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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1915-3-18, Page 3• R qtr yam.' Young Folks 1 SICK HEADACHES PERMANENTLY CURED An biker Garden. "I should like to start my garden right away," said Paul, "See, here gyre some wonderful p+ioturea- in the seed catalogue." "Why not start a garden nowt„ Ms mother asked, "It would be fine fun to see it grow," Pant looked out of the window upon s snow-covered world. "What kind of a garden could I possibly plant novel" he .said. "Jadk Frost has been sowing•eeeds." "But you an have a green gar- den ine few days," his another re- plied. "I will dew you how. First, the seeds must he soaked in warm hater." Paul ran to get the seeds. When he came baric hie mother,wae eover- ing a wide tray with a layer of cot- ton. ' "After de seeda are soft," ,she eadd, "we will place them between two layers of cotton and wet them well. Then we will carry 'the tray to 'the sunniest window, and in a few days your garden will be grow- ing.'' aul could hardly believe that seeds would grow unless they were planted in anoi•st (brown earth; bet he watched his cotton :garden faith- fully. After some days green shoots appeared. Paul was puzzled and delighted. His mother explained that each seed holds a. store of food for the little growing plant, so that et first it does not need earth to nourish it. - P,aul'e plants did not grow to be big and tall, ,but they gave him much pleasure: He soon dtarted other emall gardens in sawdust and fibre. He found that by placing peas or corn against the inside of a glass bottle and filling the bottle with moist cotton he soon had a garden where he mfg"ht watdh the growth of the roots es' well as of'tbe leaves. These are only a few of the many things +that Paul learned about in- door gardens. His mother has told him that there are many more won- derful b,hings about seeds that he will discover ' in tame. -You'th's Companion. Dr, Williams' Pink Pills Oorroct the Ouse of This Trouble There aro few ailments that pause more genuine misery in the. home than attacks which are gen- erally termed sick headaches. The attacks are often periodical, and when the mother of a family is pros- trated at intervals there is net only her own suffering to eoesider, but the discomfort caused the other nrerebere of the household, Sick headaches arise from a variety of causes; and most of them can be re- lieved or oared through the tonin treatmeht wibh Dr. Wi11ia1ms' Pink Pills. Mrs. Hugh Doeherty,'Rocar ville, Sask., • says : I suffered, for yearn with what the doctors called nervous prostration and sick head- ache. When these spells came on I could not work nor walk, and the pains in the head were almost un- bearable, •At times the pain in my head was sd dreadful that I feared it would drive me mad. I tried four different doctors at times, and not only took bottles of medicine, but quarks of it, but bo no avail. Then I quit taking medicine altogether and tried dieting, but it made no difference, •1 was still -an agonizing sufferer. Finally my husband urged me to try Dr. Williams" Pink Pills and got me a supply. After (taking the Pills for- some weeks I felt a little better and I gladly con- tinued their use. My nerves be- gan to feel stronger, the terrible headache came with less frequency, andafter taking the Pills for some months disappeared altogether. From that day to this I have had no return of the trouble, and all who knew of - my illness regarded my cure as marvellous. I cannot say too much in praise of the Pills, as they certainly saved me from a life of almost constant agony," Itis by building up and enriching the blood and strengthening the nerves that Dr. Williams' Pink Pills work seemingly marvellous cures,. and what they have done for others they will do for all ailing people if givena fair trial. If you do not find these Pills at your medicine dealers.you can get•them by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brookville, Ont. CARDINAL FACTS. This is Canada's war. What will the Harvest be 1 Increase of knowledge means in- crease, of production The first essential for the highest. yield is good seed. Not only grain growers, but breeders and all producers are mak- ing history at this juncture. Value of the crop is inoreased if treated for,sir)ut prevention. Failure to••secure suitable varie- ties is a frequent cause of poor en- silage. All grain intended for seed should be cleaned and graded, in order to retain only the strong kernels. Farmers who have separate houses for their laborers have no difficulty in securing help. Good labor is 'worthy employment in winter as well as in spring, ,sum- mer and autumn. If labor is scarce now, it will not be more plentiful in another year, so it is wise to eneourage .present help, A bureau of employment could find useful work in every town of size. When manure is piled and allowed to heat, the vitality of most of the seeds is destroyed; but when drawn to the field from the stable, or • not deft long enough in the pile to beeoane weld rotted, mlanur'e is one of the most important means of seed dispersal. t+ STRENGTH Without Overloading the Stomach. The business man, especially, needs food in the morning that will not overload the atomadh, but give