The Brussels Post, 1920-1-1, Page 7PRIVILEGES OF
BRITISH PEERAGE
PROFIT AND LOSS IN
HOLDING RANK.
• Lord Astor Unable to Revert
4 * to the Rank of Commoner
in Great Britain.
It has been an open secret over since
the death of the late Lord Astor that
his son and heir, who has now become
Viscount Astor, is very much dissatis-
fied in having to give up his seat in
the n011ite of Commons for one M the
House of Lords, his •dissatisfaction be-
ing little abated by the election to
Parliament of his accomplished wife,
Unfortunately there has seemed to
be no way out of bis unwelcome situa-
tion, since while a Commoner may be
elevated to the Peerage at the will of
the Sovereign, there is no law nor
warrant for a Peer to be reduced to
the rank of a Commoner. Once a peer,
always a Peer, is the infloxibre rule,
And while a son might refuse to in-
herit his father's land and house and
fortune, it is impossible for him to es-
cape the inheritance of his father's
rank in the Peerage.
Lords Rejected Elie
As a last resort, Viscount Astor had
one of his friends in the House of Com-
mons introduce a bill making it legal
for a Peer to renounce his rank and
title and become a Commoner; which
the House promptly rejected by an
overwhelming majority, largely on tbo
ground that while perhaps Lord Astor
might be justified in renouncing it for
himself, ho had no right to renounce it
for his heirs. So, willy-nilly, the poor
Viscount must be a Viscount still.
In thus seeking to escape from the
Peerage which his father worked so
hard to enter, and which Englishmen
generally are very glad to enter, Lord
Astor aimed, of course, Chiefly to ho
able to pursue a political career in the
House of Commons, a far more in.
teresting and Influential place than
the House of Lords. That would bo
his cblef item of profit.
There are, an the other hand, a
great many items of lees on the other
side of the aceount, some of which may
not be valued by His Lordship For
a peer enjoys various privileges and
exemptions which are denied to all
outside of that magic circle.
Thus, as a Peer, Viscount Astor is
exempt from jury duty atidIrom being
summoned to serve on a sheriff's
posse comitatus for quelling a riot or
for any other purpose. He is also
exempt from arrest in any civil action,
and from being outlawed or • tying an
attachment issued against !,..$ person
in inch action. Of cource. ho is liable
for treason or other felony. But if ho
should commit such a crime ho would regular' centr-e!' TUTE FOR THE BLIND, 86 King
not be tried by or in any ordinary The product of the home -workers is St, East, Toronto, Ont.
court, but would be summoned before bought and sold,
a tribunal of Peers, sitting in a special- Personal contact is established with Te
ly constructed courtroom, probably in recently -blinded .persons, and with
the centre of Westminster Hall, at the cases which are sometimes so old that All thanks, 0 Lord of Hosts,
Whose arm has made us free!
expense of the Crown, they become new in a very real sense.
Forgive our random boasts,
Confirm ourtrust In Thee,
Whose way is in the sea
That wards 011? coasts.
4
•
Models for Youthful Women
9218
No. 9215 -Misses' Dress.
cents. Suitable for small women;
closing on shoulder and at underarm;
two styles of sleeve attached to lining;
two-piece tucked skirt, in two lengths,
attached to waist. Cut in 3 sizes, 16,
18 and 20 years. Size 16 requires,
with dart sleeves, longer length 5%
yds. 86 ins. wide, or 3 yds, 54 ins.
wide; with puff sleeves, 4% yds. 36
ins. wide, or 2% yds. 54 ins. wide.
Width around bottom, 1.343 yds.
No. 9204 -Misses' Dress. Price, 25
cents. In two lengths; suitable for
small women; front in two sections;
two styles of sleeve. Cut in 3 sizes,
16, 18 and 20 years. Size 16 requires,
with bell sleeves, longer length, 4 yds.
36 ins, wide, or 2% yds. 54 ins. wide;
With dart sleeves, shorter length, 3%
9204
Price,
25,
9215
yds. 36 ins. wide, or 2% yds. 64 ins.
wide. Width around bottom, 1% yds.
