The Brussels Post, 1915-2-18, Page 3The Castle of Sleep.
P
Longago, in the days of the
"wishing time" lived a great ad-
venturer, who was *ailed Lion
Heart because be feared nothing,
It so happened that on one of his
journeys Lion Heart beoame lost in
a dark forest, where he roamedfor
five weeke befor'e,00ming.to: an open
field, where the sun shortie brightly.
A11 this time Lion_ Heart had found
naught toeat save 'berries and
few nuts, and ho always was •look-
ing about in 'hopes of finding a
house,
As he looked across the field he
saw that it was not a field of mead-
ow grass, :but like a flower -garden
filled with blooming poppies, and
he saw in the centre of the field' a
beautiful castle. Straightway he
started to go to the oaatle,Ibut as
he stepped into the field a bird in a
tree near by called "Beware 1 be-
ware I that is the .castle of Sleep,
where slumbers the Princess.'
Hastily Lion Heart drew beak a
step. Well did he remember hear-
ing the minstrel sing of the beauti-
ful
eautifu] Princess, over whom a wicked
witch had east a 'spell. And the
minstrel had said to him:—"Thus
the beautiful girl Must slumber till
a brave knight shall force his way
through the field and plant & kiss
upon her."
So Lion Heart grasped his faith-
ful sword in his hand and resolved
to fight his way to the castle. No
sooner did he enter the field than
the poppies began to make him feel
eleepy. But be was determined he
would not sleep. He persevered
till at last he was almost to the cas-
tle door, when the poppies in front
of him suddenly y p g
a ran up
mato a
thicket of briars and brambles.
These his good sword out down, and
then he entered the' castle. All
about him were the servants and
guards sleeping soundly. Hastily
he went to the Princess's room, and
bending over kissed her forehead.
Immediately she awakened, as did
her household and the poppy field
had vanished.
DESERTER'S GRAPHIC STORY.
A German Soldier Tells of His Es-
cape From the Army.
The Manchester Guardian repro-
duces the following narrative told
by a German deserter to the Rotter-
damsahe Nieuwsblad:—
"The most terrible battle ivas at
St. Quentin—the ground covered
with dead and wounded in heaps
four feet high. No war saw such
horrors, and no army sustained
such losses. Of the 3,000 of our
regiment only 100 were left to live
the life of misery and hunger.
Every soldier has a reserve of tan-
ned meat and vegetable, but this
must be saved for extreme cases.
Those who, driven by hunger, had
eaten this reserve were as punish-
ment tied to a cannon for two days.
"All this made three of us decide
to desalt. We saw no end of this
misery. We had no ambition, we
knew that the world was against
us, although every outside paper
was hidden from us. We evere near
Lille when our mind was made up.
We had to pierce our lines a length
of thirty miles. ' Creeping through
the grass, over rivers and pools, we
succeeded: Then .we had to cross
Belgium, crowded with spies, as we
knew. We stayed two days in a
farm waiting our dhance, and found
there the only ,food we had,'
"But one morning the farm was
surrounded. A -spy bad discovered
us. We had to act` quickly. We
rushed out of the house. I only
got through by a miracle. My two
comrades were shot. I threw my
weapon away and ran, ran for my
life, while the bullets were whistling
all around me. I had luck and was
not hot, T reached a wood and for
the moment 1 was safe, and I could
hide me in the :branches. I knew I
was ,followed, and 1 knew what my
fate would be if caught. I moved
silently and reached a river, on the
border'sof which were bulrushes,
and from eleven o'clock in the
morning till half -past six in the
evening 1 stood in the water to my
neck while the patrols were search
ing all around me.
