summon up courage to propose in person to the woman he loved, wdote to her confessing his devotion and telling her if she shared his af- fection to answer, but if she did not reply he would know his suit was hopeless. Thirty -Eire or more years later, in w persuaded though one rise from the ' manytearing lettersdown werethe Pdiscoveredarispost-office behind red peppers, and baked with bread to several other states will not reach foxmities. When death does occur it dead.' some wainscoting, and among them crumbs and cheese sprinkled over the. this country. There are a few cases is not the result, as in many infer- 23. A Messiah crucified (margin) ;one to this man. It was not until top. in Montreal, but 'otherwise Canada tions, of a process of poisoning that -And therefore accursed (Gal. 8. 13). ' months later that he was found in vendors of food which is eaten uncook- the church historian would give a ed. The existence of cases of infan- great deal if he could get hold o:. tile paralysis in the homes of vendors those primitive criticisms, but they of food is therefore a perpetual source survive only in the quotations of of danger. Dissemination can be Christian writers. made by means of house flies." 22.,9f How Death is Produced. gas -As they did of the Mas- ter. He gave them one, but those The chief terror of the disease lies ho ask in such a spirit "will not be in its appalling power to produce de - WOUNDS AND INFECTION. Plenty of Fresh Air Is Found to Work Marvels. The professional healer, like the professional fighter, has found that many of the things he learnt in South Africa he has had to unlearn in.Flan- ders. Wounds seldom proved trouble- some in the Boer War, because the South African veldt was almost vir- gin ; but in Belgium and France, where the land has been cultivated for centuries, the gentle germ is always ready to enter the smallest wound and bring about tetanus and other dis- eases. At first the sugeons were in despair, fearing that our much -vaunted anti- septics were of no avail. It required long search and experiment before methods of overcoming new difficul- ties could be discovered. Then, owing to the lavish use of high -explosive shells, wounds are more complicated and more difficult to keep clean, while the pointed bullet works more harm than the blunt one of the " good old days.' Plenty of fresh air is found to work marvels, so there is at least one hos- pital in which the patients live prac- tically in the open. It has also been found that wounds remain clean if water continually flows over them, so the clever surgeon has constructed little baths which fit over the wound, a supply of warm water impregnated with oxygen continually flowing through. KITCHENER AND HAMPSHIRE • Family Came From the County of Same Name as Ship. appears to be clear of it, and there is no reason to believe that the Montreal utbreak is to be traced to the cases in the United States. There have been no real epidemics of poliomyelitis in Canada, though there were several in Toronto and vicinity a few years ago, and in scores of homes there are chil- dren who will never run or walk again as a result of this visitation. There is no more dreadful disease known to medical science, and perhaps the most terrible thing about it is the fact that it usually selects children as its vic- tims, although no age is exempt from it. Complete recoveries are extremely rare. Almost invariably infantile paralysis leaves some dreadful mark behind it, and so far medical science has been unable either to provide a cure or even to understand the na- ture of the deadly organism, Too Small for Microscope. That it is indeed an organism, a germ, was learned only a few years ago, the discovery being made almost simultaneously in the United States and France, where epidemics had drawn some of the best medical ex- perts in the two countries to study the disease. Dr. Simon Flexner, of the Rockefeller Institute, who is a noted authority on the disease, says that it is extremely doubtful if the virus has been seen. Certainly the germ is ex- ceedingly minute. The closest ob- servers have been able only to ob- serve under the most powerful micro- scope little points, circular or slightly oval in form, and these, possibly, though not certainly, represent the parasite. Another feature of the virus is its resistance to external agencies. It withstands glycerination for months, and drying over caustic potash Tor weeks without any marked reduction of potency. Lord Kitchener of Hampshire des- More Robust Than Rabies. cent, says a writer in the Hampshire Chronicle, although the family have In these respects it is even more been settled in Suffolk for some gen- robust than the virus of rabies. More- erations namely, at the little village over, it shows no diminution in of Lakenheath, close to EIy, and just a few miles from where the three counties of Norfolk, Suffolk, and virulence after having passed through several bodies. Experiments made with monkeys showed that the germs Cambridge meet. Lord Kitchener after having passed through 25 sep- showed a tenderness for the village arate series of