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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1913-5-1, Page 7Young Folks A Joule on Father Bear. The morning that Father and Mo- • ther Bear went to Seven Mile Point, they put Little Bear in his part and took him along. "Because we may not get home to -night," explained Mother Bear. "Besides, it will be easier to bring our blackberries home in a cart." Later in the afternoon, when Fa- ther Bear and Mother Bear were busy picking blackberries, Little Bear spied Goldilocks' with her mother, her aunt, and her little cousin, They were picking black- berries on the .other side of the clearing, Straightway Little Bear began to dance up and down, and shout, "I am going to scare somebody ! I am going to scare women and children, women and children!" "Where are there any women and children ?" asked Father Bear. "Over there, over there I" an- swered Little Bear. "And. one is Goldilocks, and I'll scare her 1" "Are you sure that there isn't a man with them?" inquired Mother Bear. "No, they are all alone.! Goody, goody I I'm going to scare them!" "How do you think you are going to scare them?" demanded Father Bear. "I am going to creep along un- der the bushes, so that they can't see me, and then when I am close to. Goldilocks, I shall jump up and say, 'Boo! Boo ! Boo 1' and then I shall watch them run, and maybe I shall say 'Boo I' again." ' Father and Mother Bear smiled; but Father Bear stopped picking lackberries and ' said, in severe tones, "Young Bear, you must nev- er scare women and children. Do you understand? You must never scare women and children!" "But I should like to see them run," said Little Bear. "But," he added, quickly, "of course I won't scare them—but—would it be all right to scare a man?" "Oh, yes, there would be no harm in scaring a man, but women and children—no, you must never do that." Little Bear ran back to his play, and forgot Goldilocks until an hour later, and then he looked down from the hilltop and saw a strange sight. On one side of a clump of black- berry bushes he saw his father and mother; on the other side of that same clump of bushes he caw Goldi- locks and her mother and her little cousin arid her little cousin's mo- ther. They were all picking black- ' berries! Fath'.or Bear and Mother Bear did not know that Goldilocks and her family had crossed the clearing, and you may be sure that Goldi- locks and her family did nob know that they were so near a big, big bear and a middle-sized bear. Lit- tle Bear watched with delight. Presently he saw Goldilocks move toward her mother. "I think I heard somebody on the other side of the bushes," whis- pered Goldilocks. Little Bear, of course, could not hear what either of them said; he could, see only that they were speaking together. Her mother answered, "My child, you 'hear the wind in the bushes. "But, mother," Goldilocks said again, as Big Bear stepped on a dry twig, "I am sure T heard a noise," "My child," answered Mother Goldilocks, "you hear the squir- rels." . Again. Goldilocks whispered, 'Mother, I know that I. heard somebody on the other side of the bushes.'. "My child, you probably hear the birds flitting about." Hardly had Mother Goklilooke spolten these words when a funny thing happened. Father Bear sud- denly stepped round bushes, and almost bumped into Mother Goldilocks. My, she was scared I When Mother Goldilocks saw that huge brown bear standing close bo - side her, she dropped her black- berries, seized the hand of little Goldilooks,'. and ran, screaming, from the spot. Aunt •Goldilocks and little Cousin Goldilocks dropped their baskets and ran, too, as if all the lions and tigers in the jungle were after them. They did look funny is they ran away from three friendly -hears I "Never, never scare women and children!" quoted Mother Bear, while Little Bear began to dance. up and down for joy. "Well, that is a joke en Daddy Bear, I must say I" admitted Fa- ther Bear, and then he laughed, too. "Bat," he added, "it is not right to scare women and children. I certainly should never* it on pur- • • Then the three bears joined hands and danced round and