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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1919-5-1, Page 3r tease seri WIFE'S COLD J1 s anus faronchitit3 CIJt2 D igY DR. VVr OD'S NORWAY PINE S' RUE. 7 for Olga Mrs. James Mack, Trenton, Out., writes: -"1 suffered for several months with a bad veld. Some friends told me about Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup, and of the benefit it was to then. Before I had used two bottles I could get .some rest, which I could not do before. I had tried everything, but "Dr. Wood's" was rho only thing that gave me any relief., My husband suffered terribly from bronchitis, and did not know whether he was going to recover or not. At my .druggist's; Mr. J. H. Dickey, T was ad- vised to try your syrup, which I did, and am so thankful that I cannot recom- mend it highly enough." Many people on the first sign of the :alight cold or cough neglect it, thinking, perhaps, it will disappear in a day or two, -hut the longer it is lot run the worse it gets until it settles on the lungs and serious results ensue. On the first sign of a cough or cold, get rid of it before it gets settled. Take a few closes of Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup and see how quickly it will dis- appear. This sterling remedy has been on the -market for the past 30 years, and stands" head and shoulders over all other cough remedies. Put up in a yellow wrapper; three pine trees the trade mark; price 25e. and 60c. Manufactured only by Tho T. Milburn. Co., L nited, •Toronto, Ont. Arbor Day. Friendly tree, this is your day, So we'll stop our work and play And talk of you, .And all the good things that you do. Standing still and quiet there, 'Sending branches into air, Making pleasant shade around, Delving far beneath the ground, Holding ever safe from harm • „Little nests within your arm, Standing firmly where you are, Reaching up to touch a star, Growing, working, just as I, Seeking God within the sky. The Farm Needs Modern Equipment. With the return of our rural' 'sons 1 to the old homes, we shall find that mental changes have taken place in many of them which will alter their whole lives. A large proportion of the young farmer boys who entered our army and saw service abroad, or under- went nderwent military training at one of aur large military posts, were away from home for the first time in their lives. The experiences which came to them on the field of battle or on the drill field were broadening. They met young men 'from various other stations of life, gathered to- gether from all corners of the coun- try, and they got new ideas about the world. In. a majority of cases the young men were intimately associated with mechanical things. They learn- ed how to assemble and operate trucks, or tanks, or airplar.es, They studied motors, big guns and bridge building. No matter how much or bow lit- tle of this knowledge the boys car- t ried away, they did retain the idea that in the world in which they live ithere are mighty forces which can be used for doing man's work, and these forces are all symbolized by the word "machinery." The big things were done by mechanical means, directed by the guiding thought of man. When our farmer boys get back on the farm, that thought will come back to them. On a hot, dusty day, when driving the favorite old team in the field, both man and beasts working hard to get their work done, the recollection will return of the traction engines that yanked the big guns out of the mud, or pulled big loads along almost impassable roads. On the farms where brawn alone is relied upon to get the work done, the boys are going to do some sober thinking about the words "ma- chinery" and "power." Either those things must come to the farm, or the boy will go to the locality where me- chanical power is recognized and used. Many farmers now have an automobile; it seems as essential in a business way as horses and plows for the field. There are hundreds of farms in Can- ada large enough to warrant the purchase of a farm tractor, or Y• other modern machinery, that yet ick the essentials of hood farming. To the father the new mode of farming may not have the same ap- peal 'as to the son. Nor will that appeal be as strong to those who stayed at home to work in the •sec- ond line trenches of food production. But if a boy, Ty directing the opera- tions of a tractor capable of pulling three plows, can do three tinges as much