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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1913-11-20, Page 7NlvekliValoSexILIV,AW4.4ZWIletnIN Young Folks • aRt wvtely0 G eL v'd The Plaid Press. Molly's smiles wont out of sight, and the 'corners of her mouth turn- ed downward. Yet there, open at the table beside her, lay the invita- tion, the wonderful invitation that "hoped that Janet would bring her little sister Molly to help make a specese of Annette'e party.,, Ever sines) the Hilton's had shut had gone houseand g big u the b P g abroad to travel across the s ear , Janet had never tired of telling Molly about the good times that she had known in that rambling house, and .about Annette Hilton's wonderful Uncle Billy and his d ear , finny stories. Molly had been too little then to join in the fun, but 1 and not on a big girl;Y now she was g had the Hiltons Dome back, but they had invited her to a party. Janet was away visiting, and Molly would have to go to the party without'her; but there was another reason for her unhappiness. "The plaid dress," she complain- ". "I shall have to wear Janet's id dress that is made over for me, and every one will remember it." 'Some days laber a very sober lit- tle girl in a red plaid dress sat out for Annette's party.. "I shall stay in the corner, where no one oan see ane in Janet's old dress," said the little girl over and over to herself. But half-bway up the long hill that led to Annette :a ,house something happened. A new little thought popped into Molly's head. "I was invited," she rememlbered, going over the words of the invita- tion, "to help make a success of Annette's party, and how can I do that if I stay in the corner? It would not be polite to refuse to do what she asks." When Molly reached the house, she found a great many boys and girls sitting very quietly in the big parlor. Perhaps it was because An- nette had :been away so long that she seemed like a stranger; her lit- tle friends did not know what to say to her, or even to one another. Annette herself was trying to start a game, but no one seemed ready to join. "Won't one of you girls be the leader?" she asked. "I'll tell you exactly wheat to do." But every one hung back, and Annette began to look troubled. • "This party isn't much fun, is it?" 'whispered the little girl next to Molly. "Dear me " thought Molly, "this part' isn't 1fun, and I'm not doing a thing to help!" Then a little girl in a plaid dress found herself etandin'g in the centre of the room and saying to Annette, "I'll be the leader if you like. I'm sure it's going to be a jolly game." And it was a jolly game, and more and merrier games followed. Molly had just been "left out" in "Going to Jerusalem," when she .felt a kindlytouch on her ahoulder, and heaa deep voice say, "Why, it's my little Janet I I wouldn't have known you except for the bright plaid." Molly turned as red as her dress as she faced about and looked into the merry face of a big mean "No," she answered, remember- ing the dress for the first time since she had: joined in the games, "it's just her dress! I'm Janet's sis- ter I" "Aad I'en Undue Billy," said the big man 'laughing, "and I've a lot of things to tell Janet's sister" Then Uncle Billy led her off to another big room up -stairs, and showed her beautiful pearly shells and odd little figures carved out of ivory, and a great many other cari- ous thingsthat he had brought from over the seas. He told her stories, too, such' wonderful stories that she forgot about the plaid dress again, and even about her resolution to help make a success of Annette's. Parti. When they came down -stairs Uncle Billy had to introduce her all over again to Annette's mother and father, so' that there was not very much time loft, But the party did not really need Melly's help any more; it was going ou merrily by itself. "It was so nice to have you be- gin. the ganio I" Annette said to Molly at good -by time; and Uncle Billy whispered, "What a piece of hick ib was that you wore that plaid dross i I should never have foiled Janet'•e sinter without it l" Youth's Oontpanion. What She Said. A gentleman who had been in the city only, three days, bub who had been paying abtenbion to a promin- ent belle, wanted to ,propose; but was afraid ho would be thought too hasty. Ho delicately eppreacl}ed the subject as follows:- "If I wore to speak to you of marriage after having only made your negtlal tt• &nee three days lige what ,would yeti say to it?