round and sang, "Ta-de-dum, dum, dem, ta, de, dum, dum, dum !", and they. kept it tip •until the Goldileeks fam- ily were well out of sight, --Youth's Cohlpanieil. SPRING IMPURITIES IN THE, BLOOD A Tonic Medicine is a Neces- sity at This Season Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People are an all year round tonic, blood -builder and nerve -restorer. But they are espeeially valuable in the spring when the system is load- ed with impurities as a result of the indoor life of the winter months, Thero is no other season when the blood is ,so much in need of purify- ing and enriching, and every dose of these pills helps to make new, rich, red blood, In the spring one feels weak and tired --Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills give strength. In the spring the appetite is often poor—Dr, Williams' Pink Pills de- velop the appetite, tone the sto- mach and aid weak digestion. It is in the spring that poisons in the blood find an outlet in disfiguring pimples, eruptions and boils—Dr. 'Williams' Pink Pills speedily clear the skin because they go to the root of the trouble in the blood. In the spring anaemia, rheumatism, indigestion, neuralgia, erysipelas and many other troubles are most persistent because of poor, weak blood, and it is at this time when all nature takes on new life that the blood most seriously needs at- tention, Some people dose them- selves with purgatives at this sea - eon, but these only further weaken themselves. A purgative merely gallops through the system, empty- ing the bowels, but. it does not cure anything. On the other hand Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actually make new blood, which reaches every nerve and organ in the body, bring- ing new strength, new health and vigor to weak, easily tired men, wo- men and children. Try Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills this spring—they will not disappoint you. Sold by all medicine dealers or sent by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 by The Dr. Wil- liams' illiams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. SURGEONS LACE UP WOUNDS. Doctor Says Rivets Will Be Used by Sawbones of Futuro. The surgeon of the future will rivet wounds instead of sewing them up, says Dr.' Robert M. Green, a professor of anatomy in Harvard. Medical Sohool, who has invented an automatie device for the purpose. Rivets are better than thread, ho says, because, if anything is wrong you can be laced up for a while and then unlaced. "The metal rivets will be spe- cially used in dissection. I pro- cured the ordinary shoo -eye rivet," says Dee Green, "and found that the rivets very easily and conven- iently could be applied to the skin edges, as to aboot or legging, and that they will hold with sufficient firmness to allow the incision to be laced up with string. In case of dissection, an entire body can be ,equipped -without appreciable la- bor, and can be laced and unlaced from head to foot in .a few moments. "I am led to record niy use of this device in the hope that it may prove of service. and convenience to. others in similar work. Rivets, in- stead of silk thread, will now be used, except in special cases." d' Took the Hint. "I done told dem s'picious neigh- bors o' mine dat I been losin' too many chickens an' I'd have to get a shot -gun." "Did that make any 'difference?" "Yes, sull. Dey ]et de chickens alone but dey come aroun' an' stole de shot -gun." Are You Droopy, Tired, Worn Out' Here is Good Advice to All Who Feel as if Their Vigor and Life Had All Oozed Away. „This Condition Can be QUIckly Cured by a Good Cleansing Medicine. Your. experience le probably somewhat similar to that described' by Mr, J. T. Fleming, in the following letter from his, home in Lebanon: "I thinly I must have the most sluggish sort of a liver. In the morning. my mouthwoe bitter, and that, `foul, aoft feeling that tulle you 'No breakfast needed here this morning.' A ono of coffeewould sort of brace mo up, but in two hours 1 was disposed to quit work, all energy baying oozed out of. me, Suppor Was myonly good meal, but I knees I didn't digest very well, for I 4Peamt to beat the band. A friend of thine put. me Wfac to Dr, Hamilton's Pine, I think they meet have taken hold of my liver, oorhapo . my stomach, too, because at tho very Start they made brings go right. Leek at me now—not sleepy In the daytime, but hustling for the mighty dollar and gettingfun out of life ovary minute, That's what Dr. lianitton's Pills have lane for Me -,troy have rebulit and rejuvenated my entire keep ' e kor. frog p from headnebsf, to feel young acrd bright, to enjoy, your meals, to sleep Bound and lock your boat, no. thing man help like Dr, lIamilton's Pillet. 