No. 9218 -Misses' Dress. Price, 25
cents. Suitable for small women;
closing on shoulder and at underarm;
with or without peplum; two styles of
sleeve, attached to lining; three-piece
tunic; underskirt in two lengths, hav-
ing front lining section. Cut in 3
sizes, 16, 18 and 20 years. Size 16 re-
quires, shorter length, with peplum,
4% yds. 36 ins. wide, or 3 yds. 54 ins.
wide; without peplum, longer length,
4V, yds. 36 ins. wide, or 2% yds. 54
ins. wide. Width around bottom, 11,
yds. •
These patterns may bo obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Go., 70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept, W.
CANADA'S SIX
THOUSAND BLIND
Idle Pity Giving Way to Prac-
tical Effort on Their Behalf.
You have doubtless been interested
in what you have rzid or heard re-
garding the progress of a national
effort on behalf of the blind of Canada.
Bo you realize just what this effort
means?
Here are some of the things that
are being done:
Industrial training and employment
labor, Boards of Education, etc., in the
vital matter of preventing blindness.
A residence and training -centre,
"Pearson Hall," has been provided
where blind soldiers rnay find con-
genial conditions while taking voca-
tional instruction. In this connection
it may be interesting to know that
the Institute has entered into an
agreement with the Department of
Soldiers' Civil Re-Establ islun ent,
under which the Institute has estab-
lished an after-care department for
Canadian Soldiers blinded in the war.
There are other things, but they
may all be summed up by saying that
is being provided for the blind in the Institute endeavors in every prac-
centres established in Halifax, To- tical way to advance the interests of
rent°. Winnipeg and Vancouver. the blind and to ameliorate the con -
Useful handicrafts and the reading ditions under which they live
and writing of embossed characters Will you aid in supplying the most
are taught in the homes of those blind vital need of this work?
people who for various reasons are Thee mail your cheque to the
unable to take training at one of the CANADIAN NATIONAL INSTI-
He can be summoned as a witness
In any suit, and as such must be sworn
as any other witness. But when he is
called upon to deliver judgment, he
does so not on his oath, but on his
honor.
If anybody utters a slander against
him, It is a vastly more serious thing
than the utterance of a Eke slander
against a Commoner, being known in
law as scandal= magnation.
Peers Have Many Priveleges.
A Peer ale° has the privilege of
keeping his hat on in a court of Judice,
though for a Commoneeto do so would
be a serious offence.
It is an interesting fact that there is
one -member 01 the Peerage who is
privileged thus to wear his hat in the
presence of the Sovereign, and,
strange to say, the Peer thus privi-
leged is an Irishnian. This is tbe Baron
Kinsale (County Cork). Baron Cour-
cy, of Comedy, and Baron Ringrone, of
Ireland. His unique privilege dates
away back to the famous Sir John de
Courcy, who conquered the kingdom
of Ulster for Ring Henry II, and who
was made Earl of 'Ulster in 1181, To
him King John of England gave the
privilege of remaining covered in the
royal preeence, and ordered that that
privilege should be enjoyed by his
descendants forever. That did not
mean, of course, all his descendants,
but merely the head of the family in
each generation. This privilege was
forfeited for a time by the twenty-
-third learn Kingsale, who adhered
loyally to the douse of -King James II,
and was in consequence stripped of all
his honors and titles and outlawed.
But William III. soou pardoned him
and restored to him all his dignities,
including the privilege of wearing his
hat at the very foot or the throne, The
present Baron does not always exer
eise that right, but he jealously
eheriehes it 11.8 one of the most pre-
cious poseessione of -hie ancient house.
It may be added hat the title of Vie-
coubt, which Lord Astor.wishes to get
rid of, is next t� the lowest in the
Peerage, being Just above that of
Baron.' The imme is equivalent to
"Vice -Comes," and ras formerly
merely the title of a county sheriff,
it was never used a a title of nobility
until February 12, 1440, when Henry
VI. Made John, Baron Beaumont, "Vie -
count Beaumont." If Lord Astor
ehould get rid of the title he would
lose the priellege s of being styled
"Right Honorable," though that is a
diseinctian whiciehe :night regain as a
Cominonere But heeevouldeforOver Mr -
felt tile 11111414e if being addressed
by the King as "Our Right Trusty and,
Viten Beloved ilMuelia,"
This work is done by an experienced
Field Agent.
