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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1916-10-19, Page 31 -itte 4 FRO. OLD SGOTI, NOTES QIP INTEREST FROM .111 BANKS AND BRAES. What is Going On in the Highlands and Lowlands of Auld Scotia. The lighting restrictions have been responsible for the dismissal of all the Port Glasgow lamplighters but one. The total casualties among Mother- well men since the war broke out are 619, and of these 211 have been fatalities. Edinburgh university Senatus has decided .to recommend to the Univer- sity Court that women should be ad- mitted to .the medical classes. The first canteen in Glasgow Har- bor, which will be conducted by the Y.M.C.A., was opened by the Lord Provost, Sir Thomas Dunlop, Bart. Arrangements for the placing of the Gladstone Memorial in Edinburgh upon the selected site at St. An- drew's Square, has been approved of. For the first time since it was in- stituted by the weavers 60 years ago, "Sma' Shot Day"—otherwise Paisley Trades Holiday was not observed this year. Sheriff Fyfe, presiding at a General Munition Tribunal in Glasgow, sug- gested that a court should be formed to deal promptly with wage disputes in munition works. Viscount French inspected troops in Fife and Edinburgh, and before leaving presented a number of mili- tary medals and D.C. medals to men of Scottish regiments. Mr. John Ross, a well-known re- tired farmer in the Stirling and Braco districts, and an elder in the Church of Scotland since 1858, has just died at the age of 94. At a'sitting of the General Muni- tions Tribunal for Scotland at Grangemouth, a fine of $100 each was imposed on a number of riveters who took part in a strike. At a patriotic display given at the Celtic Sports, Glasgow, it was led by two Frenchmen and a Belgian. The latter has won two crosses, in- cluding the Order of Leopold. In a statement on dilution of labor- ers on the Clyde, the Ministry of Mu- nitions announced that some 14,000 women are now engaged on general engineering work, excluding shells. For the first time since 1857 the yearly report of the General Board of Commissioners on Lunacy, shows an absolute decrease in the number of all classes of insane in Scotland. At the quarterly meeting of the Galashiels Co-operative Society the report for the quarter showed the sales at $100,545, an increase of $13,- 835 13;835 over the same quarter last year. Capt. Peter Stewart, H.L.I., a na- tive of Perthshire, was recently pre- sented with the Military Cross by H.M. the King at Buckingham Palace, for conspicuous services in France. Greenock Corporation have decid- ed to recommend the formation of a War Savings Committee, the per- sonnel of which will be representa- tive of local churches, school boards, parish council, etc. It has been reported that the Ad- miralty have definitely decided to carry out the housing scheme at Greenock for the accommodation of the workers at H. M. Torpedo Fac- tory, at a cost of almost $100,000. While attending a conference of agriculturists at the City Chambers, Glasgow, Mr. John M. Hutcheon Dob- bie, Dalkeith, vice -convener of the County Council of Mid -Lothian, and one of the best known farmers in Scotland, fell back in his seat and ex- pired almost immediately. TATTOO CRAZE IN ENGLAND Rich and Poor have Taken Up the Fad. A craze for tattooing is sweeping England. Both rich and poor have taken up the fad. To -day there is hardly a society nian or woman. who does not bear some indelible emblem. When war was declared and the manhood of England rushed to the colors, a number of tattooists opened little shops in working-class districts and started tattooing. the names of their customers on their arms for the small suns of six cents. Originally this was done as a precaution, as they could be identified in case anything happened to them at the front. The craze soon spread. Some bashful youths propose through having the' names of their Duleineas tattooed on their wrists. This strange method of love -making was described by a "professor," who at one time used to practice at Coney Island, New York. Put "I love sweet Lily Smith," and a youth will say, "on me, where every- one veryone can see it." He lays down six • cents and. the jcb is done. Them he puts his band on a counter or somewhere, where Lily can see it, and if she wishes to accept hint she comes to the tattoo expert and has "`I love brave Jack Jones" tattooed on the back of her hand and lets Jack read it. That breaks the ice and the courtship proceeds. --a Toes Close Automatically. Birds cannot open the foot when the leg is bent; that is the reason they do not fall off their