work in the same time as he could by driving a team of horses, that boy ought to use the modern equipmont. Farmers • are, to a certain extent, dependent upon the weather for the success of their operations. When they surround themselves with the modern equipments to get their work done more quickly and at the right time, they virtually take out insur- ance against the weather. Many faun owners have more than paid for their up-to-date machinery by forcing through some single piece of work that saved their crops, in spite of bad weather. The Spick -Span Dress. A mincing .maiden, Dorothy Bess, Went out one day in a spick -span dress. Her heart was light and her head was high. She said, "They will look when I go by!" Then just ahead of her, in the way, She saw where„a rippling puddle lay. She saw it plainly, and then afar She. heard the "Honk!" of a motor car. There was Something that whispered low to her, "Wait 'where you are and do not stir." But her mind was on the spick -span dress, And toward the puddle minced Dor- othy Bess. She reached the puddle, her head held high, As the motor car went whizzing by. The things that happened I'll let you guess, But oh, what a sight was the spick - span dress! Bespattered and cross, alas and alack! She did not mince as she hurried hack. But she said, "Next time I will wait -you see - When Something whispers like that to me!" Eight Soldier Brothers Survive War. A most fortunate family war re- cord is that standing to the credit of the eight sons of Mr. J. Broome, an Egham (Surrey) butcher. Although several of them have participated in many of the hardest fought, battles of the war -two were among• the "Old Contemptibles," one has figured five times in the official casualty lists, and one was in two aeroplane "erarhoe--all eight have escaped without loss of life or limb. WITH " OU EDS ?7 W I T C O T O P A� IION SUN ICE T e.ul1@IG MLS L1U1-LIVER PILLS. Too often one is liable to dismiss con stipation as a trifle. It is not. Whei you allow your bowels to become `logger. up, there pours a stream of pollute` waste into the blood instead of it being carried off by nature's channel, the bowels, and when this waste matter gets into the blood it causes headaches, jaun dice, piles; liver complaint, sour stomael. and 'rnany other troubles. By talcrsig Milburn's Lara -Liver you will find that the bowels will be kept regular in their action, the poisoning of the blood and general weakening: of t•hr system is rectified, and the entire bud is restored to normal condition. Mise Elsie Zimmerman,'1'hedl'orci. (bit,, writes: -"I have used your Milburn's Lara -Liver Pills for constipation, awl have never found myself troubled since. I am very glad to have found something to cure ire, and will always tell everyone About them who is troubled in the same way as I was." • Price?5e. a vial at all dealer•:+. or ,nailed direct on teeedipt of price by The T. Mil- hum il- "a Cm, Limited, 'i'oronto, Ont. ca, pssTxLzass 't AR D E N S. LAWNS. FLOWERS. I Complete Fertilizer. Write George Stevens, Peterborough. Ont pa. 's a W FURS 1-'" wilt y high- est market price for IMIIISZB.8.TS apd Ginseng Root. 22 yea -re of reliable trading. Roferenoe-Union Bank oP Canada Write for Tarts. N. SILVER, 220 St. Paul St. W. Montreal, 3.Q. 0IF , tSaN )2Ld.1•gTx ON BRAND Ready Roofing, Asphalt Slate Shing- les, Wall Board. Building Papers,, Roof Paints, etc. Wrfte for prices and samples. yp�� rS�ave money by BROS." direct. iY. 5,,.. a�t�660 BROS."Toroato8t. NATIVE SEED CORN Grown in south Essen Selected at husking time. Pegged and cratecured. Limited amount ORDER EARLY. Wis. No. 7 $2.26 per bus, White Can Bailey " " Golden Glow 4.00 North Dakota 4.00 Bas Fres. Cash with order., Darius Wlgie, Kingsville, Ont. 8.25 " II VARICOSE VEINS? Wear This Non -Elastic Laced Stooking SANITARY, as they may bo washed or boiled. AD3i7STfiBLE, laced like a legging; always fits. ooM ORTAISnE, made to measure; light and dur- able. COOL, contains No Rubber. 1,500,000 SOLD EQ.cmarazOAZ, cost 23.60 each,limb. 0$me 6.60, postpaidtwo for the . Write for Catalogue and Sell' -Measurement 131ani.. Conies Limb Specialty Co. 614 New Birks Bldg. iwontreal, P,Q. FOR S1.L'sr, Canadian Root Seed. Raised from the best stock by Dominion Experimental Farms, SUPPLY LIMITED. Prices as follows: Mangers --- 60 lbs. and over 55c. 200 " " 60c. loon 43c. Swede Turnips - 60 lbs. and over 85c. 00 20e, 1G00 73c. 3rield Carrots- ,. 