Books, magazines, and music in
embossed types are circulated free to
the blind of Canada. The monthly
average circulation of books, etc., is
close to eight hundred. The Institute
also arranges for the transcription of
music for any of its members at cost
price.
An active publicity propaganda
dealing with various dangers to which
the eye is subject is carried on, and
this is followed up with personal work,
looking to the larger co-operation of
medical men and nurses, employers of
Give ue prophetic eyes,
To watch the dawn unfold,
As out of dubious skies
Peace, with her wings of gold,
Cast in celestial mold,
Brings honor's prize.
In one triumphant line
Thy hosts with our parade;
The battle, Lord, was thine,
We but Thy words obeyed;
• Grant us, who lent war's aid,
Thy peace divine.
Trapping Mink
The raccoon and mink try the trap-
per's skill. Their instinct and cun-
ning warn them away frons traps. But
they can be profitably trapped in large
numbers if the trapper uses a few
simple methods and is persistent, The
rule of successful trappers is, 'When
you go out to look for mink look for
muskrats," since minks prey on the
muskrats.
Their favorite haunt is along mall
streams, and if the weather is cold
they still be found well up toward a
spring where the water is warmest.
They have their burrows under the
ground and, like the xnuskrat, enter
the holes through the water, 11 111 a
district where the streams have mud-
dy banks they build slides, and it Is
near the elides that traps aro most
often set for them. But if anything
1111 disturbed when the set is made they
are quite apt to abandon the slide, and
further trapping is useless there. The
track they make is much like that of
a muskrat, but when the two aro us-
ing the same district it is eaSy to dis-
tinguish between them.
It is their habit When coming .out of
their burrows and leaving the water
to land at or near the same spot every
tinie. Often their trail across a log,
or whore they have passed under or
around a snag, is easily seen. At this
eolete just under the water and Wight*
ly screened with water -Soaked leaves,
the trap ehould be placed, with the
chain fastened to a drovener. The
trapper should take care thathe leaves
no oder Of his own hands about the
set, By splashing water over chain
and trap, as Well aS where he • stood,
this le removed.
•
Tho mink is a rover and Will travel
a mile; or twd upend down the brunet;
6f a small stream in a tingle night,
It Is his habit to go nosing about old
legs„ Those about his feeding ground
he becomes familiar with, and he has
no fear of them. This sense of securi-
ty msy be used to good advantage by
the trapper.
At one end of each log, about which
mink signs are seen, raise just high
enough to allow a mink to pass under.
Support the end of the log with a trig-
ger trap or a figure four trap. On each
side of the trap leaves should be
thrown up to make a loose wall that
will crush flat when the log falls..
Those two walls join tho walls of the
bait pen which is formed on the
furtherside of the log by driving
sticks into the growler. These sticks
should be close enough together to
prevent the mink or any other animal
front passing between them, and
should stand as high as the top of the
log. This bait pen should then be
covered with leaves to darken the In.
terior. On the opposite side of the
log two sticks are driven into the
ground even with the twq. walls of
loaves under the log, to continue the
entrance ef the bait pen well out on
that side. The bait is then thrown r w
well back in the pen. The passage- in
way under the log 'should be of just
the right dimensions, so that the mink
will spring the trap in paseIng. This,
is known as a deadfall trap and.is of,
ten more successful than a steel trap.
Seine trappers -build-Just euch,a bait abo
house when using a eteel trap. The
trap should be covered with wet leaves
taken froni along the water's edge.
Care should be -taken not to use too
many leaves or they wilI -form a mall
-
ion which will make it possible for the
mielt to pull his toot out of the trap.
The trali chain should be fastened to
either a drowner or a drag, A facet
trap should never be ifastelled to a
km object, fel' the resistance Makes
it possible for the ensnared 141111014 to
pull its foot from tho trap.
A MOTHER'S TRIALS
Care of Herne and Children Of-
ten Causes a Breakdown.
