The Brussels Post, 1913-11-13, Page 7You will Lind relief in zam-auk t
,tt eases the burningfstinging
pain, stops bleeding and brings
ease. Persevereltid'e, With dant.
Bull, moans cure. Why iiot prove
this i' dtt .4troaritt wta scores. _
se
ata++ Itelea►re►v+✓Re'eN► i►•+4te
Fashion Hints
• Seen in Paris Shops.
Buttons used as trimmings are
always used in some contrasting
color.
Coats have tailored collars and
Russian blouses are trimmed with.
fur.
Wraps not in the draped class lap
over in uneven lines to the left side.
Tho fichu and long jabot are out-
running the flat collar so long in
favor.
Sleeves are fuller about the
shoulder, and they are long and
claws fitting.
There are quantities of brilliants
used in the evening costumes for
the older women.
Stiff boned corsets are not worn,
as the new gowns show every curve
of the natural figure.
The popular corsage ornament is
a single flower, measuring five or
six inches in diameter,
The upstanding collar of lace or
plaited frill of tulle, lace, or mous-
seline de sole is in high favor.
Long scarfs of hrooaded velvet
or satin bordered with bands or fur
are worn with afternoon costumes,
Green moleskin—dyed, of course
=' is one of the wonders of the mo-
ment, a charming hat in this fur
and the green is soft and mottled,
in a sort of olive with a good deal
of black in it in places—is made in
olose-fitting fashion. Two black
satin chin ribbons are fastened to
the brim and they end in little
knots. There is no other trimming.
An interesting frock for a very
small girl is made of white lawn
and Valenciennes lace. There is a
short skirt, that flares a little, at-
tached to a tight little bodice with
long sleeves, much trimmed with in-
sertions of lace. Then there is a
tunic that reaches about to the
knees, and within a few inches of
the bottom of the skirt. This tunic
is made in two pieces, and is fas-
tened together on the shoulders and
at one point under the arms. A
rolled blue satin ribbon is fastened
at the waist line—rolled loosely,
like a wood shaving or a ringlet.
The powdering of the hairs which
is more of a fashion in Paris than
most people realize, is deftly done
and does not give one the appear-
ance of having a white wig. Those
who go in for beauty say that a
slight powder on the hair, especial-
ly at the brow and ears, is vastly
becoming to the majority of faces.
It should not bo done with vital,
youthful hair that has a brilliant
color, but it is admirable on .hair
that is slightly faded or partially
gray or a bit lifeless. It is sifted
on with a powder puff and only the
dead white can be used. If there
is any chance of it showing out in
the day hours it is better not to
use it, although every one claims
that it is especiall=y becoming under.
a thin veil. At night it softens the
fade to a remarkable degree. But
remember the vital point about it,
that it should not be used on dark
hair, or any kind that has little .
color and vitality.
DREADED EPILEPSY
A Casa That Should Bang Hope
to Other Suii'erera
There are wally cases of epilepsy
incurable so far as present medical
knowledge extends and the sufferer
is doomed to go through life a via -
tins to a disease which has stricken
him suddenly and without warning,
and with each recurring affects hi
mental powers. Taken in tit
however, many eases of epil
have beon permanently ()limathe use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pi
and in cases where the disease
not reached an acute form
remedy is worth giving a fair' tri
Among the cures we give the f
lowing, -Mrs. Robert Stringer, N
Liskeard, Ont., says '.`I have lo
felt that we should write you a
let you know what Dr. Willie
Pink Pills have done for our gran
son, who was attacked with e
lepsy. The trouble seemed to oo
on following an attack of whoopi
cough. His parents seemed to n
tioe that his eyes seemed to" bul
out, and that he would bo unco
scious for a few seconds, and wou
go about his play as usual,
child was five years old at t
time, The trouble seemed to
growing more severe and the
tacks to come oftener, and as
i
local doctors were not helping h
they sent him to the Children
Hospital in Toronto. He remain
there for a short time, when t
doctors said his trouble was ep
lepsy, and they could do nothid
for him. Time went on an
attacks grew worse, and in the f
of 1908 my daughter wrote me th
the little fellow was getting so b
that they wanted to send him b
to the hospital. I asked her to se
him to me for a time, and as on
of his eyes had become crooked
took him to an oculist, who sai
tills trouble could be cured, but
had nothing to do with bringing o
his other trouble. As I knew th
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills were
splendid medicine I decided to gi
them to him, in the hope that th
might benefit him. We were ver
careful as to diet, and as to keep
ing the child from excitement. I
about a month we noticed that t
trouble was lessening, and at tlhi
time the little fellow returned hem
and his mother kept up the treat
inept. In a few months he seeme
fully cured, but during the holiday
the trouble came back in a milde
form, and tho Pink Pills were agai
resorted to, and again the troub]
disappeared, and although mor
than a year has passed there ha
not since been any sign of ib. W
feel so deeply indebted for wha
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have don
far hien that we hope this plan
atatement of our experience wil
benefit some other sufferer."