mental vigor for the day. Much depends on the start a man gets each day as to how he may ex- pedt to accomplish the 'work on hand. He can't be alert with a heavy, fried -meat -and - potatoes breakfast, requiring a lot of vital energy in digesting it. A Western business man found a food combination. for produoing energy. He writes: "For years I was unable to find a breakfast food that had nutrition enough to sustain a business man without overloading his stomach, causing indigestion and kindred sitments. "Being a very busy and also a very nervous man, I had 'about de- cided to give up breakfast altoge- ther. But luekily I was induced to tray Grape-Nuta. "Since that morning I have been a mew mann; can work without tir- ing, my heed ie nicer used my nerves sura g_gee geld, alio that GrapesNuts, with a • little sugar and a small quantity of oold milk, moires a delicious morning mealy which invigorates nip for the day's business," Nemo given by Cana/ellen Postern Co., Windsor, Ont. Read "The Road to Wellvillo, in pings. "There's 11 Reason." liver road the above letter? A now one appears front time to tt io. They aro get1titno, true, and furi of huntay Interest.. FAMINES IN BRITAIN. No matter what may happen, the statesmen of Britain 'have an- nounced that they will never give in, It is, therefore, our duty to prepare for the worst. Nobody can foretell what in the future. the Em- pire may have to suffer in this great war that is waging for the right of people to live and to gov- ern themselves. It is this all -Im- portant truth dab the Patriotism and Production campaign prompted by the Department of Agriculture is endeavoring to force home. Britain, in her isolated position, is no stranger to famine. It is in the memory of every middle-aged man " how, soma thirty years ago, Ireland suffered bitterly, and hun- dreds e of dollars were subscribed for relief, and ships with loads of provisions and cloth- ing were sent over the ocean to the distressed isle. At the time of the Crimean war, consequent upon the shutting off of supplies from Russia, odd people will remember, bread rose greatly in price—to twenty and twenty-five cents the four -pound loaf. In earlier days, when navi- gation of the seas was little known, Britain's experience was far more severe. In A.D. 272, people ate the barkof the trees. In 306, thousands in Scotland died. Four years later forty thousand perished 20 England. In 729, 823, and from 954 to 958, trany thousendls starved to death. In 1016 there was an aw- ful famine throughout Europe, In England in 1087, twenty -ono years after the conquest, there was terrible distress. From 1193 to 1195, famine and a pestilential fe- ver raged all over Britain and France. In 1251 there was an- other famine in England and Soot- la„nd. In 1315 the suffering sees so dreadful thuoughout the British Isles that the inhabitants devoured the flesh of horses, dogs, cats and vermin. In 1335, 1353, 143e and -1565 there were more terrible life - destroying famines, the people of- ten being reduced to feeding on roots, weeds and offal, In 1693 France suffered horribly, In 1748 starvation was general throughout Britain. In 1795, a hundred and twenty years ago, there was again an awful lack of food. This was the last famline that was general in England, but provisions during the wars with France went up to high prices; and distress was very preva- lent. Ireland 'was several times afflicted in the last oemtnry, Par- liament having to grant no smaller 1. , atm than ten million pounds (fifty mrlada .dollars) it 1847, to. relieve the distress, If Gs •many kegler waa'•1ydbl► her submarine bleckads, wbab MA , e-: ufrecl before wean .,0."ttt wgian. In that casts Canada would not addle be called upon for Heart of fort, but fbr great sabrif ee, bo se• cuire tiro best effeat of winch, know- ledge and un leist¢qleg aro tecea- sitice, It is knowledge and under- etanding o the situation and the requirements bhaat the Pabni,ntism end Production campaign is "de- signed to teaioourege. SPENDING DURING THE WAR DILE3EMis. or T11:oSE WHIO IIIVE MORE T11AI EN `I9longlltlessily. "hs it too much to Hope that, among other good things which may emerge from this dark orisia, there may come some awa'keaing on oily part ms,� h�he futility as><voll teethe danger of much of our exlpendi • t.ure 1" asks Mr. E, J. Urwiok, 14i,A., the writer of one of the most ascii] of the "Papers for ; War Times," pwdlis'hed in London, "It is not good for a station that a quieter of its income Should bo spenit in unstable ways," alio says. tIt is not good for a nation that a 'quarter of its working capacity should Ibe specializetl into prod!ue- ing things whack are seen and felt to be rather valueless as soon as a minis comes to apply a test of val- ues. Social Side 9f. Our Faith. "Rich people are not, of course, the only spenders who are at fault; �clor people have a few useless lux- uries, too; but it is the rdoh peo- ple, and not the poor, who are in- drvidually the most responsible for the misdirection of'lalbor, since itis they who, individually again, poi - :ems the greatest spending power,. and, therefore, also the freedom to choose how they will uee that power. "We are beginning to realize at last that upon the thoughtful exer- cise of this power