The woman at home, deep in house-
hold Millen and the cares of mother-
hood, needs oecasidnal help to keep her
In good health, The deznands upon a
mother's health are many and severe.
Her own health trials and her chil-
dren's welfare exact heavy toils, while
hurried meals, broken rest and much
indoor living tend to weaken her con-
stitution. No wonder that the woman
at home is often indisposed through
weakness, headaches, backaches and
nervousness. Too many women have
grown to accept these visitations as
a part of the lot of motherhood. But
many and varied as her health troubles
are, the cause is simple and the cure
at band, When well, it is the woman's
good blood that keeps her well; when
ill she must make her blood rich to
renew her health. The nursing mother
more than any other woman in the
world needs rikh blood and plenty of
it. There is one always unfailing way
to get this good blood so necessary to
perfect health, and that is through the
use of D. Willituns' Pink Pills. These
pills make new blood abundantly, and
through their use thousands of weak,
ailing wives and mothers have been
made bright, cheerful and strong. If
you are ailing, easily tired, or depress-
ed, it is a duty you owe yourself and
your family to give Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills a fair trial. What this
medicine has done for others it will
surely do for you.
Mothers on the Shelf!
Ono of the most frequent Causes of
trouble between married people is
money. It is the dangerous rock on to
which many a martial barque of happi-
ness crashes and then founders.
Every girl should have a certain
sum allotted to her for housekeeping,
dress, and petty personal expenses.
This should be arranged, if possible,
and it is quite possible in these practi-
cal and common-sense days, before
merhrelergee'
Tare still men in the world
like the laborer who, on being asked
what money he gave his wife for her-
self, said: "Why, nothin' of coorse!
Why should I pay a woman, to whom
I already give her victuals, just for
cooking mine?"
Women of every class should keep
a wise pleasure of independence. This
can only be done if she has something,
however small, to spend of her own.
Another source of disagreement, be-
sides money matters, is the children
question. "Mother" does not always
agree with "father" in bis views on
girls; she hardly ever agrees with his
views on boys.
She take e the boy's part, father
favors the girl, and quarrels often
arise from nothing, veritable moun-
tains growing out or molehills.
Another source of married misery
lies In the fact that as soon as children
begin to arrive father relegates moth-
er to the shelf. This, of course, is not
always the ease. A man often keeps
all the grumbles and worries for
"mother," and never thinks tbat, even
if Elsie is nearly ten and Jack is four-
teen, she is still a comparatively young
and good-looking woman, and she
would sometimes like a little fuss
madeoofnmn
her.
Awwill
put up with a good
deal if only a mad keeps a few of his
charming courtship ways. If he keeps
all his charm for other women, and all
his grumbles for the home, he is a bad
husband, even if he pours out money
on his wife.
The man who sinks behiud his news-
paper, and only utters a grumpy mono -
unable now and again to bis wife,
should remember these words, and
spare her a little courtship praise and
attention.
Remarkable New Coal Range.
In the present coal situation a cook-
ing range that shows a fuel saving of
something like 85 per cent. will at-
tract extraordinary attention. When,
in addition, it consumes all its smoke
and soot, and most of its ash, atten-
tion grows into wonder. Yet a new
range does just that, The secret lies
in the use of superheated air for the
deaft. Air enters at the bottom, pass-
es under the ovens and up through the
hollow fire -box lining. It is so hot
when it issues from holes at the top
that the coal gas is instantly ignited,
and great streamers of flame, reach-
ing 9 ft. in length, burst from the air
holes and run entirely around the
ovens to the flue, passing the incom-
ing air channels, This explains the
Preheating of the air. The residue is
actually less than the amount indi-
cated as ash in chemical analysis of
the coal.
naleur:
::.16 days in the month of January
the foot. It -tried 011 kinds of reM.
smearing with pain of rheum::::
.15 11411 nsitl1lng 616 me ,_ g ne
iserson told me about blINARD'S
ablNati 05.00011 as I died..lt`the Satur-
day night, the next Morning I was feel-
ing very geol.; I tell you tits remedy is
, , .
giveoerlificate any Onto that youd
would
to have one: if any tirne.I come to hear
lit Any person slog of .rheumatIsm, I
could telt them about eels remedy.
litleNerdM LBVEILLE,
01115 I y,
216 Rue Ontario East, ltIontreal.
Vete 14, 1005.