„ "Well, 1 should tin' never put off till to,ntorrow.. that wIliob you shott'fd have done the f151f before yes erdty,,,. TIIE HALF -SPEED MAN AND WOMAN What It Means When You Feel "All Out of Sorts." You know what it meane to feel "all gut of sorts." Most people have felt this was ab some time. Nerves out of order, irritable lan- guid, depressed. An aching head, a fagged brain, appetite bad and digestion weak. With some people title condition comes and gees; with others it is chronic; they can't shake it off. It interferes with busi- ness, spoils recreation and robe and life ofall i joys.These men to women are only able to live and work at "half speed," Half epeed people have lost lhint abundant natural vitality which en- ables others to go fu ll-spe e d - ah ad through life. Their energy and nerve power have evaporated —they cannot work long without breaking down. The trouble is nerve weakness and is caused by poor, watery blood. You can begin to improve your oondition to -day by taking Dr. William's Pink Pills, They make rich, red blood once more pulsate through your veins, and your nerves thrill with fresh vigor. Here is oonvinoing evidence that new strength and full health can be had through the use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Mr. Newton Mayhew, North Tryon, •P. E. I., says : "I am a farmer and naturally have to work very hard. The re- sult was that I found myself very much run down. My blood became thin and watery, and my muscles flabby. I took doctors treatment but it did not help me and I grew so weak that I could scarcely work at all. Ae I found the medical treabmen't was not helping Roe I decided to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and in these I found the medi- cine I needed, as in a short time I was restored to my old health and vigor. I shall always reooaimerid these pills to all sufferers." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are sold by all medicine dealers, or will be mailed, post paid, at 50•eenis a box or Six boxes for $2.50 by The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„ Brookville, Ont. INCREASE OF WAGES. Millions More Were Paid to Work- ers Last Year. A report CD the ascertained changes in the rates of wages and hours of labor in the United King- dom in 1912 was issued recently by the British Board of Trade. This states that after the period of depression in 1908-9 wages began to rise in sympathy with the im- provement in trade and employ- ment, but the movement was eosne- whet slow until about May last year. After that date the move- ment became more rapid, with the result that the number of work - people whose wages were reported as increased during 1912 was in ex- cess of that for any previous year, while the aggregate amount of their net weekly increase was exceeded twice only dlurinng the last 20 years, namely, in 1900 and 1907, both years of exceptional prosperity. The number of workpeople re- porbed as affected by ohanges in rates of wages last year wee 1,818,- 940. The advaaee represented an increase for 52 weeks of over 27,- 000,000, but as the changes mostly took effect late in the yeas the ac- tual increase in the wages bill was about £3,000,000, allocating the weekly advance of £139,000. Coal mining accounted for £74,- 000, engineering and shipbuilding £11,000, the textile :trades £15,000, Toasted to a Golden Brown ! Sounds "smacking good," That's doesn't HI Post Toasties Tenter, thin bite of the beet parts of Indian Corn, perfect- ly cooked at the faotory, and ready to eat direct from the package freak, crisp and clean. There's a delicate sweetness ", about "Toasties" that make therm the favorite naked cer- eal at thousands of breakfast tables deity. Post Toasties rvith cream and a sprinkling of sugar— Delicious Wholesome P..Asy to Serve Sold by 'Grocers evet'ywherc. Canadian Pectin Oeseel 00. t,td. Wtndeor, Ontario, iron and steel manufactures £10,- 000, acid building trades £8,000. The etatietaes given are exolueive of olangee affecting agricultural era a andsea- labor rallw y servants men. 1'teports received, however, indicated that agricultural laborers in a oansiderable number of die triots had been granted advanoee of wages; also that the earnings of about half a million railway ser- vants continued bo rise, while sea- men fully maintained the rate granted in the previous year. Changes in the hours of labor affected 105x000 persons, whose weekly woriring time was reduced by 211,000 hours in the aggregate. Ow CLIMBING A MAGNETIC CHAIN Remarkable'=aExperiment With a Lifting Magnet. A Berlin correspondent of the 'Scientiflo American describe') an in - r i experiment Wresting n m nt thatwasmade g ex er P at the works of one of the large g German manufacturing firms witlr one of their lifting magnets. A chain, fastened to the ground and carrying an iron ball at its free end, was raised to a vertical position by the approach of the great lifting