"Aftex dark I ventured to move,
I spent bwo days in hiding in the
stay and running by night, till, ex-
hau.sted, I entered a farm. I con-
fided in thefarmer, he gave me
some clothes, and wi'th'e sigh of re-
lief I took my uniform off. Now it
was easier, as 1 knew Flemish and
French well, but it took ane three
days more to get clear. One night
I meet e soldier, but he did not know
the nmforin. I began to talk to
]rim, and ventured to Ask him in e.
casual sew whom .? ;.us. "In Hol-
land," he he •said. I could have em-
braced him. My misery, my strug-
gles were over; I was in free Hol-
land, and deserting from a duty
like the ono imposed on us did not
teem a dishonor,"
N
In Korea there are tribes of WO -
Men who are not atlloWed to seea
man except merraero of their fam-
ily.
$25.Q0 F4R
• A LETTER
CAN YOU WRITE ONE?
Thirteen Prizes to be Awarded
in a Letter Writing
Competition
Some years ago the Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co„ of Brookville, Ont.,
offered a series of prizes to regi-
dents of the Province of Ontario for
the best letters describing cures
wrought by the use of Dr, Williams'
Pink Pills for Pale People, Hun-
dreds of letters were submitted in
this competition and' yet there must
have been thousands of other users
of the pills who did not avail them-
selves of the opportunity to win a
prize, To all these another letter -
writing competition is offered.
Thousands of eures through the use
of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have
never been reported. These will Though •the military organize,-
furnish the material for the letters tions of the' Canadian Colleges were
to be written in this contest. There in a much more rudimentary condi-
is no demand upon the imagination; tion than those of the British Uni-
every letter must deal with facts versities, a large contribution has
and facts only, already been made to the Army for
The Prizes. the present war from their gradu-
ates and undergraduates.
Tlhe following is an account of
what has been done by the Univer-
sity of Toronto:
According to our most recent in-
formation there are, besides the
members of the staff, 134 graduates
and 86 undergraduates, and of these
137 are officers and 83 privates. The
chief electrician and several of the
laboratory assistants are also on
service, and their places are being
kept for them. Professor de Ohamp
and Messrs. Balbaud and Bibet of
the Department of French in Uni-
versity College have been serving
with the French army since the be.
•innin
g of the war.
g
At present our information is
quite incomplete, but we have the
names of 53 graduates and 63 under-
graduates who have been accepted
for the second contingent.
On Friday, January 22nd, 1,500
students with their officers were
reviewed by His Royal Highness the
Duke of Connaught. He addressed
therm in part as follows: "I wish to
express to you my very great satis-
faction with the splendid turn out
you have given me this evening.
When I looked at you and saw how
y9u stood to attention and the ad-
mirable way in wihioh you marched
past, I saw that your work since
you were formed, a very few months
ago, has been performed with a will,
and I can honestly says that I have
never seen better results than you
have shown me to -day. What
pleases me still more is the splendid
example you young gentlemen are
showing to the whole of Canada.
You have come forward at a mo-
ment when every man that is able
to do anything to help the Empire
in a time of stress is needed, and
you have done so readily and in a
most efficient manner. ,As an old
soldier and as Governor-General of
Canada, I wish to say that nopar-
ade that I have seen—and I have
seen many lately—has given me
more satisfaction than your parade
this evening.”
At the soma time the women Stu-
dents of the University have shown
their determination to be of service
by occupying the tours from four
to six in the afternoon, when there
is no instruction given in the Uni-
versity, with sewing and other work
for the Red ross Society.
I:
People Hope for More Liberal
Treatment as Result of War.
thea children taught the eatedh'iem
in German; hence the famous
"children's strike" in the diocese 01
Posen the 'following year, And by
a law passed in 1008 the use of Per
11911 was interdicted at all meetings
an districts where the Poles formed
lees than sixty per cent of the popu-
laio
t n.
f
It s to guard for the future
against such procedures as these
that the national council appeals to
the "undivided spirit" of Poland
and looks forward to a "radiant
morrow of reunion for our nation,"
Tho Poles need elbow room in ' two.
directions. Should their aspire,-
tions
spiretions be realized it will be possible
for the patriots to erect their long
projected monument to Kospluszko
in Waneaw and forever impossible
for their children to Abe brutally
flogged for refusing eo use German
in Posen,
UNIVEIRSITY OF TORONTO.