perch. If you watch a hen walking, •you will notice that it closes its toes as it raises the 'foot, and opens them as it touches the ground. THE ONLY WAY TO CURE RHEUMATISM Must Be Treated Through the Blood and the Poisonous Acid Driven Out. The twinges and tortures of rheu- matism are not due to .cold, damp weather as so many people suppose. Rheumatism comes from poisonous acid in the blood. This is a medical truth that every rheumatic sufferer should realize. There is only one way to cure rheumatism—it must be treat- ed through the blood. Allthe lini- ments and rubbing and so-called elec- tric treatment in the world will rot cure rheumatism, and the sufferer' who tries them is not only wasting money, but is allowing the trouble to become more firmly rooted in the sys- tem and harder to cure when the pro- per remedy is tried. Dr. Williams Pink Pills have had remarkable success in curing rheumatism because they go right to the root of the trouble in the blood, driving out the poisonous acid, releasing the stiffened joints, clearing away the torturing pains, and giving the victim renewed health and ease. Mr. Vincent Brow, Havre Boucher, N. S.,. says: "For two years I was an al- most constant sufferer from rheuma- tism, the trouble being so bad at times that.I could scarcely get about. The trouble seemed to bring with it anaemia, and altogether I was in a very bad condition. I used doctor's medicine for almost a year without relief. Then on the advice of a friend I decided to try Dr. Williams Pink Pills. I think I took altogether about a dozen boxes, with the result that I am again enjoying perfect health." You can get these pills through any medicine dealer or by mail, post paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. HOMES FOR EMPLOYEES. The C.N.R. Is Building Up -to -Date Homes in New Ontario. The Canadian Northern Railway is rushing to completion one hundred houses distributed over a number of divisional points on the Montreal-• Port Arthur section of its transcon- tinental line. These homes—modern, comfortable and of pleasing .design, are intended to provide satisfactory accommodation for the employees of the road and their families, who will be living at these centres. The condi- tions of occupancy have been -made so easy that it will be a comparatively simple matter for the •C,N.R. em- ployees to virtually own outright the towns, Brent, Capreol, Foleyet, Horne Payne and Jellicoe, where the com- pany house -building operations are now in progress. It is confidently expected by. Mr. Cyril T. Young of the Eastern Lands Dept. of the Canadian Northern, who is in charge of the work, that the employees will be able to celebrate Christmas, 1916, in their cosy new i homes. This work, he says, will pro- vide at each point the nucleus of a` busy progressive town. With the ex- ception of electric lighting, which may be a later development, the houses in New Ontario will be equipped quite as completely as are the homes of simi- lar size in long established towns and villages in Old Ontario. They . con- tain a large living room, from which a winding stair -case leads to the up- per floor, a kitchen, a pantry, and a bedroom, on the ground floor. Above, there are other two bedrooms, a bath- room, and a sewing -room, all of fair size. One of the hardships in winter has been eliminated by the provision of a roofed -over coal and wood bin outside the house, but against the kitchen, with a sliding doorarranged in the wall so that the household sup- ply can be replenishedwithout the us- ual cold out-of-door journey. The walls, up to the eaves, are of timber -6 and '7 inch logs "sided" down to 5 inches at the saw mill at Foleyet, made snug and comfortable by caulking with oakum. The cornice is carried entirely around to provide a "bell -east" end. Windows there are in plenty, and on the upper floor a ten -foot wide dormer window fur- nishes natural lighting for the sew- ing -room, while on the opposite side a window eight feet wide, provides for the bathroom and stair -way. The white sanded roofing is fireproof, and the solid construction of the houses appealed to the Canadian Northern executive officers asan added protec- tion against this danger in the north. Beaver board supplies the interior finsh, and ship lap may be added out- side. As a general rule the plan has been followed of placing each house at the side of a good sized lot, to facilitate the planting of the remainder to gar- den truck for table needs. But the trainmen and their families, who move to the new towns to take up residence, are expected to constitute a fairly good market and it is under- stood that the