5 lbs• and over 000. 25 " 850, 200 '' 780. Freight paid and larks free. lb, Kill the Potato Bug Early. Kill the Colorado Potato Beetles, or potato "bugs," ear.y in the season before they start raising their fam- ily of hungry little buglets. The par- ent beetles spend the winter months in the ground at a depth of from two to several inches. These em- erge in the spring about the time the potato plants come through the ground. Early in spring they may be seen flying through the air look- ing for a suitable place in which to lay their eggs. They feed on prac- tically all plants of the potato fam- ily, attacking potato, tomato, egg- plant, ground cherry and jimson . weed, as well as other weeds of this Kissable Child Nobody lave Will Ac $1.00 FINISH FIX; Sometime I3etween Mldnig;ht and Dawrt Alabama dell R PROBLEM 8Y MUNELEN t AW Red Cross Girl of Mine Virginia frena Virginia Wait For I Want to See if MY Daddy's Come Home. The whole seven songs will be sent prepaid on receipt of price. together with our complete list of popular music. Wo will also place your name on our mailing list to receive notion of the new comp as they come out. Send the dollar now and get the mucic by return mall. Ideal ituslo Putillshhhg Co, bre 17 emee +AZNg1 sew. )19, TORONTO ,..,.-.,. e z . ,s i -ms s ADVERTISING THA PAYS By R. G. KIRBY. Advertising of the products of the 'advertised. The writer has no grudge farm is being found profitable by against the real estate men but be- praritical farmers. Live stock ad- Heves that many farmers could find vertising has been proven of the more satisfactory buyers for their greatest importance in selling stock farms if they would handle the at a profit. A farmer with pure- transaction themselves and do their bred cockerels weighed them up and own advertising and not turn the estimated how much they would deal over to any agent. Of course, bring on his local market. Then he the real estate men that advertise o sell farms and demand a. fee in advance should not be patronized by farmers with land for sale. When a farmer wishes to sell his land, he should first make it as presentable as possible, then advertise in papers • that reach both farmers and city buyers and then deal with honest buyers who appreciate good farms, and do not waste the farmer's time' trying to trade questionable securi- ties or poor city property for the land. Advertising often locates a bona fide farm buyer in the mash unexpected place. It is the cheapest, method of placing honest facts be- fore a large number of people. It is not only the cheapest but the quickest and the best method. When cows and calves are for sale, many farmers keep them longer than is necessary when they only adver- ,tise on the farm sign board. Often they try to sell to friends or neigh- bors who are really not in the market for such stock. Then they try the advertisement which places their stock before many buyers and some of them immediately prove to be in the market for the cattle. The foun- dation of the pure-bred live stock business rests on faith in honest ad- vertising and the farmer who at- tempts to make the most profit from pure-bred animals without the use of paid publicity is making a mistake that costs much money. Even grade cattle can often be sold at good prices by advertising, as many farmers need another good grade cow for their herd. At the present time there is a fine demand for dairy cattle having even a fair producing ability and such cows do not need to be sold for beef as there is always some buyer who will pay more for them than beef prices if they still have any value as mak pro- ducers. A short advertisement will usually locate buyers for tuch stock that will pay more for them than the stock buyer. The farmer with the pure-bred bull calf for sale might wish that a hun- dred thousand people would march down his road and read his sign say- ing that the bull was for sale. He might be willing to pay several dol- lars to obtain an audience of that size. It is certainly lucky that he can buy a little advertising space for a few dollars that will tell his story to all those people. The farmer on the back road and the farmer near the large city have about an equal chance to sell their live :stock through the medium of advertising. The price is the same to each, family. The female deposits herr eggs on the under side of the leaves. These eggs are yellow in color and are laid on end, in bunches. A single female is capable of producing be- tween eighteen and nineteen hundred eggs. As soon as these hatch the small larvae or "slugs" feed on the plant until full grown, when they drop to the ground and enter the soil where they change to„.