Many Professors ami', Students Have
Enlisted for the War.
The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co.,
of Brockville, Ont., will award a
prize of $25.00 for the best letter
received on or 'before the 1st day of
March, 1915, from residents of On-
tario, on the subject, "Wily I Rb -
commend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills."
A prize of $10.00 will be awarded
for the second best letter received;
a prize of $5.00 for the third best
letter, and ten prizes of $2.00 each
for the next best ten letters.
The Conditions.
The ours or benefit from the use
of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills des-
cribed in the letter may be in the
ri er
w t a case, or on t owne that has
come under his or her personal ob-
servation.
More than one cure may be des-
cribed in the letter, but every
statement must be literally and ab-
solutely true.
Every letter must be signed by
the full name and correct address
of the person sending it. If it des-
cribes the cure of some person other
than the writer of the letter, it
must also be signed by the person
whose cure is described as a guar-
antee of the truth of the statements
made. -
The writer of each letter must
state the name and date of the pa-
per in' which he or she saw this an-
nouncement.
Fine writing will not win the prize
unless you have a good case to des-
cribe. The strength of the recom-
mendation and not the style of the
letter will be the basin of the award.
Ie is understood that The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co, shall have
the right to publish: any letter en-
tered in this contest if they desire
to do so whether it wins a prize or
not.
'Ilhe contest will close on March
1st, 1915, and the prizes will be
awarded as soon as possible there-
after. Do not delay. If you know
of a cure write your letter NOW.
Observe the above conditions care-
fully or - your letter may be thrown
out.
Address all lettere as follows:
Tho Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
Letter Contest Department.
NATIONAL SPIRIT IN POLAND.
The movement for a larger Po-
land takes new strength from the
formation of a national council at
Warsaw, and from the stirring
manifesto just issued an its name
by the Polish leaders, Count Pyg-
munt Wielpolski at their head. The
Poles are now in the full tide of
war, and with the exception of some
of their brethren in Galicia? have
unreservedly thrown in their lot
with the Allies. As a race they be-
long to conflicting jurisdictions.
There are 4,000,000 in Prussia
alone, west and east; Austria also
hes her share.
Geographically complex, the pro-
blem of "unifying" Poland is also
politically difficult, ,for at this mo-
ment its solution waits on the out-
come of time war and the goodwill of
Russia. That its people are already
unified 'by .sufferang in common is
plainly the conviction of the na-
tional council. In two territories
they have felt the heavy hand of the
oppressor. Of course, it is the Rus -
slim tyrant of whom we have beard
most. His ruthless suppressions of
insurrection are skill served up in
our historical texit books, and the
story of his attempts to extinguish
the language and national spirt of
Poland form a part of every liberal
education.
lin; tine german tyrant has also
been ab work. In 1885 40,000 Poles
were expelled from Posen because
they had not become Prussian`eiti-
eubjedts, as a preliminary to meas-
ures for oolonrzing Palish rlistriebs
with German settlers, In 1873 the
Polish language was excluded from
the elementary, and later from the
secondary sdhools of Prussia, In
lOOb a decree forbade religious in-
etreation in Polish, and the Poles
were eompelled to pay for having
SENSE ABOUT FOOD.
Facts Worth Knowing.
It ie a serious question some-
times to know just what to eat when
a person's stomach is out of order
and most foods cause trouble.
Grape -Nuts food can be taken at
any time with the certainty that it
will digest. Actual experience of
people is valuable to anyone inter-
ested.
A woman writes: "I had suffered
with indigestion for about four
years, over since an attack of ty-
phoid fever, and at times could eat
nothing but the very lightest food,
and then suffer so with my stomach
I would wish I never had to eat
anything,
"I was urged to try Grape -Nuts,
and since using it I do not have to
starve myself any more, but I can
oat it at any time and feel nour-
ished and satisfied, dyspepsia is a
thing of the past, and I am now
strong and well.