The germ theory of the transmission
of disease was entertained as long
ago as 1657, when Rome wee ravaged
by the plague,
So that a watch will be as fleCeAila0
as if worn On 4 wrist an inventor has
patented a pouch to be suspended from
belt,
, • ^
In the Shadow of His Wings.
(91st Psalm).
How bleat Is the soul that has fullnd a
retreat,
When rude chilling bleats of adversity
beat,
A. fortress secure, what time trouble is
nigh,
Neath the sheltering wings of the
Father on high,
In that refuge serene he shall not be
afraid
Of the snare of the fowler, tho' subtily
laid,
No terrors disturb his sweet alumber
at night,
Nor at noonday the arrow's swift veno-
mous flight
Ne'er phantom -filled darkness his
heart shall dismay,
Nor sudden destruction that wasteth
by clay,
Tho' pestilence sweep o'er the land far
and wide
And thousands are falling a prey at
his side.
Misfortune and. evil around 110 may
El 00,
Yet safe from the scourge shall his
dwelling place be,
For God's mighty angels, obeying His
will,
In their hands will uphold him and
shield him from ill.
Because Arm is his trust in His mercy
alone
Who Omnipotent reigns on His
Heavenly throne
And pledges His promise forever to
keep
Those who on Him rely in peace. per -
feet and deep.
WELL SATISFIED WITH
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
Mrs. A. Bernard, La Presentation,
Que., writes: -"I have used Baby's
Own Tablets for my baby and am
well satisfied with them. I have
recommended them to several of my
friends who have also used them with
beneficial results." The Tablets are a
mild but thorough laxative which
regulate the stomach and bowels and
thus prove of benefit in cases of
indigestion, constipation, colic, colds,
etc. They are sold by medicine deal-
ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from
The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„
Brockville, Ont.
Water on the Brain.
Do you get mentally fagged -and
too quickly? Are you conscious that
your work suffers from what has been
called "mind fog?" Is it pain and
tribulation to you to concentrate?
Have you to "drive" your brain to
make it do its work? Do you admit -
to yourself -that your mind seems to
have lost Its grip, its freshness, its
originality? Then it's as likely as not
that what you want is water on your
brain!
What is the matter with you is ab-
stinence from drink! As a nation we
don't drink enough. Discern not the
hand of a prohibitionist here, but the
ideal and natural drink is water. The
brain, and the whole body, needs a lot
of it. Six pints per day is the mini-
mum. And -with water still given
premier place -it does not greatly
matter how you get that amount.
Tea, coffee, milk, cocoa, mineral
waters, are all mainly water, and each
counts. Spirits are quite taboo for
the brain. They may whip for a
time, but the last state of a spirit -
whipped brain 1s insanity.
Drink more -more water for pre-
ference. You'll see, and feel, the brain
difference very rapidly.
And that's all there is in 11! It's
the watered brain that does the work.
So water it!
Rubbish Machines.
One of the most remarkable ma-
chines In the world has been invented
by 00 Englishman, Mr. W. P. Hoyle.
It converts dust into cash -or, more
correctly speaking, It extracts what is
'worth saving from rubbish, and pre-
pares it for redistribution.
Cinders are washed, dust is con-
verted into fertilizer, tins are cleaned,
and paper and rags sorted, Another
bit of machinery used in the refuse
recovery plant deals with elinkers,
turning them into moulded concrete
building-blocks, About $195 can be
saved out of eyery hundred tons et
waste, which is the amount of rubbish
accounted for daily by a town of 86,-
000 inhabitants, It the whole of the
United Kingdom it is estimated that
nine million tons of waste are thrown
away every year, so one can work out
the princely income this represents.