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills from any dealer in medicine
or by mail at 60 cents a box or nix
boxes for $2.60 from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
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1
THE EMPEROR'S BARBER.
An Incident When Joseph II. Visit-
ed France.
"By the grace of God I was born
a gentleman; but I not the prince
as little es possible," was a favor-
ite saying of Emperor Joseph II.
Whether his huminilty was sincere
or not, he certainly laid aside his
dignity of natation whenever he
could oleo lis, aside his duties as
ruler of the Holy Roman Empire.
In "Au Couchant de la Monar-
chie," the Marquis de Segur tells
of one occasion when the emperor
went to France to visit his sister,
Queen Marie Antoinette. The Pa-
risians, accustomed to the luxury
and m•agnifieenoe of the court at
Versailles, were astonished at the
extreme simplicity that Joseph II.
affected,
He, preferred not to be recognized
as emperor at all, and travelled;
with one or two gentlemen, or
alone, under an assumed name.
Once his quick wit alone preserved
his incognito.
He lead stopped for the night at
an inn, and Sn the 'nothing was
ohaving before a small glass, while
. the landlord's daughter held a ba-
sin of water for him. Something
,about the Hurn or his belongings
had roused the girl's cariosity and
suspicion, for the preaobly asked,
in it respectful voice
"Aro you not connected with the
court, or in the service of the em-
perof?''
Joseph 'who saw whet her ques-
tions in.ight lead up to, "replied
Trickly
"Why, cettainly, my dear girl;
how did you guess it? I shave
him."
His ready answer --which din not
pass the bound of truth—lulled the
girl's suspicions completely.
We can finish nothing in this lis
but we can make e beginning and
beirueatlh it. noble examyle,
The money that /some people owe
hoes not trouble them so much as
they money they would like to owe.
LONDON'S OLD WATER SYSTEM
Three Hundred Years Since New
River Was Brought In.
An anniversary of much histori-
cal interest occurred last month in
connection with Lendon'e huge wa-
ter system. It was exactly 800
years on September 20 since Hugh
Myddleton.'e ambitious project of
constructing the New River and
bringing pure water to• 'London
from the ' Cradwell and Amwell
Springs, between Hertford and
Ware, was successfully accom-
plished.
Meddle -ton was practically ruined
by the triumphant conclusion of his
achievement, although this succes-
sons reaped untold wealth. This
citizen and goldsmith, after having
appealed in vain for financial help
to the oity corposa&tion, w allowed
to undertake the work On 1609 on
his own responsibility provided
were completed within four years,
With untiring energy Myddleton
persevered in his undertaking, de-
spite the opposition of the lamd
owners through whose property the
stream was to pass, and who feared
that their lands would be inundat-
ed.. The bitter opposition and the
engineering difficulties he encoun-
tered soon brought it home to Myd
dleton that the undertaking was
beyond his means.
His first :stop was to associate
himself with a number of persons
who were called "The Adventur-
ers," to contribute tc the expense
and to share with him in the pro-
fits. iihten then it was found that
the undertaking was ,beyotld'tlheir
Regularit
or the bowels is an absolute ncces.
pity for good health. Unless the
waste matter from the food which
collects there is got rid of at least
once a day, it decays and poisons the
whole body, sousing biliousness, indi-
gestion and sick headaches. Salts
, 'and other harsh mineral purgatives
Irritate the delicate linin of • the
bowels. Dr, Morse's Indian Root
Pills—entirely vegetables — regulate
the bowels effectively without weals-
ening,
ealsening, sickening or griping, Use
Dr. Morse's 00
•
0
resouroee, and in hie extremityMyddleton applied to the King.