Ontario Government is surveying, and will later throw open to settlement a township contiguous to the town of Foleyet and another to Horne Payne, in the great clay belt. The Canadian Northern officers are confident that the building of these homes will mark the beginning of a new era in the New North. First there should follow the stores to cater to the needs of the town dwellers, and then settlers to take up the adjacent land, because of the inducement of a good market, and the advantages of adequate shipping facilities. Handsomest Cathedral. Mexico City, the capital of Mexico, is a town of some historic interest, while its cathedral is regarded as the handsomest church on the American continent. The foundation stone of this edifice was laid in 1593 on the site of a former heathen temple. The national museum is filled with treas- ures of Aztec civilization, and various memorials of the hapless Maximilian and the beautiful. Carlotta lend a lustre to this attractive city. The cli- mate is quite good and the population about 471,000, many of whom are Americans and Germans. For Catarrhal Deafness and Head Noises Here in America there is much suf- fering from catarrh and head noises. American people would do well to con- sider the method employed by the Iang- lish to combat this insidious disease. Everyone knows how damp the English climate is and how dampness affects those suffering from catarrh. In Eng- land they treat catarrhal deafness ansd head noises as ac constitutional disease and use an internal remedy for it that is really very efficacious. Sufferers who could scarcely hear a watch tick tell how they had their hear- ing restored by this English treatment to such an extent that the tick of a watch was plainly audible seven and eight inches away from either ear. Therefore, if you know someone who is troubled with catarrh, catarrhal aeal- ness or head. noises cut out this formula and hand it to them and you wilt have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness. The prescription can be easily prepared at home for about 75c. and is made as follows : From your druggist obtain 1 oz. of Parmint (lbouble Strength), about 75c. worth. Take this home, and add to it } pint of hot water and 4 ounces of granulated sugar : stir until dissolved. Take a tablespoonful four times a day. Parmint is used in this way not only to reduce by tonic action the inflam- ation and swelling in the Eustachian Tubes, and thus to equalize the air pressure on the drum. but to correct any excess of secretions in the middle ear, and the results it gives' are usually re- markably quickand effective. Every person who has catarrh in any form should give this recipe a trial amu free themselves from this destructive disease. THE BRAVE BLIND. An English Nurse Tells a Touching Story of the War. Few of the many true tares of the heroism of the brave men fighting in the great war equal some of those re- lated of men who will fight no more— the cripples, the deaf, the disfigured, the blind. One such)recently told by an English nurse home on leave to re- cuperate her strength, is a little story with a heroine as well as a hero; it is, indeed, a love story. A young French officer, blinded and cruelly disfigured,was for a time un- der her charge. He was engaged to be married; but as soon as he under- stood he would never see again, or ever be seen without a shock at .the ruin of his once handsome counten- ance, he wrote releasing his sweet- heart from the engagement. She re- fused to be released.; indeed, she ap- peared at the hospital and demanded that her lover marry her at once. He would not consent; but the interview left him so shaken that he dared not trust himself to see her again. He confided his weakness to . the nurse, and begged her. help. "Do not let her in,"• he pleaded; "but make an excuse to talk with her. Tell her I am not only helpless and hideous—she does not mind, the an- gel—but that my disposition is . al- tered; say it is often that way with those injured es I am. Say I am no loliger fit to live with. Say that I am grown morose, and fly into fright - fill rages on the smallest provocation; say that. those I have most loved 'are most likely to excite them. Telt her she could' not make me happy; she must leave nee to strangers. You• un- derstand, madame? You, will help me?t, "i understand," the nurse promised, TRAPPERS!' Send your RAWFUR5 IoJOHN HALLAM at s►waa .wt fcorlsi. nolv.,Wweh a—ImMdLoIviiNiks to trot �t.tui 1Sa$.o. *wK•ihw}ddg,Wtmer"et, 4ow/Wia�m.slai ix.ak ppo et ea*w Ii f,. "m i Gua4s. EIP: ' awe rev (lik....1an'1,... . iYl:e a,. OP44? JOHN 11 lmited 202 Hallam