Mr. Hoyle's rubbislemachine should
help England to realize that income,
but meanwhile many individual towns
aro doing valiant things on their own,
Aberdeen In one day collected $2,836
worth of bottles, a Week's jtan-jar col-
ledion in Sheffield realized 56,000, sold
for $600, while Gleamy is saving rub-
bish to the extent of nearly $100,00
per
Mudil has been aehieved by Attempt-
ing the impossible.
The mould of a. nian's fortune is in
his own hands.
• .4. timber of five -ton eonerete
have been constructed by file Public
Works Department of K,Mgston, Jatu-
Mee, Foch, buoy is aboat 6 ft. in
diatneter, with cylindrieal walls about
inches thick,
Matrimonial Alterations,
"Agnes married a self-made man,
didn't she?"
"Yes, but she has eompolled hini to
make extensive alterations,"
An Apology.
Aunt ---"Tommy, 1 put three pies
here this morning and now there's
only one. How ie that?"
Tommy -"Please, Auntie, it was so
dark that I didn't see that one."
•
Moral Superiority,
If you will make three wishes," said
the clefashioned fairy, "I will see that
they all come true."
"You're a little slow," responded the
rustic. "Any feller that runs an office
this way will promise to make wishes
conic true faster'n you can think 'ent
up,"
A Dreadful Mistake.
There was a distinct air of chasten,
ed resignation about him as he penned
the following note: "Dear Miss Brown
-I return herewith your kind note in
which you accept my offer of marriage.
I would draw your attention to the
fact that it begins 'Dear George.' I
do not know who George is, but my
name, as you will remember, is Thom.
as."
What's Its Use?
Little Jimmy went with his mother
to stay with an aunt in the count**,
and his mother was very worried as to
how he would behave,
But to her surprise he was angelic
during the whole visit- always did as
he was told. and never misbehaved.
Ae soon as he got home, however, he
was bis natural self egain.
"011.sogood jel*IllhimleYcouelwleersealadW"ayy,ewehwere
you start behaving badly now?"
"What's home for?" asked Jimmy in
pained surprise.
Judging By Experience.
At the local club the conversation
had got on the topic of the English
language, its uses and abuses.
"Have you ever noticed," said one
man, "how fond people are of using
garden phrases when speaking of a
woman. Her cheeks 'are always
'roses,' her hands are 'lily-white,' her
eyes are 'dewy violets,' and -e--"
"You've forgotten one," broke in the
man with the sour face, who had hith-
erto been silent.
"Which one?"
"Her tongue. It's a seariet 'run-
ner.' "
But—
Mr. Milks was a commercial travel-
ler, and only came home at long inter-
vals. On one of his returns he was
telling his live -year-old son all about
his wanderings.
"And then I came home," he finish-
ed.
"And did you come in a train, dad-
dy?" asked Johnny
"Yes, sonny."
"And did you see the ears of the
engine?"
"Of course not!" laughed daddy.
"Engines don't have ears?"
"Oh, yes, they do!" persisted the
small boy. "Haven't you ever heard
of the engineers, daddy?"
MONEY ORDERS,
Dominion Express Money Orders are
on sale In five thousand offices
throughout Canada,
5.
The Work of Coughing.
If you cough every fifteen minutes
for ten hours you expend energy
equivalent to two hundred and fifty
units of heat, which is equivalent to
the nourishment contained in three
eggs or two glasses of milk. So says
a physician who has specialized on the
waste of energy in cougning.
At a normal rate we expel air froth
the chest at the rate of four feet per
second, but in violent coughing we ex-
pel it at the rate of three hundred feet
a second. Thus a persistent cough
not only weakens the constitution, but
ft is a direct cause of emaciation ac-
cording to the same authority. Such
weighty statistics lead to a reitera-
tion of the oft -repeated inunction,
"never neglect a cough."
Liniment Chu.est Gamest fn coma
It Isn't Easy—
To apologize,
To begin again,
To admit error,
To be unselfish,
To face a sneer,
To be considerate,
To endure success,
To keep en trying,
To profit by raistakes,
To forgive and forget,
To think and then act,
To keep out of the rut,
To snake the best of little,
To shoulder deserved blame,
To subdue all ugly temper,
To maintain a high standard,
To recognize the giver lining,
But -it always pays!