James I, agreed to provide half
the cost of the work upon res ivin
half the profits and advantages.
The work was then sueeeasifully car -
vied to completion, and on Sep-
tember 29, 1013, dome five years
after the oomm0ncemeet of the
work, the waters of Amwell Springs
first entered the reservoir known es
the New River Head, in the parish
of Cllerkenwell.
Although the city corporation had
•shrunk from the enterprise, every
civic hotbox was 'worded]Cyddle-
tan when the sluices were first
opened, and the "sweet waters" of
Herts were brought to the confines
of Leaden, and the completion of
the work was celebrated with joy-
ous proceedings,
The inhabitants clo. not appear to
have taken readily advantage of
the new supply, and the King
therefore commanded, and the city
couuoil consequently required, the
court of aldermen to provide "that
all such houses in the city and
liberties as 0i:ther of necessity or
convenience might use the same wa-
ter, Mould be required to do so,"
The original cast of the New
River is :not known, the documents
on
of the company having bede-
stroyed by a fire at their offices in
Dorset Street, Fleet Street, on
Christmas eve, 1769; but it is sug-
gested that the original cost proba-
bly damountid not amount to more than
$90,+,0g6.jn which cans the capital
represented by each of the seventy-
two sharps would• be $1,250. In
1899 the shares had reached the
fabulous value of about $600,000
apiece.
A Boon to Stoekwraisors
g To Rnow .Row to Our° Collo, piss
temper, Colds, Swellings, eta,
Sayes Thousands Enoh Year.
Of Pedalo, Interest to Horsemen.
It la a matter of vital importance to
every farmer, horse -owner, and stook -
raiser to know exactly what to do
when one of his animals is takeft' ud-
denly sick,
The letter of Mr, Frank G. Fuller-
ton, which we print below, gives in-
formation of inestimable value, and
tells of his experience in curing ailing
stook during the past thirty-eight
years.
"Several years ago
when my horse took
colic I used to give
them Cayenne Pep-
per in hot milk, but
in a few cases only
did I help, and be-
cause I had nq
means at hand T lost
several valuable animals. Some one
told me of the success- Mr. Wendling,
of Brookville, Ont., had in his racing
stables with 'Nerviline,' so I laid in a
supply. It wasn't very long before
Nerviline saved the life of a valuable
stallion of mine, which was worth at
least $1,000.00. This horse was taken
with colic, and would have died had
1t not been for Nervillne. I have used
Nerviline for" reducing swellings, for
taking out distemper lumps, and eas-
ing a bad cough, and always found it
worked well. I recommend every man
who owns, horses or cattle to keep
Nerviline on hand,"
Large size bottles, 50c.; small size,
25c.; all dealers, or The Catarrhozone
Company, Kingston, Ont., and Buffalo,
N.Y.
Sir L. Starr Jameson.
From a new picture of the head
sof the Chartered Oompany of South
Africa, which has millions of acres
of grazing land to be turned into
vast ranches to augment the beef
supply of Britain.
KEEP BABY HEALTHY.
To keep the baby healthy his
little stomach should be kept sweat
and his bowels working regularly.
Nine -tenths of the maladies which
afflict little ones are caused by some
derangement of the stomach or
bowels. Baby's Own Tablets are
the ideal medicine for little ones.
They sweeten the stomach; regulate
the bowels; break up colds; make
teething easy; dispel worms and
cure constipation and indigestion.
Concerning them Mrs. S. Shannon,
Urney, N.B., saya: "I have used
Baby's Own Tablets for my .two
little ones and think they are just
what ,children need. I world not
be without them," Sold by all
medicine dealers or- by mail at 25o.
a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont.
_s
Grains of Gold.
There is no duty we so much un-
derrate as the duty of being happy,
—R. L. Stevenson.