•a naked, yel- lowish colored pupae. Within a short time these pupae change into the hard-shell beetles. These climb out and begin eating the leaves of the plant along with the larvae. These insects eat a quantity of food out of all proportion to their size. It has been estimated that the po- tato crop of the country is reduced each year more than ten million bushels as a result of attacks by insects and diseases. If spraying were not practiced at all this figure would be much larger. The total number of bushels lost every year to the above two causes can be con- siderably reduced by the right me- thods of spraying. Nearly every community, where potatoes ere grown, contains those who either do not spray at all or else do not spray as thoroughly as they should. Think of the female beetle with her eigh- teen hundred eggs and spray early before they hatch and the young be- gin to satisfy their enormous appe- tites. The Colorado potato beetle is not a difficult insect to control if begun in time. The use of a good arsenical, properly applied, will keep this pest from doing very much damage. Spraying should begin when the plants are about six or eight inches high and should be repeated about every two weeks as long as the plants are growing. During the past few years arsenate of lead, or lead arsenate, has been the most Univers- ! ally used poison, supplanting Paris green. It has the advantage of con- taining less soluble arsenic, and it is {this latter which causes the burning of the foliage. The lead arsenate : will also stick much better and be less liable to be washed off. Calcium arsenate, or arsenate of lime, is now ' being put on the market and is a 'very good poison for the potato "bugs." It is cheaper than arsenate of lead and requires less of the poison to do the same work. This poison can be applied with water or else put right in the Bordeaux mix- ture. Net payment bank strait 60 clays from d+r:,' of in\oleo and 5':.,, allowed for cash 10 days from date of invoice. Particulars about toilettes on appn. Cation. DR. of U. 11:V ,T17, c.teutral 10x pe tti en (al G'arm. Ottawa. ()nt. . Peace Gardens. It is time to turn over the earth in your gardens and get it ready for the vegetable and flower families. All the boys and girls who planted war gardens had so much fun and satisfaction out of them that there will be quite as many gardens this year as last. Flowers and vegetables are not the on:y things that grow in gardens! 'Girls and boys grow stronger and healthier and happier. Any of you who have read "The Secret Garden," by Frances Hodgson Burnett, will know this, It is so wonderful to make things grow and know that without your care and effort that lit- tle piece of ground would be of no use to itself or the world. Let's all have gardens, even if they are very little ones! The world's most crooked river is the Jordan, which wanders nearly 220 miles to cover sixty. thought that they were pure-bred t and of a breed that was popular in his community. Ile placed a shall advertisement in the paper and sold them at a price twice as large as their value for meat and they were worth the increased price as breed- ing stock because other farmers needed new blood of that breed end the birds were vigorous and of good type. Without the assistance of ad- vertising the birds only had their meat value. The advertising reach- ed a class of customers who could put such stock to even more profit- able use and thus could pay more money for them. A farmer with a pair of pedigreed watch -dogs of a popular breed had eight pups for sale. He advertised in his • town paper and sold them within a week and had to refuse several orders. Several farmers came a long distance to see the pups and in every case made a purchase and the breeder did not even have the trouble of crating them for express. In other cases the pups were crated in small boxes and shipped by ex- press and reached the buyers in good condition. Many farmers fear to ship ,animals by express and never do, when it can be avoided. Possibly the losses in express shipments are emphasized so frequently that we forget the large number of satisfac- tory shipments that are made. The use of proper packages that are