"My husband also had an experi-
ence with Grape -Nuts. He was put
under the doetor'a care, but medi-
cine did got seem to do him any
good until ho began to leave off
ordinary foods and use Grape -
Nuts. It was surprising to see the
o;iange in him, He rs y bettor
right off and naturally le has pone
but words of pralsb or rape -Nuts,
"Our hey thinks he cannot eat a
peal without Grape -Nuts, and he
learns so fast at sahooi that his
eaoher
t. comments on it, I am satis-
fied that it is because of the great
ponrlshing elements in Grape-
s
'1Thr mother is right. Grape -
Nuts food die a certain and remark-
ble rebuildsr of body, nerves and
brain.
""There's a Reason."
Ever read the abovo letter? A new
one appeard from time to time. They
arogenuine, true, and t'uir of human
Intermit.
It All Started
Front a Rad Cold
WA,TPoilll MAN FOUND 1tk1LIE f
IN DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS.
Mr. lloht, Tesler, Sr., After Stiffer*
ing for Two Years, Tells of the
Benefits He Got From Dodd's
Kidney fills.
Watford, Ont„ Feb, 8th (Special).
-Mr. Robert Taylor, Sr., a very
estimable Shan living here, is telling
his friends that the pain in his
back, from tvhieh he differed for
some tiros, has disappeared, and
that he gives all the credit to Dodd's
Kidney Pills,
"My'trouble started witha cold,"
Mr. Taylor states, "and though I
was treated by e doctor I got no
permanent relief. I had cramps in
my muscles and stiffness in my
joints, my eleop was broken and
unrefreshing .and I perspired freely
with the least exertion, I had at -
twits of rhoumatisin and sciatica,
and though I tried many medicines
I found no relief till I tried Dodd's
Kidney Pills. I must say they wore
a great benefit to me."
Mr. Taa,lor's troubles came .from
his kidneys, The diseased kidneys
failed to strain the uric acid out of
the iblood and the results were as he
has stated. Dodd's Kidney Pills put
the kidneys in working order, the
uric acid was strained out of the
blood, and the troubles went with
it,
e• -
THE BRITISH NAVY.
Saving Nation an Enormous Amount
of Money.
In the course of an article on "No
Naval Battle—Why 7" which ap-
pears in the Fortnightly Review,
Mi•. Archibald Hurd says that the
German fleet, which, during the
past fif
e tenears Dost £300
y ,000,000
to maintain, has completely Mailed
to fulfill any :single one of the hopes
on which it was based.
Declaring thtat the British people
would do well to be duly grateful
for the blessings which have been
theirs owing to naval predominance
during the past three months, Mr.
Hurd says that in the absence of
complete command of the sea the
British people would have had to
face the following weekly bill:
Increase in the cost of food by 50
per cent., raising the outlay. per
head of the population from 8s. to
22s. a week, £9,000,000.
Decline in wages bill, about £2,-
000,000.
Increase in cost of other necessi-
ties and luxuries, £2,000,000.
Loss of shipping, £1,000,000.
Decline in national income from
investments, £2,000,000.
Total loss per week, £16,000,000.
We thus reach the conclusion,
adds Mr. Hurd, that during the past
four months of war the navy has
been paying dividends to the nation
at the rate of £18,000,000 per week,
without taking into account the fact
.that it has spared us moral and in-
tellectual damages which are in-
calculable. Battle or no battle in
the North Sea, the people of the
United Kingdom, not to mention
the peoples of the far-flung Domin-
ions, have reason •for satisfaction
that during the years which pre-
ceded' war they turned a deaf ear
to those who urged that the expen-
diture on the fleet should be re-
duced.
WORLD'S BIGGEST'' THINGS.
The greatest bank is ,the Bank of
England.
The largest -monolith is in Egypt
—106 feet high.
The highest chimney is in Glas-
gow, Scotland, and is 474 feet.
The strongest electric light is at
the Sydney lighthouse Australia.
The deepest coal mine is near
Lambert, Belgium, and is 3,500 feet
deep.