26o, per box, five for $1,00 at all druggists and storekeesere er -postpaid from The. Catarrhozone (lea )iuffalo, N. ]tingetdll, Panetta. STILL A BACHELOR AT 102, Robert Crichton . Lives 101 Tears Without Medicine, In the pleasant valley of Cater- hami, some twenty mike outside London, England, there lives a cen- tenarian who boasts that he is the oldest bachelor in England and has lived 101 years without taking medi- cine. He is Robert Crichton, -who was born in Perthshire, Scotland, on April 3, 1812, He is a descend- ant of the Crichtons of Cluny, the branch of the family to which be- longed "the Admirable• Crichton," Starting life as a solicitor, at the age of 27 he went to Australia with his brother James and the two en- tered into partberslfip with+ an army surgeon and acquired' a cattle farms 400 square miles in area. Here their sister joined the two brothers and the three resolved never to marry, a compact that was faith- fully kept. After twenty years the brothers and the sister returned to England with a fortune and built a house in Horsham, Sussex, where they lived until they moved, to Caterham, twenty-two years ago. After ex- amining the Marden estate, which they contemplated buying, Crichton asked to be shown the churchyard, saying that it was there they would best find out if it were a healthy placo to live in. Tho ages on the tombstones proved satisfactory and they bought ,the estate. The brother and sister have died, but Robert, on the eve of his 102nd year, is still .strong. He is a non- smoker and almost a teetotaler, but likes a pinch of snuff. Up to the age of 97 ho played billiards with some skill, but failing sight made him give up the game. An Unpopular Way. "I asked him how he got rich, and he told me, but I shan't follow his advice." "Why not?" "I don't like his methods." "Dishonest?" "Not at all. He said he simply saved his money instead of spend- ing it for everything he thought he wanted." DR. TALKS OF FOOD. Pres. of Board of health. "What shall I eat?" is the daily inquiry the physician is met with. I do not hesitate to say that in my judgment a large percentage of dis- ease is caused by poorly selected and improperly. prepared food. My personal experience with the ful- ly -cooked food, known as Grape - Nuts, enables me to speak freely of its merits. "From overwork, I suffered sev- eral years with malnutrition, pal- pitation of the heart, and loss of sleep. Last summer I was led to experiment personally with the new food,- which I used in conjunction with good rich cow's milk. In a short time after I commenced its use, the disagreeable symptoms dis- appeared, my heart's action bo - came steady and .normal, the func- tions of the stomach were properly carried out and I again slept as soundly and as well as in my youth. "I look upon Grape -Nuts as a perfect food, and no one can gain- say but that it has a most promin- ent place in a rational, scientific system of feeding. Any one who uses this food will soon be con- vinced , of the soundness of -the principle upon which it is mann- featured and may thereby know the facts as to its true worth." Name given by Canadian Postum Gb., Windsor, Ont. "There's a reason," and it is ex- plained in the little book, "The !load to Wellville," in pkgs. Ever read the above letter? A nsW one appears Mom time to time. They are. genuine, true, and full of human Interest, TO PRACTICE ON. Policeman—"Why do you salute me, my boy? I'm not your superior officer," Boy Seout—"I know that, but you'll do to practise on," On the Other Foot. John, how muck money have we in the