Building, Toronto. Bpi°RB TRADE MARK rttE .5.P(NA71. oFFi; Will reduce Inflamed, Strained, Swollen Tendons, Ligaments, or Muscles. Stops the larenessand pain' from a Splint, Side Bone of Bone Spavin. No blister, no halt gone and horse can be used. $2 a bottle at druggists or delivered. De- scribe your case for special instruc- tions and interesting horse Book 2M Free. ABSORBINE.,3R1, the antiseptic linimentfor mankind reduces Strained, Torn I.iga- agents. Swollen Glands, Veins or Muscles; Heals Cute, Sores, Ulcers. Allays pain, price 11.00 a bottle at dealers or delivered, Mole "Evidence" reeo W, F. YOUNG, P. O. F., 515 Lymans Bldg, Montreal, Oaa "lbsorblao sad Absorbine. Jr., aro made la Canada. "and I will tell her all about your hor- rible disposition, you may be sure." "Ah, madame, you mean to betray me!" he cried reproachfully. "I hear it in your voice!' "You certainly do!" she assured him shamelessly. "I am going to betray you into matrimony, and be best man and bridesmaid rolled into one!" And she kept her word. Drink "-lot Water For Indigestion A Physician's Advice. "If dyspeptics, sufferers from gas. wind or flatulence, stomach acidity or sour- ness. gastric catarrh, heartburn, etc., would take a teaspoonful of pure bisurated magnesia in half a glass of hot water immediately after eating they would soon forget they were ever at - dieted with stomach trouble, and aou- tors would have to look elsewhere for patients." In explanation of these words a well known New York physi- cian stated that most forms of stomach trouble are due to stomach acidity ana fermentation of the food contents of the stomach combined with an insufficient blood supply to the stomach. Hot water increases the blood supply and bisurated magnesia instantly neutral- izes the excessive stomach acid and stops food fermentation, the combina- tion of the two, therefore, being mar- velously successful and decidedly pre- ferable to the use of artificial diges- tents, stimulants or medicines for in- digestion. His Day Off. A lady admirer of Kipling's works had long wished to meet the author and at last her desire was gratified. She was frankly disappointed. "You —you are Rudyard Kipling?" Mr. Kipling murmured something. "But I thought," she stammered, "I thought you were—oh! how shall I say it— something quite different." "Oh, I am," theauthor hastily as- sured her. "I really am, madam; only, you see, this is my day off." rdinard's Liniment for 4a10 everywhere. Vast Cost of Army Housing. Many protests have been made in England as a. result of the revelation in an official report that it cost $98,- 000,000 to build huts and stables for the British troops in the first year of the war. This is at the rate of $100 a man, it is stated. 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. Correct, One Way. Teacher—Bobby, spell "yesterday," Bobby (with his eye on the calen- der)—W—e--d—n—e—s—d—a—y. hlinard's Liniment Cares Burns, Eta Same Faintly Name. An Irishman was seated in a rail- way carriage next to a very pompous - looking man, with whom he commenc- ed a conversation in a rather free and' easy manner. At length the pompous! one said: "My good man, reserve your' conversation for one of your own equals. I would have you know that I am a K.C," The Irishman jumped up and held out his hand. "Begorr.y shake!" he exclaimed, "Oi'm a Casey meself." RELIEVE HEADACHES WITHOUT DOSING By Applying Sloan's Liniment to Forehead You Can Stop e e the Severe Pains. Many ,headaches are of a neuralgic origin. The symptoms of such head- aches are intense and lingering pains in the brow, temples or back of the head. There, iti' one certain relief that bas been known and recommended for years back, Sloan'er Liniment. One application and the dull pain is practi sally gone, It le easily applied with- brut rubbing, "tubbing is ttnneoeseary, as Sloan's Liniment quickly pene- trates to the seat of the trouble, Aching muscles, rheumatism, bruises, lumbago, chilblains, sprains and : stiff neck can also be meet ef- fectively treated with Sloan's Line- ment. Cleaner than mussy plasters or ointments ; It does not stain the skin or clog they pores. At all drug stored, 25c., 50e., $1.00, TERRIBLE CLERICAL PARENT. Bishop Told Queen of Denmark He Had 200 Children. It is related of the Queen of Den- markthat she once paid a visit to the Danish colony of Iceland, where the good old bishop exerted himself to the utmost in her entertainment. Hia most successful effort in that direction, it is stated, followed upon the explanation of a mistake which had at first greatly scandalized his royal mistress. The Queen paid many compliments to her host, and