The largest library is the Nation-
al, in Paris, which contains 3,000,-
000 books.
The tallest monument la in Wash-
ington, District of 'Columbia. It is
550 feet high.
The oldest college is University
College, Oxford. It was establish-
ed in the year 1050,
The largest bronze statue is that
of Peter the Great in Petrograd,
Russia. It'weighs about 1,100 tons,
The largest college is in Cairo,
Africa. It has on its register each
year over 10,000 students and 310
teachers,
In their eagerness to get to the
top some people are apt 'to go up in
the air.
ED. 5.
ISSUE 7--'15.
A Nova Scotia Case Of
Interest to ill 'onion
Halifax Sends Out a Message of Help
to Many People.
Halifax, H.S., Dee, 15—When inter-
viewed at her home at 194 Argyle St„
Mae. Haveretock was quite willing t0
talk of her peculiarly unfortunate ease,
i was always 'blue' and eepresssd,
felt weak, languid and utterly unfit
for any work, My stomach was so
diserdored that I had no appetite,
What I did eat disagreed. I suffered
greatly from dizziness and sick head•
aehe.and feared a nervous breakdown.
*Upon my druggist's recommendation
I used Dr, Hamilton's Pills,
"I felt better at once. Livery day I
improved, In six weeks I was a well
woman, cured completely after differ-
ent physloiane had failed to help me,
It is for this reason that I strongly
urge sufferers with stomach or diges-
tive troubles to use Dr. Hamilton's
Pill."
Dr. Hamilton's ?Me strengthen the
stomach, improve digestion, strength-
en the nerves and restore debilitated
systems to health. By cleansing the
blood of long-standing impurities, by
bringing the system to a high point
of vigor, they effectually chase away
weariness, depression and disease.
Good for young or old, for men, for
women, for children. ,All dealers sell
Dr. Hamilton's Pills of Mandrake and
Butternut.
What I Know.
I know that this day will never
come again. Therefore, I will make
it the best day in -which I have ever
lived. I know that happiness is a
thing within, and that is always in
the world and very near to me. 1
know I have but to search for it,
and that as soon as I begin to hunt
it out I have it, Also, I know that
as soon as I get happiness and 'be-
gin to give it away it comes back
doubled—and more to me. I know
this. I know that work is a stimu-
lus and
that i keeps e s the
world
alive and moving. ng. I know that the
people who work with love in their
hearts and interest in their brains
are the real doers and Ibenefaotors
of mankind. I know that I can be
a doer and a benefactor. I know
that life is exactly what I make it.
I know that other people and other
forces can influence cry life and
work only as I follow it. I know
that I am young 'kf I live youth; I
know that I am happy if 1 live hap-
piness; I know that I am worth
while if I attempt and accomplish
worth -while things. I know that
the greatest thing I eau ever do is
to do my best at all times and un-
der every circumstance. — Geo.
Matthew Adams.
A Philosophette.
"But why don't you marry Ed-
win, Angelica 7" asked Mrs. Blin-
ker.
"Why, mother," replied Angeli-
ca, "I think it's much better to
have a man on a. string than merely
anchored."•
e•
Are Hard Times Coming?
Yes. for the man that wears tight
boots, but his corns are relieved quickly
by Putnam's Corn Extractor. No pain
and certain cure. That's Putnam's.
tree no other, 25c. at all. dealers.
He Didn't Forget It.
"Sohn, did you mail that letter I
gave you two weekly ago 7"
"Yes, my dear, yesterday."
Minard's Liniment Curds Distemper.
Done Properly.
"How is it you were so long over
your work to -day 7" she asked.
"Sure, ma'am," replied the ser-
vant, "you were watching me most
of the time."
The Nova Scotia "Lumber Bing"
says:
I consider MINARD'S LINIAIIENT
the best LINIMENT in use.
I got my foot badly jammed lately,
/ bathed 1t well with MINARD'S LIN/-
luI9NT and it was as well as ever next
day.