ban]r1" "Wel I have a few hiunded dol tars, Maria. Why ?" Nothing,. Only I just 'got a let- ter to -day from the lawyer who settled up fny fathers estate, There is morO property than anybody an- tioipatedl a good deal morn." "That's fine I How much do we get out of it, Marla? "Wo ? I got it few thousand dol- lars, John. Why g" Were Tried and Stood the Test DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS MAK- ING A REPUTATION IN THE WEST. Saskatchewan Matt Tells How They Cured Him, After Four Months' Suffering from Backache and Other Forms of Kidney Disease. St. Phillips, Sask., April 21 (Special),—In a new country, where changes of climate and im- pure water are among the diffloul- ties to be surmounted, kidney trou- ble is prevalent. It is the kidneys, the organs that strain the impuri- ties out of the blood, that first feel any undue strain on the body. Con- sequently, Dodd's Kidney Pills have been well tried and tested in this neighborhood. They have stood the test. Many settlers tell of backache, rheuma- tism and urinary troubles cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills. Mr. Otto Olshewski is one of these. In speaking of his cure he says: "I suffered from kidney disease for four months. My back ached, I had heart flutterings, and was al ways tired and nervous. My skin had a harsh, dry feeling; my limbs were heavy; and I had a dragging sensation across the loins. "I consulted a doctor, but, as I did not appear to improve, I de- cidedright."to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. I used six boxes, and now I am all Dodd's Kidney Pills always stand the test. Ask your neighbors. SPINSTERS WED CONVICTS. Siamese Ming Unbe- liever in "Un. appropriated Blessing." Kings of Siam apparently do not believe in the wisdom of allowing single women to drift unattached about the country. In certain dis- tricts after a girl has reached an age where Ther securing for herself a husband is considered doubtful, she becomes a "daughter of the king." That is, the king .takes upon him- self the task of settling her suitably in life. His process is quite simple and to the point: Ho proceeds to the Siamese penitentiary and .looks over the various prisoners. There is a law in Siam tlhat any prisoner can obtain his release by marrying one of this class of girls, and, na- turally enough, any prisoner whom the king picks out is not likely to be backward about consenting to the ceremony. Nei- does it make any difference if he is married, for the men of that country are not re- stricted to one wife. • As far as can be learned, there is no allowance made for the inclina- tion of the girl in question. She has failed in her mission in life, as far as herself is concerned, and she must abide by the decision of the king. quickly stops coughs, cures colds, and heals the throat and lunge. .. .. 20 cents It is most important for a man to have a persistent purpose run- ning through his life; lie must not waver from hour to hour accord- ing to the people with whom he mixes. Minard's Liniment Cures Carget In COW& Compensation. Tommy—"Don't you hate house- cleaning?" Freddy—"Naw, When ma cleans house she doesn't clean me." PILES .CU RED 1N 6 TO 14 DAYS. Your druggist will refund money if PAZO nlfails ours' any Prordng ofDeb. 6 to 14 daye. 50o, "Before marriage I used to sib up until midnight wishing ho would go home." "Yes?" "Yes, and since we are married I sit up until mid- night wishing that he would come home." Mlnard'i Llnlment Cures Colds, Eto.. Danger. The three most dangerous enter- prises in the world First—To interfere between hus- band and wife. Second -To 'recommend a doctor. Third --To tell the truth. ED, 4. ISSUE 17--.'18. ITCHY 6U6NIhC ECL[1A ON FACE Very Bad Case. Little Blisters Broke and Formed Scabs. Thought Would Be Disfigured for Life, Used Cuticura. Soap and Oint- ment a int-menta Month, Com pletelycCured. cold nrook, St, John, N. D.