magnet suspended from a orane. The attraction of the magnet was so strong that the chain remained in a perfectly vertical position. A grown-up workman olimbed up the chain without disturbing its rigid- ity in the least. The chain seemed to float in the air. The magnetio pull on the :ball was greater than the gravitational pull on the man. This remarkable experiment shows the enormous power of at- traction exerted by the lifting mag- nets that are used in iron and steel works to carry about iron material of every description. The magneto enable the operator to seize iron material at any point desired, and oonvey it to any other point within the range of the crane. Incident- ally, the use of lifting magnets has greatly diminished the risk of acci- dents in the moving of heavy masses of iron. ILLS OF CHILDHOOD. Every mother should be able to recognize the symptoms of the little ailments that attack her children. She should aleo be in a position to treat them promptly. To •do this she ahould keep a supply of Baby's Own Tablets in the house at all times. The Tablets never fail to be of help to little ones. Mothers who are anxious for the welfare of her little ones will reoeive free for the. asking a valuable little book on the care of infants and young children. Conoerning the Tablets, Mrs. G. L. Bonham, ..St. George, Ont., saes: "I can recommend Baby's Own. Tablets as a safe and sure medicine for little onus. I have raised our babies with their aid and would not be without them." Sold by medi- cine dealers or by mall at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medi- cine Co., Brookville, Ont. NIXED • METAPHORS. Eminent Britisb Statesmen and Politicians Make Them. In the palmy days of spread-eagle oratory, when language was far more flowery and figurative than it is now, it took a cool head behind a vehement manner to steer a safe oourse among similes and meta- phers. Absurdities were frequent, and laughter marred many a per- oration ; yet, carried along by the speaker's earnestness and fire in delivery, the most wildly ridiculous metaphors often passed unnoticed. At a memorial meeting in honor of one of the most famous of Ameri- can orators—Wendell Phillips—a magniloquent speaker referred to the spirits) of the great departed, which, on leaving this earth, "wend each its way, swifter than a winged eagle, loftier than a soar- ing falcon—sweeping across the mighty epaoes of thee heavens as a glorious comet sweep, rushing ever onward, forward and upward, to its goal in Abraham's bosom 1" Oratory of that type --even with- out the mixed metaphor—is a rare survival from the fashion of an ear- lier time. Eloquence is more re- strained and less ornate nowadays. Yet even in the simpler style of our own time, public speakers of ex- perience, as well as blunderers and beginnora, occasionally slip up on their metaphors. Ahy schoolboy could oorreot the err'or's thatsome wide-awake English reporter has Noted in the recent speeches of em- inent British statesmen and polo tielanse "We are told," Said Mr. Walter Loan, in a debate on an education bill, "that by suoh legislation the very heart of the country has been shaken to its uttermost founda- tions," 51r, St. John Brodrick, in the House of Commons, talking ok the mobilizabion of troops, declared that "atnongg• the many jarring notes heard in this House on mil] tary affairs, this subject at least must be regarded as an oasis," Mr, Mquith, the premier, did bet- ter: Ho said that "redletribution is a thorny nubtect, which regntirtie delicate baudling or It Will tread en PRESERVE SSIIIN Aphiur map 91414 i rt• � Warr' on MI ,f ■�[ •`eWith CUTICi1 50 Assisted when necessary by CutIcura Ointment. They keep the skin and scalp clean and clear, sweet and healthy, besides soothing irritations which often prevent sleep and if neglected become chronic disfigurements. Cetleura soap end Ointment aresold throughout the world. A liberal sample of each, with 02 -peso booklet on the care and treatment of the Ala and Nalp.. Dopvon ostobr,Tr B -f o Potter Drag io China, A. BOMB people's toes" ; and it was Lord Curzon of lieddleston, former Viceroy of India, who declared op- timistically "Though we are not out of the wood, we have a good ship." French Sayings. Devotion is the last love of wo- men, Saint-Evremond. Women. like brave men exceeding- ly, but audiaoious men still more.— Lemesies. The whisper of a beautiful wo- man can be heard farther theta the loudest call of duty.—Anonymous. It's better to love to -day than to- morrow. A pleaaure postponed is a pleasure lost.—A, Rsaard. There are beautiful flowers that are scentless, and beautiful women that are unlovable.