having learned that he was a family man, graciously in- quired how many children he had. It happens that the Danish word for "children" is almost identical in sound with the Icelandic word for "sheep," and the worthy bishop promptly answered "Two hundred." "Two hundred children!" cried the Queen. "How can you possibly main- tain such a number?" "Easily enough, please your Ma- jesty," replied the prelate, with a cheerful smile. "In the summer I turn them out upon the hill to grass, and when the winter comes I kill and eat them." Vanilla comes from an orchid grown in Mexico. Guard our r aby's Health Cheerful, Chubby Children Make the Home Happy Weak, puny babies are a constant care to tired mothers and are subject to many diseases that do not affect healthy children. Keep your children in good health. t See that their bowels move regularly -especially during the teething period. This is a distressing time in the life of every child and the utmost pre- caution should be taken to keep them well and strong. By the consistent use of Mrs. Window's Soothing Syrup it is possible to avoid many childish ills now so prevalent. It is a corrective for diarrhoea, colic and other infantile ailments. It soothes the fretting baby and permits the child to sleep well and grow healthy. It brings comfort and relief to both child and mother. Mrs. Window's Soothing Sip Makes Cheerful, Chubby Children Is absolutely non-narcotic. It con- tains no eeiptxl, mot:011ie riot. any of their derivaWtives, It is soothing, leas - ant and harmless. For genex,tiona motit$rn it>,all arts of the wtlri hay* used it and millions of babies have been benefited by it. Buy a bottle today and have it bar%dy Relieve and Protect '"our Children Sntd 4v ell rtrufgl rtr in (,'utra(la ant:' throsgheut Me ruierfd • VANCOUVER A GREAT BORT: City will Spend $5,0.00,000 and she "M it1e in Canada" C.P.R. $1,500,000 on New Wharves. DOMINION The Canadian Pacific has plans for wharves at Vancouver which will cost $1,500,000. These plans will dove -tail into those which the city contemplates to carry out at the port, The latter is. growing in value a bigness allthe and b ass time. There is RAINCOATSg great complaint from, shippers of congestion, for Vancouver is becom- ing a great port" The city is .going to spend $5,000,000 on wharf exten- sion in the immediate future, and the railway company, on its own account, has plans for a further extension of the wharves which it will use for its own business, Both east and west the Canadian Pacific Railway has now for its shipping interests, facilities 'me which render it absolutely independ- ent -this independence making for better and more efficient service in the ocean carrying busindss, which the company has notably extended during the past few years. The fleet of the company now numbers, all told, over 100 vessels: but it has especially strengthened its Atlantic and Trans - Pacific service in latter years—recog- nizing, as it did, the possibilities of increased exchange between this con- tinent and Europe and Asia, an intim- acy and largeness of communication which, somewhat hurt by the war, are resuming their urgency and import- ance from day to day. GUARD THE CHILDREN FROM AUTUMN COLDS The fall is the most severe season of the year for colds—one day warm the next is vet and cold and unless the mother is on her guard the little ones are seized with colds that may hang on all winter. Baby's Own Tab- lets are mothers best friend in pre- venting or banishing colds. They act as a gentle laxative, keeping the bow- els and stomach free and sweet. An occasional dose will prevent colds or if it does come on suddenly the prompt use of the Tablets will quickly cure it. The -Tablets are sold by medi- cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. • WOOD FOR PIPE -MAKING. Growing Use of the American Moun-. tain Laurel Root. A sale of a Iarge quantity of moun- tain laurel roots from one of the na- tional forests in the Southern AppaIa- chians is reported by Government cal- ' cials in charge, who say that the roots will be used to make pipes. The mountain laurel root is similar in ap- pearance to the French briar, which the majority of pipe smokers are said to prefer. The French briar is the root of the white heath, or "bruyere." These roots are gathered in large! quantities, and after being cleaned and sawed into blanks they are placed in hot water and simmered for 12 hours or more. This process gives them the rich hue for which the best pipes are noted. It is said that in 1915 the value of the blanks shipped! to this country was almost $800,000, and in addition a large number of fin- ished