--"Cuticura Soap and Ointment cestaloly cured my little girl of a very bad case of eczema. She had eczema on her face for al- most two years, First little white blisters covered her face, then these would break and form scabs, and they wore very itchy and burn- ing. I used to have great P¶' trouble In getting her to sleep at night, She wretched so I had to do all I could to prevent her, for sometimes site would scratch the scabs off and then it would bo very sore nod. burning. She was certainly a great care. I treated her for It and also used different kinds of blood medicine, andointment but got no Cure. I thought She would be Wag. ured for life. "It had lasted about two years when one day I saw an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment in the paper so decided to give them a trial. I had not used them for more than a month when she was completely cured. I cannot praise Outicura Soap and Cuticura Ointment enough. Of course I continuo to use Out! - curs Soap as I find i6 the best soap on the market for children." (Signed) Mrs. John Newman, Dec, 30, 1911. Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment are sold by druggists and dealers everywhere. For a liberal free sample of each, with 32-p. book, send post card to Potter Drug & Chem, Corp.. Dept. SOD, Beaton, U. 5. A, WAR TIME -TABLES. German Railways Are Always In Readiness. At all times, even when there is no talk of war in the air, there is locked up in every German station- master's desk a set of war time- tables—a separate time -table for every country with which a war is possible, including Franee, Britain and Russia, while even Austria- Hungary is not exempt. Whenever war is declared every stationmaster picks out the particular mime -table required, and at once all the trains run automatically on "war time," and for war purposes. Each time- table is revised once a year, in or- der to fit it with any alteration that may have been made in the plans of campaign. Each man liable to serve in the reserve is in posses- sion at all times of a warrant for travel, and when war breaks out does not require to wait on instruc- tions, but must report himself at once to his particular territorial de- pot, or at least by 10 o'clock in the morning following the declaration of war. Otherwise the is liable to a heavy penalty. All carriages are marked with the number of soldiers they can carry, trucks with the size and weight of cannon that can be loaded on them, and the nulnbir of horses that can be taken on each vehicle. Of course all the railways belong M the State, and this simplifies matters; but in time of war every- thing gives way before the army. No man or woman ever lived who was too good. CURES COUGHS &COLDS Nearly every man is long on shortcomings. Minard's Llnlment Cures Distemper. Nothing pleases some folks more than to be the first to peddle a piece of unsavory gossip. Whom Try murine Eye Remedy No smarting -Fools Flno-Acts quickly. YTry It for sod, weak, Watery L o, and 0 rfi �° Ormminted Lyollda, Illustrnt,i nook 1n encs Package. 11016108 1s cern. Eir S lledlal n"[mLlueed In nl cesaeful Y1 yc'els Ap l alms'. rraotloo 100 01577 genre, AMy /B 0' 0 g9 tOdla7tod to the 005110 and .uld by Lnlgglsle at et..000 per bottle. 1100100 C '��� Lyo Oslo. In Aoeptla Tu See, asatoo, Marine Eye Remedy Go., twicae* Your neighbors may know that you have money, but what they may not know is how you got it. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablet'', Druggists refund money if It faile to auto. IL W. GROVE'S signature is on each: box, -- One Way. "So you claim to be a literary man, ell?" "Yes, sir; 1 wrote that book Dozen Ways to Make a Living.' " "And yet you are begging!' "Yes, sir;' that's one of the ways " GIN PILLS DRIVE AWAY Those Pains in tFbq Kidneys. Mr. Thomas Stephenson, of I,achute Mills, P. Q,, writes "I was troubled for many years with Kidney DLheasc, and a friend told nye to take GIN PILLS. After taking a few boxes I was greatly relieved, and after finishing the twelfth box the pain com- pletely left me. My wife Is now using GIN PILLS and finds that she has been great! relieved of the pain ever her Kidneys.' Sod. a box, 6 for $2.8o, Sample freelf yea write National Drug and Chewiest' Cot of Canada, Limited, Toronto. 