care- fully marked is one of the necessary factors in making advertising pay. In advertising poultry it pays to study the stock for sale and then de- scribe it as briefly and accurately as possible. Some buyers like to know the strain of fowls for sale and whether the birds are bred -to - lay or exhibition stock and they like to pick up those points from the first advertisement. If the buyer is after hatching eggs he will wish to know something about the breeding stock. Many advertisers sell only hatching j eggs from mature hens and not from pullets and this is a point worth mentioning in the advertising. When a farm is for sale advertis- ing is necessary to place that fact before a large number of prospective buyers. Often a farmer places a sign before his house when the farm is for sale. The neighbors read the sign and the farmers and motorists see it, but often the man who is looking for such a farm is living in a nearby city or on a farm in another township and he will not see any I roadside sign and not know that the place is for sale if it is not Mothers and daughters of all ages are cordially invited to write to this department, initials only will be published with each queston and its answer as a means of identification, but full name and address must be given in each letter. Write en one aide of paper only. Answers will be mailed direct if `stamped and addressed envelope is enclosed, Address all correspondence for this department to Mrs. Helen Law, 235 Woodbine Ave., Toronto. INTERNATIONAL LESSON MAY 4. Lesson V. Man Medi in the Image of God -Gen. 1:26-28; 2:7-9; Eph. 4:20-21. Golden Text, Gen. 1:27. Gen. 1: 26-28. In Our Image. To the Hebrew writer this would, of course, mean the spiritual image Ebel likeness of God. For the teachers of the religion of Jehovah- were em- phatic in declaring that'God had not revealed Himself in any material form, but only as a Voice (Deut. 4: 12, 15), and that they should not at- tempt to represent Him by any grav- en image (Excel. 20: 4; Deut. 4. 15- 18). The Creator of the world is not like the images which the goldsmith makes (Jer. 10: 1-16), "The Lord is high above all nations, And His glory above the heavens. Who is like unto the Lord our God, That hath His seat on high?" It is therefore in mind and heart that we are like Gocl, like Him in reason and conscience, in thought and will, in power to love and hate, in wisdom to plan and skill to per- form. ' But through disobedience to God we have marred that likeness, and we can recover it only as, through faith and by the grace of His Spirit, We become imitators of Jesus Christ. (2 Cor. 3: 18,) "Know yourself as you truly are," said Professor T.: H. Green, "and you will know the truth of God, freedom and immortality." Hostess: -Here is a plan for a "school party:" Invitation are is- sued something like this: "School will be in session at the home of on Friday evening at eight o'clock. All supplies furnished. You are cordially invited to attend." As soon as the guests have re- moved their wraps they are ushered into the schoolroom -a large room that has been previously prepared by removing furniture and, if possible, arranging chairs so that two may work as partners. A. schoolmaster is in charge, Small numbered tab- lets are distributed. The person having tablet number one must find for partner the one whose tablet bears the same number and so on. When all are paired off, a bell is tapped, the school seated and each pupil answers the roll call with a proverb or anything that best suits the hostess' fancy. Old-fashioned school songs are sung and work be- gins. On the first page of each tablet the pupils find these questions to ans- wer: What letter is (1) A vegetable? ('2) An insect? (3) A clew (4) A sheep? (5) Part of a house? (6) A large body of water (7) A direction to oxen? (8) A bird (9) A beverage? (101 A verb of debt? Space is left for the answers, which are respectively: P, B, Q, 1J, L, 0, G, J, T, 0. Next comes some "arithmetic wade." (1) Five hunched plus a large boat c7;als withott 1:glit. t.') One thousand phis a poem equals man- ner. (3) One thousand plus help equals an unmarried woman. (4) Five hundred plus a preposition equals a great noise. (5) Five hun- dred plus uncooked equals to pull. (6) Fifty plus a kind of tree equals pari of a whip. (7) Fifty plus a finish equals to loan. (8) One hundred plus competent equals a heavy rope. (9) One plus to scold equals angry. (10) Five