monkeys, were more He spent hundreds of pounds for the repair of bhe ancient church and churchyard where his forefathers lie. In their own homely form the inscrip- tions on the gravestones there tell their own tale. The ascription on one reads thus! "Here lyeth the body of Thomas Kitchener, who mig- rated from Binsbed, Alton, Hamp- shire, in the year A. D. 1693. as agent to ye Honble. Sir. Nicholas Stuart, Bart., dep. this life April ye 5th, 1781, aged 65 years." This Thomas Kitchener, who thus left Binsted as a young man of 27 years, may be con- sideredDr. to all intents and purposes the "The infectious agent enters the founder of the Kitchener family, body chiefly, if not exclusively, There is also the grave of his son through the mucous membranes of Robert, who lived to susbain the fam- the nose and throat, The virus ex- ily honor for GO years, and was garb- ists in the secretions of the nose and erect to his fathers. throat and in the intestines. Hence "there aro two remarkable coincI- the mode of spread may be by kiss- dentes with regani to. Lord Kitchen- ing, coughing and sneezing, which os. The family sprang from Harnp- carry the secretions of the nose and shire and Lord Kitchener was drown- ' threat from one person who may be ed in H.M.S. Ilampshire, The oth- infected to other persons. Since the er was that Lord Kitchener was born disease attacks by preference young in June and was drowned in June children and infants whose nasal and robs the patient of strength and con- sciousness before its imminence, but is caused solely by paralysis of the respiratory function, sometimes with merciful suddenness, but often with painful slowness, without in any de- gree obscuring the consciousness of the suffocating victim until just be- fore the end is reached. No more ter- rible tragedy can be witnessed. For some years experiments have been made with a view of producing a Stumbling block -The Greek word a disant part of the city. The man, (which we have borrowed as scandal) I when he read the letter, was grief - more probably means a snare or trap. i stricken. 'It was from the love of his Their own obstinate prejudices were and carried word to him that the bait, and they made God's own she loved him ail had loved him al- means of salvation into a means of ways. Some hint of the tragedy got destruction, like a wild animal pull- ' to the Government officials. A search ing down on him the heavy stone of I was made for the girl who wrote the the trap. Compare 1 Pet. 2. 8. letter. She was traced with - Foolishness -We can easily imagine oub niluch difficulty. She never had how a cultured Greek would scoff at i married and she still cherished the the idea of being saved by a Gall - curative or preventive serum, and lae.an carpenter who was not even Through the efforts of the Gevern- some progress has been made with a alive, but dead on a malefactor's cross meat the two old people whose lives drug called hexamethylenamin, or urotropin, which possesses a degree of shame. had been blighted by neglect on the of antiseptic action. This drug, how- 24, Called -Since God's call has two part of Govenrrment service were ever, must be very carefully, adminis- necessary elements, Gods invitation brought together. They were mar - and because it is more or less dam- and man's acceptance, the former be- i ried, gerous to many of the vital organs of +ng universal, cut the latter hmrted, the body. No doubt the present the term is naturally used of those in epidemic will result in still greater whom the call becomes effective. efforts being made to fully under- 26. Not many -Yet there were some stand the virus of infantile paralysis from all these classes, and every one and to develop a serum that will rob of them counted for a great deal in it of much of its deadly powers. their influence with others. In the first century, as in the twentice• Christianity was mostly a middle class movement, in this respect agree - Problem of Shipping Them for Long ing with every other great movement Distance Solved. upward in human history. But then, as now, it also laid hold of the The feat of freezing live fish and , lowest. So in India to -day a few reviving them several weeks or Brahmans and a great many out - months later has been achieved by castes recruit the church -till the the Swiss scientist, M. Pictat. flood comes! The scientist put twenty-eight live 27. Even so in Benares we have de- r, h sh in Ina oxygenbox at in containewhichd several water graded outcasbas whom Christ has pieces of ice floated. The temperature educated, and proud Brahmans who of the water was then reduced slowly cannot read. • FROZEN FISH REVIVED. until it froze. 