133 GRUESOME JUBILEE, Fi'ance'e Official headsman to Cele - brute This Fall. A unique jubilee will be cele- brated in Paris this year, No such jubilee has ever been celebrated be- fore, It is that of M. Anatole Deib- ler, the headman of Franee. How the cutting off of heads could be as- sociated with the word jubilee or rejoicing is digieult to sec. Never- theless, M. Deibler, or Monsieur de Paris, as he is popularly called, and his friends will essay the task. M. Deibler began the cruel call- ing of cutting off heads a quarter of a century ago, when he was a young man of twenty-five. Thus he has had twenty-five years of active ser- viee. He is a native of the flourish- ing town of Rennes, the ancient capital of Brittany, where he was born fifty years ago. The exact date of M. Deibler's birth was No- vember 29th, 1863, so that the jubi- lee festivities in his honor will be- gin on that date of this year. The position is a State appoint- ment, carrying with it a salary, an appropriation to keep the guillotine in order, and apension. M. Deib- ler is paid twelve hundred dollars a year. He receives in addition one thousand six hundred dollars year- ly for the up -keep of the guillotine. Upon retiring he gets a pensipn of two-thirds of his salary. His aides, of whom there are several, receive similar pensions in proportion to their salaries. And should the headsman or any of his assistants leave a widow or children, they are all taken care of by the State. If Breathing is Difficult, If'Nostrils are Plugged, You Ilave Catarrh IT SATISFIES MILLION'S' OF PEOPLE Worth your while to teat it LIPTON'S w Sustains and Cheers, GLOVES That Are Guaranteed Why take chances inbuying a pair of gloves when you can get apositive guarantee backed by Canada's largest glove factory in the 'LBS./Moto Shell Gloves made from specially tanned horse- hide. Guaranteed wet proof, wind proof, steam and heat proof. Send for Illustrations. f HUDSON BAY KNITTING CO. ' Canada's Expert Clove and Milt Makers. MONTREAL. FARMS FOR SALE. H. W. DAWSON,Ninety Colborne Street, Toronto. • 000 STOCK FARM OF 500 ACRES 7f with Three Souses; large- Bask Darn. Must he sold quirk. Priv', le very inw. S1•JEVERAL DESIRABLE FARMS IN Manitoba, Alberta and Raskatebewaa that eon be bought. Worth the mousy for quirk rale. THAVE OVE':R, ONE HUNDRED GOOD !arms in different sections of Ontario on my list. It you want a farm consult me. .-- N. W. DAWSON, Toronto. At Last a Remedy That Already Has Per. manentiy Cured Thousands. Perhaps you haven't heard of the new .comedy—it's e0 pleasant to use -1111s the nose, throat and lungs with a healing balsamic vapor like the air of the pine woode. It'e really a wonderful romedy— utilizes that marvelous antiseptic only found in the Blue Gum tree of Australia. The name of this grand specific is Catarrhozone, and you can't find Its equal on earth for coughs, colds, catarrh or throat trouble. You see it's no longer necessary to drug the stomach—that spoils digestion—just simply inhale the balsamic essences of Catarrbozone, which are so rich in healing that they drive out every trace of Catarrh in no time. "I look upon Catarrhozone as the moat valuable medical discovery of recent years," writes R. V. Potter, of Prince Albert. "As a long sufferer from nasal and throat catarrh 5 was obliged to take considerable medicine, and, althoughat helped me, my digestion was always die- turbed and the catarrh didn't go away. With Catarrhozone it was different. It cleaned my nose and throat of all phlegm and discharges, enabled me to breathe freely, relieved- a stuffy feeling in my nose and frontal beadachee, Today I am entirely free from catarrh, and I use my Catarrhozone Inhaler a little every day in order to prevent the disease from re turning." With Catarrhozono experimenting ends. A permanent curative action begins. Last- ing relief from Catarrh results. The large 'size costs 7100, last two months and is guaranteed. Small size 601.1 sample sire 250. A11 storekeepers and druggists, or The Catarrhozone Co,. Buffalo, N. Y., and Kingston, Canada. 