—Houelle. We meet in society many Waage tii a women whom we would fear to make our wives.—D'Harlovelle. The heart of a woman never grows old; when it hats ceased to love, it has ceased to live.—Roohe- pedre. Lovers have in their language en infinite number of words in which eaoh syllable is a caress,—Boohe- pedre. Before promising ar• woman to love only her, one should have sear: theist all, or should see only her. --A. DWue need the friendshipofa mag in great trials; of a wonDam to the affairs of eveay-day life. -A• L. Thomas. Offensive Breath Caused Usually By Catarrh A Simple Remedy Discovered That Cures Without Drugs. The American people suffer more from Catarrh than from any other disease, It undermines more consti- tutions and creates more sickness than all other diseases Combined. It is, therefore, very dangerous. You can't successfully treat Catarrh by internal dosing you must in some way send a purifying, healing agent through the breathing organs, so that the germs can be reached. This you do every time you inhale Catarrhs. zone. It's rich essences and healing balsams are breathed all through the none, throat and lungs, and effectively destroy every trace of Catarrh. This is a proven fact. 3 endorse Catarrhozone because I know of six bad cases of Catarrh, In- cluding my own, that it has cured. It is a sensible remedy because it is ed. pable of going where the disease is. I believe it cures quicker than other remedies because it gets sooner to, the source of the disease than anything ,else I know of. I bad headaches, bad breath, and much stomach trouble as. sootated with my Catarrh, but they have disappeared since using.Catarrh- ozone, which keeps me free from colds, headaches, catarrh and ail win- ter ills." OTTO I0, IURAMEIL, . Belle- ville, Ont: Catarrhozone is needed in every home, Large size lasts 2. months, priee $1.00; small size, 50o; trial size•, 25e, At all storekeepers and druggists' or The Caterrhozone Co., Buffalo, N. Y., and Kingston, Canada. Not Responsible. "Ellen, I'm tired of your neglect and careleseness. Just loon at all that dust lying about on the furni- ture. It's affix weeks old at the very least," "Thou, lb's no fault of mine, You know very well, ma'am, that I've bean with you only four weeks." Try Murine Eye Remedy 11 you have lied, Wealt, Watery Elea or Granulated Eyelids. Dcesti't Smart :Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25e, 50c. Murine Eye Sainte in Aseptic Tubes, 25c, 50c. Eye Books Free by Ma, An Sye Teale need for All gybe that Need Cm* Whine Rye Remedy Ce., Chtongo Ibilli. A WONDERFUL DISCOVERY An eminent scientist, the other day, gave his opinion Gust the most won- derful disecvery of recent yeas' was the discovery of Zam-link. Just think: A5 soon as a single thin layer of Zam Buk Is applied to a wound or a Sore, eueh injury Is insured against blood poison ! Not one Species of as microbe that h been found d t at Zamtfiuu does not kill! Then again. As soon as Zam-Buk is applied to a Sore, or a cut, or to skin disease, It stops the smarting, That fa why aileron are such Wendt. if Zam-Buk, They care nothing fel the science of the thing, All the; know is that 'Lam-lluk {stops their pain. Mothers should never forge: this Again. As soon as Zam - Buk is ap lied to a wound and or to a diseased Sas p et part, the cells beneath the skin's sur face are so stimulated that new bealthy tissue is quickly formed. Thar forming of fresh healthy tissue fro?' Wow is Zanl-auk's secret of healing The thus tissue s t us Porme4 iske wor d a to the surface and literally casts of the diseased time above it. This it whyZola-Bak cures arepermanent. Onlythe other dayMr.b Marc o' 101 •Delorimier Ave Montreal called upon the Zam-Buk Co, and told them that for over twenty ave years he had been a martyr to eczema, Fits hands were at one time so covered with sores that he had to sleep in gloves. Four years ago Zam'Bnk was introduced to bim, and in a few months it cured him. To -day --over three years after his cure of a disease he had for twentyflve years—he Is still cured, and bas had no trace of any return of the eczema! All druggists sell Zam-Buk at 50e. box, or we will send free trial box if you wand this advertisement and a lo. stamp (to pay return postage). Ad- these ddress Zam-Buk Co., Toronto. BEVERAGES OF NATIONS. Amount of Spirits Cousumed in Different Countries. Norwegians are one of the meet temperate of Northern nations, cone ening but 46% pinta of bear and 4% of brandy per head of popula- beak, The Daae drinks on the average 158 pints of beer, but little wage, and only 86 pints of brandy eaob year. The Swede manages to con- sume 84 pints of beer and 13 of spirits. The Russia* drinks 7% pin,bsof vodka and the same amount of