SINCE el 070
ILO
aarnscomis
•
Classitiee Advertisements.
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PoRTRAIT AGENTS WAIWINI1
germ printand finishes- lowest,
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rnnto,
susomr.sAarnorrs.
ruacan, TUMORS, LW4PS,IePG.
..internal and external, dred without
pain int our bolas troatmomit. Write us
before too late. Dr, Bellman Medical
Co.. Limited, Oollinewvod. Ont.
.4.1 rsdid opportunity. Write
101,,County. apieTnwsnArlen, WIDEKLY, .111 BRUCil
Box T, Wilson PublishIng Co,,
11 Adelaide Ett, W., Toronto%
laLL /INCIPPRD 1.4111WEIPAPER
and lob printing plant In Santoro
Ontario. Insurance carried $1,500. Will
go for 51,200 on quick salts Box OIL
Wilson Publishing Co., Ltd., Toronto,
The old idea that periodical change
of seed was essential has been akon-
tioned by scientitie inveskigators and
by the most progressive farmer. If
proper methods are followed to keep
up the fertility of the soil; if the
land is thoroughly cultivated; and it
clean plump seed is sown every year,
deterioration of the grain wall not
occur.
Kinard's Liniment, naves Distemper.
"Not to call attention to crowded
work or petty fatigues or trivial ex-
perienees. To 'heal wounds which in
times past my cruel and careless hands
have made. To seek no favor, no
compassion; to deserve, not ask for
tendernese. Not to feel any uneast.
MS'S when my advice or opinion is not
asked or is set aside." -Archbishop
Benson's Principles,
°Coughs and Colds
Restless Nights
which sap the vitality.
Danger lurks in every
hour a cold is allowed
to run. Assist nature
tobring your children
quickly back to health
and strength and avoid
serious complications
111 (11 prompt use of
Cray's Syrup - over
60 years in I.14e.
LI,, erp!tihty the
' r
, 't10ifl't
l, '''''''i ''‘' . " ., , •
'T'C . ; C: .."' 7
America. e Pioneer Dog Denteglee
Boole on
• DOG DiSEASES
ana Bow to Peed
Mail.N1 Free to tol, Ad -
de -s by the Author.
a. Clay Glover Ca., San
)?S West al^. 44'1141
NM York,
Iffitaled Itchlog Vas
Soothed With Cuticlra
Ben‘th
ifiria
Soap
Apply
Dryad
Ointment
These super-cretany emollient.; um-
allystop itching, cicarawaypimples,
redness and roughness, remove
dandruff and scalp irritation and
heal red, rough and sore hands. If
used for every -day toilet purposes
thcydo much to prevent such dis-
tressing troubles. Nothing better,
surer or more economical at any
price.
Soup 25e, Ointment 25 end 500. Sold
throughouttheDorntaion. Canadian v)epon
L_mi_neas, Limited, S1. Paul St., Ition`zeaL
itrolt•--Cutieurn SCtan Amtos without num.
SATISFYING RELIEF
FROM LUMBAGO
Sloan's Liniment has Ole
punch that relicrcn
rheumatic. twinges
• This wannth-giving, congestion- •
scattering circulation -stimulating rem- t
edypenciraies without rubbing right
to the aching spot and brings quick
relief, surely, cleanly, A wonderful
helpfor external pains, sprains,
strains, stiffness, headache, lumbago.
bruises.
Get your bottle today -costs little,
means much. Ask your druggist foe;
it by same. Keep it handy for the
whole family. Made in Canada. Thc
big bottle is economy.
ne. 70e, 111.40,
Sloan
• 1 tit art
,Ifetp lbrinefIr
********************
How ti Cure
Billousueps
Doctors worn alognfit renteileo
containing powerful drupe end
sticyshol. 0Tbr Extract of Rootet
lens known es Mother S,10011
Curative Syrup, hoe no dope os'
Wrong ingredientet It curer
built/cotton isiliousness And
teestipation.' Can be had at any
drug elute," Get tho annul:4.
500, and I.00 Bottled. $
44'41;411r . 04404, 44,44,VkliIiI***
..---- .....
12011,2 No, 620-s,',1.