01. NEW WAY TO SWAT THE FLY. Home -Made Trap Catches 12,000 Flies a Day. Here is a fly -trap that you can make at home at an expenditure of only a few pennies. It is described by F. L. Washburn, State entomol- ogist of Minnesota. He calls it the "Minnesota Fly Trap," and asserts that the trap has ensnared as high as 12,000 of these summer pests in a single day. The trap is very sim- ple in construction. There is a base on which are set two bait pains.' These must be filled with bread and milk and changed frequentlyi so that the bait does not dry up, but re- mains attractive to the flies. There is a middle part which contains a lateral passage admitting the flies to the bait pans. This is only half an inch wide. After the flies have fed themselves at the pans they rise. But the middle part grows gradually narrower until.at the top there is an aperture of a quarter of an inch. They pass through this and find themselves ho the dome, whit'h completes the trap. The trap is two fent long, a foot high a.nd eight inchea wide. THE SQUARE DEAL L PAYS. And square with the encmy'every tnan gots when he. separates himself from his, corms by Putnora's Corn Extractor, For Mg . years "Putnam's" has onrod ovary man it treated—use "Putnam's" only --it's painless and sure, 26e.at all dealers. Justifiable. `;Whyy ltd u hit him ?" "Well, youyor Honor, I just hap., pened M mention that it was some Windstorm we had yesterday, and he started right in to tell me that he !could remember when it blew muob harder, and then I let hint have it," r1Lot mo sell you this encyclo- paedia." "No, No use to me, My son is coming home from outage pretty soon, and he'll know every. thing` that's in A-{IFTY ACRES -7 MILES -FROM LON- • don market; soil gravelly cloy ]nam; 2 acres orchard; buildings fair. Price Four Thousand. The Western Real Estate Exchange, London, Ont. 4RM IN SASI6ATCIIFWAN—EQ RIP. ped; in eron; must aril; terms. 0007. Perev Love. Ha warden. Sask. MALE HELP WANTED. AT ONCE—MEN WANTED: LEARN Barber Trade; great demand: wood wages: twenty to thirty advertised for daily in Toronto miners .alone. Can tenets von in six to eight weeks. Send for Cata- logue. Meier College, 221 Queen East, To. Fon to. STAMPS AND C01NS. Ct TAMP COLLECTORS—SUSUMU) nIF- . t1 ferent Foreign Stamps, Catalogue. Album, only Seven Cents. Marks Stamp Normans,. Tornnrn. MI SCELLAN 80110. CANC110. TUMORS. LUMPS. ETC,.V Internal and external. cured with. out pain by onr Immo treatment Writs esbefore tem late. Dr. Hellman Medical . Co., Limited. d'ollinewond: Ont. GALL STONES, KIDNEY AND eLAL. der Stones. Kidney trouble, Gravel. , Lumbago and kindred aliments positively cured with the. new German Remedy, Rano!," price 51.60.Another new remedy for Dfabetee•Mellltue. and sure ours, le "Sanol'e Antl•Dlobetes." Price 72.60 from druggists or direct. The Sanol 21e notes. marling rCompa y of Canada. Limited. Maypole Soap THE CLEAN HOME DYE Gives rich, even colors, free from streaks and absolut- ely fast Does not stainhands or kettles 24 colors, will give any shade, Colors 10c, black 15c, at your deoler's or post - paid with booklet How to Dye" from 1) 107J E. L. BENEDICT & 00. Montreal Even an iron watchdog ean't scare the wolf from your door, Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria, Some people sue for divorce now- adays on causes that wouldn't even start a good spat in an old-fashioned family. I consider MINARD'S LINIMENT the BEST Liniment in use. I got my foot badly jammed lately. I bathed it well with MINARD'S LINIMENT, and it was as well as over next day. Yours very truly, T. G, McM11LLEN. Employer (to his clerk) ---"Is it true that when the clock strikes six you put down your pen and go, even if you are in the middle of a word?" Clerk--"Cortaiuly' not, sir. When it gets so near to six as that I never begin the word at all !" aaii' Bioo4si is the direct and inevitable rctult of irregular or constipated bowels and clogged -up kidneys and skin. The undigested food and other waste mat- ter which is allowed to accumulate poisons the bloodand the whole system. Dr, Morse's Indian Root Pills act directly on the bowelst regulating them --on the kidneys, giving thein wee and strength to properly filter the blood—and on the skin, opening up the pores. For pure blood and good. health take Drs MerS0.4 *udj iul1-Rant »111Illlf. ;e ~rut.