plus frozen water equals wickedness. The correct answers are: D -ark, M -ode, M -aid, D -in, D -raw, Leash, L -end, C -able, I -rate, V -ice. A quiz in "physiology" comes next: Of the human body what are these: (1) Two established measures? (2) Two musical instruments? (3) Small articles used by carpenters? (4) An of a life value ,. cannote article used by artists? (5) Steps of parents see the a hotel? (6) Two dedicated build- above the accumulations of worldly ings? (7) Two graceful trees? (8) i possessions, and the carrying out of A large wooden box? (9) A male their own personal ambitions, we deer? (10) Two students? feel as though there ought to be Correct answers: Feet and hands, some way for them to see it. This ear -drums, nails, palate, insteps, department stands for law and temples, palms, chest, heart, pupils. order, for a certain amount of pa - Lastly comes "literature." What rental authority, for children's rev- erence and obedience to parents. But -and this is a big, grave but: when parents fail in their obligations to- wards the soul given to their eare, shall they not expect those souls to seem to fail them sooner or later? If this daughter should some day strike out for herself, determining to have the education and opportnn- Answers: Poe, Bacon, Bunyan, Cooper, Tennyson, Coleridge, Scott, Dickens, Shakespeare, Longfellow. The answer to each first question is given as a starter. After work is concluded tablets are exchanged, teacher reads the answer and all are marked. Intermissions are given to liven up the "work," During these, apples or other simple school treats are pas- sed or brief games played till "school calls." Farm Boy: -Why not organize a band among your companions Who love music? Other boys have done so. We know of one band of fifteen pieces whose members are all farm boys living within a radius of three miles. These boys meet regularly each week for practice and they have become so proficient that they are in demand for alt club programs and picnics that are held in their county. Get up a band and show that your district is alive. Somebody:-f'Will you treat this question confidentially so far as my name is concerned, though I am sure it may interest others. I have a brother who, as well as myself, is a farmer. He has two children; son who is sixteen and daughter eigh- teen. He has put the boy through high school and purposes to have him attend Agricultural College because he says the two of them can get more out of the big farm if one of them - this is one of the partners, Farmer & Son, is "on" to the latest things in scientific farming. It is purely a financial investment on my brother's part. The daughter has been a little witch with housework ever since she made mudpies. For this reason she s taken out of school when she wa was thirteen and she practically takes care of the whole house while her mother gives her attention to raising every year a larger flock of chickens and turning out more gilt- edged butter than they need to make -if it is made at the expense of a young girl's future. Will you say something in your excellent depart- ment about this?" There is more to be said than we can give space to in this particular This form of injustice is not peculiar to the farm. When department author is: (1) A river in Italy? (2) The side of a porker, cured? (3) An affliction of the feet? (4) A do- mestic animal and the noise of an- other? (5) A number, a vowel and light of day? (6) A dark mineral end a low line of hills? (7) A native of the north of Great Britain? (8) A elane exclamation? (9) To agi- tate and a weapon? (10) Not short ity for larger development which is and a nickname for a boy? her RIGHT -who shall blame her? potter forms the clay, and inbreat1hes We are reconciled to God. We re - the life of the soul (2: 8). The es- i turn to Him in penitence and in lov- e is the same. Man's ins obedience. His favor is restored sential trut • ner life, his soul life, is derived from and we enter into the blessed life of the breath of God. This statement, as that of 1: 26-27, is made of all foretaste and promise of the life men, without distinction. And so all eternal. We, who had lost our birth - men everywhere, in all ages, are right, become again the children of children of God, made in His image, God. "Taught in him." We put away the old corrupt humanity, spoiled by sin, are "renewed in the spirit" of OUT mind, clothed in our true man- hood which