Honesty is the best policy, but ho
who acts oe that principle is not an
honest" man.—Whately.
In sleep and dearth the divine ele-
ment of which we are oompoended
re -appears, and we cease' to haste or
criticize.—Mark Rutherford.
A Christian is of no: sect. He can
dwell in the midst of sleets, and ap-
pear in their services without being
attached or bound to :any.—Jacob
Boehme.
Many in this world run after feli-
ity like the absent-minded man
hunting for his hat, while all the
imo,it is on bis head or -in his hand,
Sydney Smith.
There are eigms that the best
people in the best notions are coal
ih
m
e
or
g to wish to live in a world of
ere claims, and to" proclaim on
Vary, ocoesion "Our eoumtry, right
wrong !" -Lord Haldane,
P
t.
11
y
u
ar
Cly
d"It is said that more than one
Pe has been killed' by kissing."
Yes; but isn't it great if you
ve through it?"
George Was only six and had riot
astarted " sohool,r Ono day his
nolo said to him, t I hear that you
0 going to start school next term,
eorge. Aren't you ploased7"
Not at all "answer'ed George with
ee
Indian Root Pills 0r
ision. l"I can't read or write
do sums, so don't see what
m going to do there all day."
SAVED
$1,000
BY
NERVILINE
The Seven Wonders.
Recent efforte of scientists to de-
termine the seven wonders of the
modern world have resulted in
their making the following choice:
Wireless telegraphy, the telephone,
the aeroplane, radium, antiseptics
and antitoxins, spectral analysis
and X-rays. Of the seven wanders
of the ancient world, only one was
of practical utility, the light -house
of Alexandria; the others were
notable only for size or beauty.
Varying Luck.
Mrs. Exe—What sort of luck do
you have with cooks?
Mrs. Wye—Oh, varying. Some
we keep as long as a week and some
as long as a meal.
LIQUID SULPHUR
is prescribed and used by leading
nurses in Toronto es an anti -septic.
LIQUID SULPHUR by virtue of
being simply pure SULPHUR
liquified is one of Nature's own
remedies for skin troubles. It is
simple, costs very little, but is
most effective in its results. EC-
ZEMA disappears when LIQUID
SULPHUR is given a fair trial.
For sale all druggists. Price 60
Cents per bottle.
Pearls of Truth.
The way to gain a good reputa-
tion is to endeavor to be what you
desire to appear.—Socrates.
Men, as a rule, act rightly in
civilized society, not from compul-
sion, but from ethical habit.—Lord
Haldane.
True manhood comes from self-
control—from subjection of the
lower powers to the higher condi-
tions of our being.—Smiles.
The way to avoid evil is not by
maiming our passions, but by com-
pelling them to yield their vigor to
their moral nature,—H, W. Beech-
er,
Good nature and oommon sense
are required from all; but one
proud distinction is enough for any
one individual to possess or to as-
pire to.—Hazlitt.
The man who will succeed must
seek, and he most see—he must
strike, and, above all things, he
must believe. Nature does nothing
for doubters.—J. S. Blackie.
Knowledge must be accepted•
from whatever source the truth
comes, and no Church is entitled to
set a her to the progress of scienti-
fic inquiry.—Bishop Weldon.
WOMEN NEED GIN PILLS
For Weak Backe and Headaches.
Mies Ethel Balcombe, of Port
DulIerin, N,S., writes; "I was troubled
with Kidney Disease for several years.
My back was weak. I bad terrible
headaches and was so restless: that I
could not sleep at night. At last a
friend told me about GIN PILLS. I
at once got a box and after tatting
them, I feltbetter—after taking three
Ilexes, I was cured:"
50o. a box, 6 for $2.50. Sample free
if you write National Drug and Chem-
ical Co, of Canada, Limited, Toronto,
9'
"Woman," growled the villain
"the crime is on your own head."
"Is it on straight?" anxiously de-
manded the villainess.
The hair of the head grows Easter
in summer than in winter.