beer. The Frenchman, however, takes 160 pints of wine, 15 of beer, 48 of brandy. The Britisher soothes himself with 9 pints of whisky .or gin, 8 of claret, and 228 of beer. The Dutchman will drink 54 pints of •beer and 12 of brandy. Tarring every Germanrovinces to obtain an average, it is found that the German consumes 187% pints of beer, 10 of wine, and 9% of spirits. In Munich, however, the average amount per head rises to 850: a pints, being the highest of siny pro- vince, while the lowest average ob- tains in the northern province of Alsoatia. Here the inhabitants are satisfied with only 144 pints of`beer per head. The Italian is the least of all ad - dieted to alcoholic beverages, tak- ing only 8 pints of bear, 1ae of alco- holic beverages, and 144 of wine per head. ARE HARD TIMES COMING? Yeo, for the man that wears tight boots, but hie corns ars relieved eutokly by Putnam's Corn Extractor. No pain. and, oertain ours. That's 'Putnam's. Use no other, 25e. at all dealers, Getting a Verdict.. "We could have settled our cif- ficulties by tossing a coin. Instead we agent a let of money in going.) to law." "Well ?" "I tuelerstand the jury settled the matter by tossing a coin." LIQUID SULPHUR aurae rough skin. It ie better for a girl to be given in marriage than it is' for a man to be sold. Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. A Winnipeg colored nasi was fined $52 and coats for smoking opium. He told the court he al- ways had, does now and always will "hit the pipe." LIQUID SULPHUR cures Robing piles. Fooling Baby. UP•TO-DATE BAtTVLESXUP. ILLS. queen Elizabeth Is the First Oil -Burning .Warship. H.M.S. Queen Elizabeth, the superchip of the British navy, is tho largest British batbienbip ever launched. Her design embodies some striking new features Which make her the most up-to-date war- ship in the world. She will, for example, bo the ant vesSel:to be armed to fight aircraft (a battery of apeotally designed guns are given her for this purpose) and to he protected againet them as well, for in adieu all her crew will be under cover of a central battery, which given overhead protection from dropping bombs, as well as side proteetion against ganfiro. Again, she will be the first ship to mount the new 15 inch guns, of which she is to carry four pairs. The offensive power of this weapon en is enormous. Her torpedoes, fired from four tubes, ia ube , will be of the latest twenty- one inch pattern. Heated air pro- pels them, and they have a long effective range, with double the speed of the older weapons. For speed and accuracy, in fact, there is no torpedo in existence like them. She will burn oil fuel only, being the first battleship in the world to do this. It is anticipated that oil alone will enable her to maintain a steady twenty-eight knots per hour without any of the falling off and spurting up again that oocuns ig coal -burning ships, Expected Death From Day to Day Another Case Where Life Was Saved and Health Restored by Nerviline. We have all read and heart of the agonies of sciatica, b'.t only those who have been tortured by this dread mal- ady can fully appreciate what it must mean to be cured after years of:suffer- ing. It is because he feels It his solemn duty to tell to the world his faith in Nerviline that Victor P. Hires makes the following declaration. "For three years I was in the Royal Mall service, and in all kinds of weather had to meet the night trains. Dampness, cold, and exposure brought on sciatica that affected my left side. Sometimes an attack would come on that made me powerless to work. I was so near- ly a complete cripple that.I had to give up my job. I was in despair, completely cast down, because the money I had spent on trying to get well was wasted. I was speaking to my chemist one day, and he recom- mended 'Nerviline,' I had this good liniment rubbed on several times a day, and got relief. I continued this treatment four months and was cured. I have used all kinds of liniments, and can truthfully say that Nerviline is far stronger, more penetrating and infin- itely better than anything elee for re- lleving pain. 0 urge everyone with lumbago, neuralgia, rheumatism, or sciatica, to use Nerviline. I know it will cure them." Get Nerviline to -day, large family size, 50o; trial size, 25e; all dealers or The Catarrhozone Co., Buffalo, N. Y., and Kingston, Canada. Motherly Instinct. Matron—Baby is orying, Mary. I expect he wants his bottle, Mary -1 just give it to 'im, mum, Matron—Did you i Then I expect he doesn't want it. Minard's Liniment Oo., Limited. Gentlemen, --1 have used MINARD'S LINIMENT on my vessel and in my family forDara, and for the every day 111s and accidents of life I ooneider 'it has no equal. 