Yours very truly,
T. G. McMULLFIN.
A woman should never spank her
dhildren with a slipper unless she
puts her sole into it,
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Eta
Heard Enough.
"Where is Timmy 7" asked Mr.
Jones on hie return from businele
one evening. "Gone to bed," was
the wife's reply, "I hope he's not
i119" "No, I sent hifa to bed as a
punishment for ewearin ," "Swear-
ingl" repeated M', ones. "I'll
teach him to owear,i' Mout wait-
ing for a li lit the angry father.
rutlled ups µirs to interview the
cu prllt, only fall per a loose
Stair- od and bump is ohin. At
once he became emcee nlfluent,
and whn the sr had cleared 'he
heard is
wife call gently i "Patter
come down, dear) Pin afire Tommy
has heard enough for his first les-
son."
This must be en awfully' tiresome
world for the man who knows it
all.
SIHOThI' SOLDIERS,
90,000 Viten Lost to 13ritafn Because
of the 1f.igh Standard.
The British Medical Journal
thinks thin the present standard of
height in the British Army is too
high, And estimates thatin the
Dist
few weeks more than thirty thous•
and excellent soldiers have been
lost to the nation because of ib. In
war time, short men are in many
respects more desiralble than their
bigger brothers. Thoy occupy less
room in transport, they find Dover
more easily, and they offer a small-
er mark to bullets and shrapnel.
They are better sheltered in
trenches and do not have to dig
them so deep to protect themselves.
As the Journal says, "It takes less
khaki to olothe thele and less leath-
er to boot them, The army blanket
Bowers them more amply, and they
need less food than tall, thin men
to keep up their body heat and main-
tain their marching energy. Those
who stand the rigors of cold clim-
ates ,best are not always big men,
and the sailor, like the wind-swept
tree on the coast, may be short,
'Warmth and easy conditions of life
rather tend to the development of
tall men, The cavalryman and ar-
tilleryman need to be big and
powerful, but as to those who bur-
row in the trendies, how Can it
matter whether they are four feet
and nine inches or five feet and six
inches 7 We are not out for a show
and a parade, but to win a war of
sieges and attrition."
Painful Swellings Reduced
Muscular Strains Ended
such Troubles Now Quickly Rubbed
Away by Powerful
Remedy.
Ie
you any muscles that are
strained and weak, that are frequently
subject to rheumatic pains; if you
have any painful swellings that re-
fuse to go away—get busy with Ner•
vlline. This is the very sort of trou-
ble that Nerviline is noted for curing
quickly. "I have proved Nerviline
simply a wonder in reducing a bard,
painful swelling. It followed an In-
jury I received in my left leg and
caused me great pain and discomfort.
The muscles were strained and sore,
and no other remedy gave the ease
and comfort I get from rubbing on
Nerviline. There is a soothing, pain -
relieving power about Nerviline that
touched the root of my trouble. Ner-
viline reduced the swelling, it destroy-
ed the pain, it brought my limb back
to perfect condition." The experience
of Mr. Bowen, whose home is in Mid-
dlesex, is not unusual. Thousands are
proving every day that muscular paths
of every kind, chronic rheumatism,
lumbago, neuralgia and sciatica will
yield to Nerviline when nothing else
can possibly cure. Nerviline is an
old-time family pain remedy, used
nearly forty years with great success.
The large family size bottle costs 50c,,
trial size 250, at all dealers.
The Modern Way.
He—Listen. My love for you is a
consuming fever. The blood runs
through my veins like molten lava
from a seething vo'leano.
She—Well just hold this thermo-
meter in your mouth till I get your
temperature, to prove it.
Minard's-Liniment Cures Carget In cows.
Their Kind.
"You can always trust a Piano
manufacturer."
"Why so?"
"Because his products are both
square and upright."
YOUR owra DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU
Try Murine Eye Remedy for Red, Weak, Watery
Eyes and Granulated Eyellde; No Smarting-.
Just Eye Comfort. Write for Book of the Eye
ymallS'ree. MurineEye Remedy co, Chicago,
The only time some fellows look
for an evening is ,when they carry
a corkscrew with them.