28. Base -The opposite of noble At the end of about two months the (verse 26). of birth. And the things for the sacrilege, the prayer to this cake was gradually thawed, and the that are not -For the Creator still effect being written out, signed by fish, it is said, were found alive. In makes his world ex nihilo. The com- each of them and pinned to a pillar of the church. A few days later it came to the lot of the Irish Guards to lead a charge shall have contained pieces of ice would repeat only the word despised; on the German trenches. This party for from fifteen to eighteen hours literally, made nothing of. Bring to was in the front rank, the chaplain before the whole mass is frozen. nought -Literally, make idle, a fa- with them, calling out : Remember The process of thawing must also vorite word of Paul's (for example, that prayer 1 They charged straight be slow. Through this process it is I cor. 18. 8; 15. 26). through tho German lines until every believed that Siberian sturgeon and Alaskan salmon can be exported alive to distant markets. RUBBISH HEAPS. AVENGED DESECRATION. Irish Guards Made Gallant Charge on German Trenches. A remarkable story of the Irish Guards, which tells how a little squad of men, led by their maimed chaplain, laid down their lives to avenge the desecration by the Germans of a little church behind the lines, is given by an officer of the guards. The• chaplain and the men came to the church early one Sunday morn- ing only to find it in ruins, the Host scattered in fragments, the crucifix and statues shattered and the pictures torn to bits. The entire party thereupon knelt down and in prayer solemnly conse- crated their lives to God in reparation such an experiment, the scientist re- mentaries, forgetting that this is not ports, it is essential that the water classical Greek, often render "count - be gradually frozen, and that it ed as nothing, cyphers"; but this • powerful if anything than before. It is this fact that drove investigators to the conclusion that the virus' iv a liv- ing organism, but, as stated, it is so minute that it cannot be said with certainty that the germ has ever been seen. It passes with great readiness and little or no loss in potency through the densese and finest porce- lain filters, when in aqueous suspen- sion, and on this, as on other ac- counts, is extremely difficult to deal with in laboratory experiments. Enters Through Nose. Many Serious Fires Traceable to Such Accumulations. Moro fine originate in rubbish heaps than from any other source. To permit rubbish to remain in the build- ing not only invites a fire to visit your home or place of business, and render your family temporarily home- less, or cripple your business at a time when you can least afford it, but also endangers the lives of your fam- ily or employees. In addition to de- stroying an average of $23,000,000 in property value in Canada each year, fire caused the death of 141 persons. The home is built to protect our loved ones, and we want to do every- thing to insure absolute protection to those who live in it. That rubbish heap In the attic, storeroom or basement is a menace to your household, because there is al- ways a possibility of fire starting in it, and it may start when least ex - ped. CoIlscteideI' what might happen, and then, without delay, eliminate the menace of the rubbish heap. •29. No flesh -"A11 flesh" hi this phrase is a common, Old Testament term for the whole human family. 80. Both righteousness, etc, (mar- gin) -These three are elements in the comprehensive wisdom which was incarnated in the Saviour. 81. Quoted from Jer. 9. 24f., the passage so magnificently used in Wesley's great little hymn. "Let not the wise his wiedom boast, The mighty glory in his might," 2. 1, And I -He has been enforcing his point from their case, now he turns to his own. Excellency -Nob like a visiting sophist with a big reputa- tion for eloquence and philosophy. Testimony (text) and mystery (mar- gin), two very similar words, are about equally balanced in the MSS. The latter is perhaps better. It was for the Greeks a religious rite which it was unutterable sacri- lege to reveal to any but initiates. So with the gospel -only initiates. So with the gospel -only imitation was open to all. 2, The "determination" was colored = by Paul's distress at his failure in Athens. Ito had not impressed the cross there, but they had Iaugheed him down just when be was getting to it, as is obvious from his last words there. The spiritual blindness of the man was slain, but not before, it is believed, they had killed at least twice their number of Germans. Was Troubied CONSTIP Ill - - TEN FOR OVER FIVE YEARS. Unless one has a €nee action of the bowels, at least once a day, constipation is sure to ensue, then in the wake of constipation comes sick headache, bilious headaches, jaundice, piles, and many forms of liver complaint, Milburn's La7ca-Liver Pills will regu- late the flow of bile to act properly upon the bowels; thus making them active and regular, and removing the constipa- tion and all its allied troubles, Mr. Phil. G. 1;ob1ehaud, Pokemouche N.B. writes; "1 have been troubled constipation for over five years, and I feel it my duty to let youknow that your Milburn's Laxa-Liver Pills have cured me, 1 only used three vials, and I cats. faithfully say that they have saved ale fromi'alarge doctor's bill," Milburn'e Laxa-Liver Pills are 25 cents per vial, or live vials for $1.00; for sabl it all dealers, or mailed direct on receipt if price by TileT. Ivlilburn Co., Limited. i'oronto, Ont.