1 would not start on a voyage without it, if it Cost a -dollar a bottle. CAPP. F. R. DESJARDIN, :tour. "Storks," 8t. Andre, Kamouraeka, Explaining It. "Does he quarrel much with his wife?" "No, but he's not home a great deal, you know." LIQUID SULPHUR Is a disinfectant. Ignorance at the right time is bete Mrs. Junes—"Why are you set- I ter than knowledge at the wrong ting the alarm for 2,301 You surely time. don't want to get nip at tibat time?" Jones—"No; I'd like to go to-minard's Liniment Cures carget In cows, sleep et three time. When the baby hears that he may think it's • time Pointed Paragraphs. for him to turn in." Nearly every man is true to his first love --'himself.' An optimist is a man wfro lays up a title sunshine for a rainy day, Some women are self-made but most of them are remodeled by dressmakers. Many a timid girl courts death by making love to a rich old cod- ger who has one foot already In the grave. It's dil leult for a newly married man: to ensrate rnuoii enthnaiaain ever Itis bride's beautiful hair after he has seen her pile it on the bu- reau for the night. Blooliumaer—"After all beauty —. le only gun deep." Spatt "In many oases it is not go deep as aunt. ie often laid on the skin's surface," ISSUE 4(i—'A3. B MINCfr. MEAT Outcast fruits etc,,—perfect:, balanced—ready to use, Saves endless labour, . One 9 quality: —the beat. W,CLARK. Mostls01, 11 „'Imykimil 1IIIhft*ilIt ,t figion1n`" Fruit tokocurb, to. bonny cn am with eillrg 6pllLt, cure, ringnrLL., aro of tarns ewPlapj(r en's of aem.bmw, w.okt>r1ms,.'rcmc434 KENDALL'S Spavin Cure It has been nscdby horsemen, eteria Italians and tonins era for 3d years -s and it hen 13,000044 its worth in huzdredA of thousands of canes. Bickerdike, Alta., jai. 29, INS. "I Have been using Kendalls Spavin Cure fora good many years with good results. In fact, x ani Dever wltbout it." II. SlEIDOaIs. $1 a bottle --e for 55 at druggists—or write for copy or our book "Treatise ea the Horse" free.,. Dr. B. J. KENDALL COMPANY Enosburg Falls, Vermont, U.S.A. 7A The eventless time is the happy time, time, but we do not realize .that tilt we have had the exciting experi- enoes which break us., Minard's Liniment Cures .Colds, ha Friend—"Were you smitten by your wife before you married hero' Penhecker—"Yes, but not half as much as I have been since." USE LIQUID SULPHUR IN YOUR BATH,. Why is a merry fellow like a bad shot? Because he's the bey to loeep the game alive. Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. No man in good health has any, excuse to be a pessimist. EDUCATION. T LLIOTr'F BUSINESS COLLEGE, , To• ..L4 Tonto. Canada's Popular Oommer• oia1 School. Magnificent Catalogue free. FARMS FOR SAL!•' H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Streets Toronto. TF YOU WANT TO BUY OR SELL A Fruit, Stook; Crain,. or Dairy Farm write It. W, Dawson, Brampton, or .90 Colborne St., Toronto. N, W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Toronto. STAMPS ANO e.0INS TAMP COLLECTORS—HUNDRED ' DIP. I !erect -.Foreign Stamps. Catalogue. Album, only Seven Cents. Marla Stamp Comns no. Termite. NEWSPAPER FOR 'SALE, COUNTRY WEEKLY NEWSPAPER FOB. Sale in good Ontario town. Excellent Poppeefiag tng for. min of energy, write Wileop nbll,hOompany, Toronto• MISCELLANS 0119, CANGER, TUMORS, t LUMPS. ETC., internal and external, oured with. out pain by our home treatment, •Write es before too late Dr, nellmao•3fedloai Co., Limited, Coltingwood, Ont.. !`i ALL STONES, KIDNEY AND BLAD• F' der Stones, Sidney trouble. Gravel, Lumbago and kindred aliments- positively cured with the now German remedy. Boni," price 01.50. Another new remedy tor Dlabetee-Mollltue, and sore euro.' 10 Banol'e Anti -Diabetes," Price 52.00 from druggists or direct. The Sand Mannino. Luring Company of Canada. Limited, Winnipeg. Man. The Soul of a Piano istho Action. lnslst.ost the "OTTO HIGEL" Pinto Action HIGHEST PRICES FOR Raw Furs osaams0 write for List telt■ W. C. GOFFATT ORILLIA, -- ONTARIO Now is the Time to Think About your Staple Syrup Business - Consult any of your neighbors whe have used the' champion Evapor- ator. They,w!Il tell you to install before the snow is on the ground, Costs no more to buy now than in March, Write for free booklet. THE C9IMM WC. CO, VISITED58 WO!tlltptenSt., MONTREAL, QU6. Why wo pay more for your RAW FURS We are the oldest RAW Fun "mese ee Won ae the largest dolleatoro o CANADIAN RAW FURS In Canada, That means larger eaporlarondarser tuartotn and 4 LARGER PRIOR to you. Side direstiii ea.ablb turns mach, Wee Shipments hold adpat+ate on esgtiost. Pail price Oat noel ready. writs tar lt, HIRAM 5OHN9o1 LIM1'tED, 40e St. Paul 81. Mail Dept, "0" t0outsca1, `t` ttt