Mlnard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria,
The hardships of war—armored
cruisers.
Kate Douglas Wiggin's closest
possession, she says, is a letter
which she once received from the
superintendent of a home for the
feeble-minded. He evoke in glow-
ing terms of the pleasure with
which the "inmates" has read her
little book, "Marin Lisa," and end-
ed thus •superbly; "In fact, mad-
am, I think I array safely say that
you are the favorite author of the
feeble-minded I"
REMEMBER! The ointment
roil put on your child's skin gets
into the system just as surely as
food the child eats. Don't let
impure fats and mineral coloring
matter (Such as many of the
cheap ointments contain) get
into your child's blood 1 Zam.
Btik is purely herbal. No pois-
onous coloring. Use it always.
50c, Box of All Druggists and Store.,
Pelica tel
y
flavoured—
Highly
colleen-
trated.
Dues
WHY WORRY
Choose your variety and
ask your grocer for
'Clark's".
FARMS FOR SALE.
H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street,
Toronto,
IF YOU WANT TO BUY DR BELL A
Pratt, Stook, Grain or Dairy Frim,
Write H. W, Daweon, Brampton, or 90 001•
borne St.,. Toronto.•
H. W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Toronto.
NURSERY STOOK.
TRAWbERRI3S, RASPBERRIES, PO -
1.7 TAMES, Catalogue free, McConnell
& Son, Port Burwell, Ont.
MALE HELP WANTED.
LEARN BARBER TRADE --ALWAYS
sure employment at good waged: few
weeks required to complete course write
for full particulars and catalogue. to -day.
Motor Barber College, 219 Queen Eaet.
Toronto.
MISCELLANEOUS,
!-t ANGER. TUMORS, LUMPS, E'r0..
V.) Internal and external, cured with-
out pain by our home treatment, Write
ee before too late. Dr, Beaman ModloaS
Co.. Limited, Oollinawood, Oat-
Grocery
at.
GroceC BUSINFIsa IN TORONTO
x far sale with store and
dwelling, well established. good location.
Doing good business which can be large-
ly increased. $3,000 will handle, On-
tario Realty Co., 30 Yonge St., Toronto,
EGINE
FOR SALE
New Wheelock iB x 42
Automatic Waive
Complete operating condition,
flywheel, frame, belt, cylinders
and all parts. Can be shown
running at present time.
Will sell at less than half
cost price.
S. FRANK WILSON & SONS
73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto
retWIAlle
s
THE
Scientific Treatment
OF
BOILER FEED WATERS
Comprises knowledge of the
water conditions, application of
the correct reagents, careful
supervision as to quantity and
regulation or treatment.
Such thorough, scientific
handling of Boiler Water pro-
positions, results in the preven-
tion of scale, corrosion, pitting
and foaming, and consequently
a great saving of money.
Individual. analysis of water
from your own boilers by our
chemist will be made free of
charge if you are interested in
ridding your boilers of scale,
DEARBORN CHEMICAL CO.
OF CANADA, LIMITED.
Engineers. Chemists.
General Offices and Works:
1220-1230 DUNDAS STREET,
Toronto, Canada.
What Is Your
Mirror's Story
You can't have a beautiful
complexion for the asking.
Vaseline
Trademark
COLD CREAM
Made ba Canada
used regularly will remove blem-
ishes, and make the skin smooth,
clear and sound.
Vaseline Cold Cream contains
no animal or vegetable fats. It is
sterilized in the making and deli-
cately petfunmed.
"Vaseline" preparations ardor sale
at all Chemists and General Stores.
AVQIA SIYBS'T'ITUTJIS. Insist
on' Vaseline" hi original pack-
ages bearing the name, CHESS.
BbOUGTI MAN UFA. CT AIL.
IN•G CO., consolidated,
Illrufraled booklet free on rxgrresi
CHESEBROUGH Ml7'G CO.
(Consolidated)
1880 CHABOT AVE.. MONTREAL