"Father, what is meant by bank-
ruptcy 7" "Bankruptcy is when
you put your money in your trip
pocket and let your creditors take
your coat,"
The road to su0cess is open to all,
but too many want to get there,
without the trouble 0.1 going,'
Wearies Liniment Cures Distemper,
ECZEMA ON FACL
1
SCALP AND HANDS
Came Off in Scales. Itched Sadly,
Had to Tie Hands. Little Watery
Pimples, Cuticura Soap and
Ointment Completely. Cured,
1307 Davenport Road, Toronto; Ont.—
"My eczema Arab started wbon I was a
baby, on my face and scalp, It seemed dry
and when 1 aepatchod it, It came off f n scales.
It itched vory badly and I was obliged to
have my hands tied up so as to prevent
scratching my face. Little white watery
pimples came on my hands and face and I
had to stay home from school formerly two
wools. It caused my face and hands to
look badly. The eczema took a vory bad
form, appearing on my face in little watery
ulcers so tigd that 1 could hardly bear to be
touched. My hair being naturally very
thick 1 found to be getting thinner and won-
dered what could cause it to fall out.
"My mother tried and and
spent no end of money trying to get mo hot-
ter but it did' no good. At last afriendroc.
ommended Cuticura Soap and Ointment and
my mother need them. We applied the
Outicura Ointment to my face, head and
bands and washed with the Cutiaura Soap
and the eczema began to disappear. Before
eft months had passel I was completely
cured." (Signed) Miss Constance Jane,
May 26, 1013,
Outicura Soap and Ointment do so much
for pimples, blackheads, rod, rough eking,
itching, scaly scalps, dandruff, dry, thin and
falling hair, chapped hands and shapeless
nails, that it is almost criminal not to use
them. A single set Is often suMcient. Outi-
cura Soap and Outicura 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 do
Chem. Corp., Dept. D, Boston, U.S. A.
THE WEATHER.
It Is Always an Interesting Topic
of Conversation.
Beware of those well-meaning but
over -progressive people who would
deprive us of the weather as a topic
of casual conversation. It is, to be
sure, a time -worn topic, and most
of the remarks one hears about it
are bromidic to a high degree and
utterly lacking in originality.
At the same time, if we are going
to live together harmoniously, it
is absolutely necessary for the hu-
man race to have a harmless, un-
contentous subject about which we
may converse at a moment's notice.
If we aren't going to use the wea-
ther for this purpose what are we
going to use? The weather is al-
ways with us. Everybody knows
about it, and yet nobody is respon-
sible. If you meet a, man and say,
"It's a nasty day," you know ab-
solutely that it isn't his fault, and,
therefore, that he is not going to
be offended. If you say, "It's a nice
day," she knows you have had noth-
ing to do with it, and, therefore,
that you are neither bragging nor
trying to sell him stock in a wea-
ther promotion company. If you
say you think it will be a fine day
to -morrow he knows you are not a
propagandist, but merely a mild
sort of optimist.
It is a good topic because it can
never be settled, while questions
that can be settled must ultimately
be laid aside in favor of something
new. There is no authoritative
theory about the weather; there-
fore, one may say what one pleases
without 'a college diploma or a
State license,
Let us talk about the weather. It
won't hurt tis a bit, and it won't
bother the weather.
DEATH REPORTED.
An old offender that hung on for roars.
Nothing torched Ins stony heart but Put-
nam'e 'Corn Extractor and out he name,
root, stem and .branch. A11 corns cured
just as quickly when Putnam a is need;
try it, 25a: at all dealers.
None Has.
"There is one thing about a cold
which science has never attempted
to utilize."
"Will you mention it?"
"Sure—its hoarse power."
Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
Surprised the Bishop.
A bishop was one day addressing
a Sunday School, when he said, in
a most Impressive way :
"And now, children, let me tell
you a very sad fact. In Africa there
are 10,000,000 square miles 'of terri-
tory withopt a single Sunday School
where little boys and girls can pass
their Sundays. Now, what shall we
all try and save up our money and
do?"
And the class, as one voice, re-
plied, in ecstatic union :
"Go to .Africa I"
.Ell 4,
ISSUE 46--'13.
HOSTELS FOR WOMEN ONLY,
Loudon Rolpfdg to . Solve Problem
of Rousing the Underpnld.