pipes were imported. On account of the present scarcity and high price of French briar, al number of pipe manufacturers in this , country have been on the lookout for( substitutes, and the Federal Forest Products laboratory has conducted ex- periments to determine the availabil- ity of other woods. It is reported that the mountain laurel root burns out! more readily than briar, but forest service experts are trying to find a method of hardening the wood, and have succeeded to an appreciable ex -1 tent. They have also found that a number of the various kinds of chap- arral which are abundant in the West give promise of yielding material which will be the equal of French briar in every way. Other woods now widely used for pipe making are ap- ple, red gum, ebony and birch, to- gether with smaller amounts of olive wood, rosewood and osage orange. Considerable amounts of the laurel roots are being used, and afficials ex- pect to make further sales. The lands purchased by the Government in the Southern Appalachians are reported to contain unlimited quantities of lau- rel which is widely known for the deli- tate beauty of its flowers. In places it forms exte :. ive thickets, which are almost impenetrable. Visitors to the mountains say that in the Spring these thickets, or "pink beds" as they are called by the mountaineers, are indescribably beautiful and form one of the main attractions of the region. The sales of laurel root will not be made at places frequented by tour- ists, or where its remove' will detract from the beauty of. the landscape. The War of the Home Seekers. Two English workmen were dis- cussing the war. "It'll be an awful long job, Sam;' said one, "It wilt," replied the other. "You see, the Germans is takin' thousands of the Russians prisoners, and the Russians is takin' thousands and thousands of German prisoners. If it keeps on, all the Russians will be in Germany and all the Gormans in Russia. And then they'll start oll over. again, fightin' to get bask to their 'ones!" Best for quality, style and value. Guaranteed for all cli- mates. Ask Your Dealer Didn't Say What Kind. She (pouting) ---Before we were married you said I was a dream. He—Yes, ' but don't forget that there are some pretty bad 'dreams. raauiafed Eyelids, 'r01)eEyes inflamed by expo- sure to Sun, Dual and Wind quickly relieved by Milne yesEye Remedy. No Smarting, b just Eye Comfort. .A.;t. Your Druggist's .5 Oc per Mottle, F4urineEy 1 SoiveinTubes2le. Forlieok elthe€yelt!'rceask Druggists or 6iurlseEyeleemedyCo.,Ch!cago. He Owned Up. "Simple Simon went afishing in his mother's pail." "Not so simple at that," declared the amateur sportsman. "I've spent time and money getting to a place where the likelihood of catching fish was no whit greater." rdinard'a Liniment Cures Dandruff. In a Safe Place. First undergraduate—Have you telegraphed to the old man for money? Second undergraduate—Yes. r. First undergraduate—Got any an- swer? Second undergraduate—Yes. I tele- graphed the governor, "Where is that money I wrote for?" and his answer reads, "In my pocket." Young scorpions eat their mothers. •�,+ '�;.�'� 3~•:31, Purely Herbal—No poison- ous coloring natter. Antiseptic -S tops U A o o d - poisoning, festering, etc. Soothing—Ends quickly the pain and smarting. Heall . Sec Blsox.aAllsoresDruggists and Stores SEED POTATOES SED POTATOES, IRISH COB - biers. Deleware. Carman. Order at once. Supply limited, Write for quo- tations. H. W. Dawson. Brampton. E:ELP WANTED. • CABINET MAKERS AND MACHINE hands wanted, Steady work at highest wages. Apply to The Bell Furniture Co., Southampton, Ont. NEWSPAPERS POR SALE PROFIT-MAKING 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, 78 West Adelaide Street Toronto: MXSCELLANEOBS. ('tANCEII, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC., lJ internal and external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr, Denman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. America's Pioneer Dog Remedies moor ON DOG DISEASES And How to Feed mailed free to any address by the Author H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, New York When buying your Piano insist on having an "OTTO HIGE1 " PIANO ACTION hhiry For Salo Wheelock Engine, 150 H.P., 18 x429 with double main driving belt 24 ins. wipe, and Dynamo 30 W. belt driven. All first • class contrition. Would be sold together or separate- ly ; also a lot of shafting at a very great bargain as room is required inlmedi- ately. S. Frank Wilson & Sons If salt is used for sweeping carpets, 73 Adelaide Street West, it will keep out moths. Toronto. nsinard'a Y.iitiment cniitvea Neuralgia. El), 9. ISSUE