is .in the image of God, or, as Paul says, "after God hath been created in righteousness and holiness of truth." misrule of the Turks. Ones fertile This is what the atonement means. This is what Christ does for us. He and productive and the home of a large population, with great and rich brings us to God. His death reveals cities, it .is capable of being 'restored, to us God's love. "Let them have dominion." Com- pare Psalm S: 3-8. Thus. we are taught, God associates man with Himself in the government of the world. He gives him God -like pow- ers, for the right use of which he is responsible. He puts, so to speak, the world of living things in his care, to be controlled and used, but never abused, by him. Gen. 2: 7-9. Formed Man of the Dust. In this second account of man's creation the language is bolder and more picturesque than in the first, in chapter 1. There God created in His own image; here He forms, an a communion with Him which is the deriving from Him their life. Com- pare what Paul says in Acts 17: 24- 29, and also Amos 9: 7. "A garden." The land of which the Hebrew writer is speaking was southern Mesopot- amia, between the Tigris and Eu- phrates rivers, the land so recently delivered by British arms from the W der wise government to some un mem00.611113m00.611113 of its former prosperity. f tv. ' zma epA a s 'The history of the land has been like ALL RUN DOWN that of humanity, made by God to be very good, but marred and cor- rupted by sin and folly. The Hebrew writer uses the an- cient story in a aymbolic or figurative way. The garden means to him man's primitive innocenee and happiness. The "tree of life" represents the favor of God and communion with Him, and the "tree of the knowledge of good and evil" repre- sents the simple law of right and wrong whieh from the beginning man must choose whether to obey or disobey. Through wrong choice and disobedience he lost his inno- cence, ,lost the favor of Cod in which was his true life, and the consequent alienation from God is symbolized by his expuleion from the gsarden and by death. No truer description of sin and its rcnsequett 06 has ever beer written. Eph. 4: 20-24. Flyer. as Truth Is in Jesus. Through faith in Jesus Christ and through imitation of Him we regain the paradi•se we have lost. FROM ,I 'ART and NERVES. Airs. Percy G. McLaughlin, Lawrence Station, N.1t, writes: -"I am writing to tell you that 1' have used Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills, and find since I com- menced to use them that I feel altogether a different woman. I was weak and run down from my heart and nerves, and was recommended to try your pills by Mr. James II. Scott who has taken them and says if it were not for them he rouge'! not live. When I finish the box I am now 'taking I will be completely (lured. I wish to thank you for putting up such a wonderful medicine, and I will gladly recommend it to one and all." To all triose who suffer in any way from their heart or nerves, Milburn's Ileart and Nerve''ilis will come as a great boon. '.Tiley strengthen and stimulate the weak heart to pump pure, rich, red blood to all parts of the body, strengthen the shattered nerves, and bring a feeling of contentment over the whole body. Price 50e. a box at all dealers or nailed direct on receipt of rice by '1he'I'. Mil- burn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. OVER ENTIRE BODY. No rest night or day forthose afflicted with that terrible skindisease, eczema, or, as it is often called, salt rheum., With its unbearable burning, itching, torture. ing day and night, relief is gladly wel- comed. It is a blessing that there is such a reliable remedy as Burdock Blood Bitters to relieve the sufferer from the continual torture and who can get no relief from their misery. Apply it externally and it takes out the fire and itch and aids in the healing process. Take it internally and it puri- fies tho blood of ell thoseoisons which are the source of skin eruptions, Mr. Andrew h3o'wen, Highland Grove, Ont., writes: --t I must say that Burdock Blood Bitters is eewnuderful preparnti t. I had .a very bad case of eczema whi spread almost over my entire body, 1 triad doctors home treatments and many other patent tnedieincs, but with no results. A friend advised me to try 13.B.B., and after taking five before, f ani thankful to say they cured me corns plotely." 13.I3.B. is manufactured Duty by T» T, Milburn Co., Limited, Wreaks .Ging