What are known in London as
"women's hostels" are said to be
growing more numerous in.the Eng-
lish metropolis and are helping, to
some extent in solving the proirfem
of housing the underpaid woman
worker.
The rent of a cubicle ino, hostel,
according to The London. Times,
averages about ninety cents a
week, which rent must always be
paid in advance.
A reference is required with each
intending resident from some re-
sponsible person, and the matron
writes for this reference before the
would-be resident takes up her
abode at the hostel.
All the cubicles are small, but
very clean, and painted white.
Each cubicle contains a "bed, chair,
washhand stand with two drawers
and a rug at the bedside.
A framed and colored scriptural
text hangs over each bed, and there
are hooks at the foot of the bed on
which to hang clothes. Residents
at the hostels aro supposed to make
their own beds and keep their cubi-
cles tidy. '
There is a large airy room pro-
vided as a general sitting -room for
the residents.
Misunderstood.
The lady visitor from out of town
was being conducted round a fam-
ous cathedral by a guide. "Ah, yes,
Gothic, is it not?" she murmured
with ecstatic admiration. The
guide regarded her with Pity mix-
ed with horror. "Certainly not,
ma'am," he replied, "Episcopali-
an,"
Many Reasons Why
Liquid Cough Il1ixtures
Can't Cure Bronchitis
But the Healing Fumes of Catarrho-
zone, Which are Breathed to the
Furthest Recesses of the Bronchial
Tubes, Bring Quick Relief and Sure
Cure.
Every sufferer from coughs, colds,
bronchitis and all throat and chest
ailments needs a soothing, healing
medicine which goes direct to the
breathing organs in the chest and
lungs attacks the trouble at the source,
disperses the germs of disease, and
cures the ailment thoroughly. And
this medicine is "Catarrhozone:'
The ,germ -killing balsamic vapor
mixes with the breath, descends
through the throat, down the bron-
chial tubes, and linallit reaches the
deepest nir cells in the lunge. All
parts are soothed with rich, pure, me-
dicinal essences whereas with a syrup
the affected parts could not be reach-
ed, and harm would,result through be-
numbing the stomach with drugs.
"1 have been a chronic sufferer from
catarrh In the nose and throat for over
eight years. I think I have spent four
hundred dollars trying to get relief. I
have spent but nix dollars on Catarrh -
ozone, .and have been completely cur-
ed, and, In fact, have been well for
some time. Catarrhozone Is the only
medicine I have been able to find that
would not only give temporary relief
but will always cure permanently.
Yours sincerely, (Signed) WiLLIAM
RAGAN, Brockville, Ont.
For absolute, permanent cure, use
Catarrhozone. Two months' outfit
costs $1.00; smaller size, 50c., at all
storekeepers and druggists, or The
Catarrhozone Company, Buffalo, N.Y.,
and Kingston, Canada.
Made to Order.
The Boss—Jimmy, this is the third
morning you've been late; can you
give me an•exouaeI
Jimmy—Certainly ; what kind of
a one do you want?
Try Murine Eye Remedy
If you have Red, Wreak, Watery Eyes
or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smart
—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell
Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50e.
Murine Eye Salve in Aseptic Tubes,
25e, 50o. Eye Books Free by Mail.
An Eye Tante Owed ter An eyes that Need Cern
Muriao Rye itemedy Co., Chicago
MIstaken Courtesy.
An old Irish countrywoman, going
to Dublin by train, says the London
Times, stepped into a first-class car-
riage with her basket, and made
herself comfortable.
Just before the train started, the
conductor passed along, and notic-
ing the woman and the basket, said,
gruffly
"Are you first-class, my good
woman 7"
"Bogor, I am, and thank you,"
she replied, with a smile, "and how
do you foal yourself ?
Minard's Liniment Curse cargos In COWS.
A Gentle Hint.
Not all the worms that turn are
as gentle and "es tactful in their
turning as the one that a German.
paper reoently'desoribed.
A quiet, patient little man had
been pushed about and trodden on
by the other passengers ona crowd-
ed street -car. For a long time he
suffered in silence. Then, in a
meek voice, he addressed ae awk-
ward youth standing next to him.
"Young ntan," ho said. "I hope
T051 will not think me rude, but may
ask your age?"
The youth stared ab him for a
moment, and replied, "Eighteen."
"Eighteen," repeated the little
man softly. "Now, really, young.
Man, don't yeti think that you ate
old enothgh to stand oil your 'own
teat1"
SOUPS
]rlgbiy concentrated i one tta
sufncesearieli ra,sily,
Purest snit 'best
ingredients.
Order
today.
w. CL*6 C,
1'ELECYRIC DYNAMO
OR GENERATOR'
FOR SALE
30
K.We, 110 VOLTS '0 .C,
I I
675 R. P. M.
At a Very Reasonable Figure for.
Immediate Sale,
S„ FRANK WILSON) & KO@3S,
73 Adelaide Et. West. TORONTO.
EDUOAYI0N.
rtLIOTT'1` BUSINESS COLLEGE, TO.
al ionto. Canada's Popular.; .Cummer.
oral Scheel. Magnificent Catalogue free.
FARMS FOR SALE,
H. W. DAWSON, Ninety :Colborne .stress,
Toronto.
MIRITIT, STOOK. GRAIN ANN DAlliT
.L Forme to all section, of Ontario
Fame agape• - _
FACTORY SITES, WITII OR wITnou71
Railway trackage, in Toronto.
hrernpton and other towns and cities.
T)ESTDENTIAL PROPERTIES' '1N
ee��., nrampton „nt a dozen other townf.
N. W. DAWSON, Colborne 65., Toronto
STAMPS item "olNS
TAMP COLLECTORa—EUNDRED DIF.
ferent Foreign Storeys. Catalogue,
Album, only Seven Cents. Marks Stamp
rem nn no. Toronto.
NEWSPAPER FOR SALE,
COUNTRY WEEMLY NEWSPAPER FOR
Sale in good Ontario town. Excellent
opening for man of energy, write Wilson
Pnbliehing Company, Toronto.
MlSCELLANeaa,a
CANCER, rusioxS,- Loxes, rm.
'LI internal and external, cured with.
opt painby our home treatment. Write
us before too late. Dr, Denman Medical
Co.. Limited, Collingwond, Ont.
ri ALL STONES, =NET AND GLAD.
W der Stones, Kidney trouble, -Gravel.
Lumbago and kindred ailments positively
cured with the new German remedy,
Banat,' price 81.60. Another new remedy
for Diabetes -Mellitus, and sure cure, 15
"Sanol's Anti•Diabetee." Price 32.00 from
druggists or direct. The Sanol Manufao.
taring Company of Canada, Limited,
Winnipeg. Man.
FOR SALE
Puileys Shafting
Suitable for Mills, Manufacturing
Plants, Printing Houses, Etc.
2 Wood Split Pulleys, 12% x 48 in.
for 3 15/16in. shaft.
1 Wood Split Pulley, 12l/ x 48 in.
for 2 15/16 in. shaft.
1 Wood Split Pulley, 121/A x 28 in.
for S 7/16 in. shaft.
1 Wood Split Pulley, 103 x " 36 in.
for 3 7/16 in. shaft.
Pulleys of smaller sizes and Shaft-
ing of various lengths and sizes to be
sold at very low figures.
Box 23,
Wilson Publishing Co., Toronto.
One half of the average man's
life consists of owing money he can't
pay and the other half in having
money owed to him that he can't
collect.
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, &a.
A man will give his wife $10 to
pay $60 worth of bills. Then he will
borrow $6 of the $10 back and want
to know what she does with all her
money,
A druggist ran obtain an imitation of
DIINARD'S LINTMENT from a Toronto
house ata very low price, and have it
labeled hie own product.
This greasy imitation ie tbo peered one
wo have yet seen of the many that every
Tom, Dick and Marry has tried to intro -
dem.
Ask for DLTNA1D'S and you will get. 15.
Practising.
"So you •want to go into public
life 7" asked Senator Sorghum..
"Yes," replied the young man,
"You must remember that you will
be oriticiced and ridiculed even by
your friends. Can you aoeustcm
yourself to that?" "Yes. I'm praoa
tiling now. I wear ote of those
plaid posts with a belt in the back,."