depends +tale. real- ization of the tree social brother- hood. which we all acee�pt as the believe thee ows s �cTel actions, We one of another an•other ; this is the summing up of the somal side of our• faith.. But we have been very slow to per- ceive that this membership one of another applies to Its jetsam much in all pan• economic activities as in our ordinary family and neighbor re9ationshigs. Social Brotherhood. Not Bight For a Nation to Spend Quarter of Its Intone • • oa all "In de last century the outrage- oue idea got abroad that economic activities, or the business side of life, could somehow be treated, act- ually as well as ,theoretically, apart from ethics and religion. In the present century even economists admit that this was a deplorable fallacy. "In abnormal times the spending habits of the well-to-do tend to break down at once, and thereby to cause industrial failure and dis- tress. We all go on buying bread, but none .of us go on buying ball- dre,sses at a time like the present. That is why we are bound to call the spending habits of well-to-do people more un•Sta+ble or even more dangerous than those of the people who have .small inoomes. And our dangerous habits bring a nemesis upon us whenever a orisis arises; only, in this Gose, the, nemesis falls upon o:taler•s, in the shape of wide- spread unemployment and misery. It is, therefore, no exaggeration to say that the distress of 'the lux- ury traders, whidh is so painful and obvious a calamity at the present time, is due to our bad habits of spending at normal tames. Responsibility of the Rieh. "And they really have depended, and do depend, upon lis in Ibis lit- eral sense, that we have called upon thein to open shops and pee - gas trades in order to supply our wants, and to earn their living by doing that and that alone. They are, therefore, our workers, our dependants, as literally as are our domesltic servants; and that Ibhe moment we slap or alter our habit- ual spending, they are ruined. "Here, then, is our sesponsibid- ity laid bare. And our first duty emerges equally clearly. However mush we may feel impelled to sub- scribe to 'special funds for the re- lief of bile wounded or the Belgians, it is doubtful whether we have any right Ito gratify our impulse until we have mlade..sure that these our retainers, are provided for. "The markers or anakens of wealth are limited in nuaniber, and, with all their heed work, the amount of h ings which they can make or of atrvices which they can render in any year is severely lim- ited, even though it ally increase gradually as the years go on. And, in a land which is by no means flowing with milk and honey no in- dividual and no class can draw very largely on the, total stock pro- dueed without leaving a deficiency somewhere." •x, "Doesn'it it give you a terrible feeling when you run over a man?" they walked im, "Well, if bs'ie a large man, replied fllrtautomo- bilist, 'it does give one a pretty roualr jolt,," Canada Ll many times larger in epee than Belgium, but in popula- tion there is not a greet deal of difference, that is, considering Bel- gium before the war. Britain is the protector of small estates. The greater the area and variety of arse, the more protection is needed -vhen, emergency arises. He Coup Not Make One Step THEN 1101:1D'S KIDNEY PILLS CURED WAL'.Iiui j, RODERTS. Newfoundland Man Finds a Firm Cure After Sulicriilg Ten Months of 'Goiters—Doctors and Other ,Medicines Failed to help Iiinl. Lewisport,, Twidlingete District, Nfld., Mayall 8 (Special).—A thrill- ing story of a splendid euro by Dodd's Kidney Pills is told by Wal- ter J. Roberts, a well-known resi- dent of this place. "My trouble started from a cold after measles," Mr. Roberts states. "For nineteen months I was con- fined to the house, and for ten months I could' no make one step. "I tried many dieters' and medi- cines but govt no relief from them, The trouble was in my feet, legs and arms, and at times wets almost unbearable. I could not feed my- self for those ten months. "At last I tried Dadd's ,,b idney Pills, taking twenty-eight boxes in all, and am glad to say they made a firm cure of me." Mr. Roberts' troubles were caused by diseased kidneys. That is why Dodd's Kidney Pills cured him. Diseased Kidneys fail in their duty of straining the impurities out of the blood and the consequence is trouble all over the body, Dodd's Kidney Pills cure diseased Kidneys. NEWS. OF THE MIDDLE WEST BETWEEN ONTARIO AND BRI• TISH COLUMBIA. Items Froin Provinces Where Many Ontario Boys and Girls Are Living. Thomas Lauder chief of Edmon- ton Fire Brigade, has resigned. Winnipeg has finally decided not to hold an exhibition this year. holders. Manitoba has added 81 new school districts to its list in the past school year. Saskatoon Garment Manufaotur- ing Company has turned busy on a big order for shorts. Calgary teachers successfully protested against cuts in their sal- aries under war conditidbb, Deputy Chief of Police Bruton, of Edmonton, will succeed Chief Berry on the Regina force. The cost of lighting Calgary's streets is $113,000 a year, and it is held to be excessive. Six volunteers of German or Austrian birth were let out of the infantrymen stationed art :Saska- toon. An old settler of Alberta, Mrs. William E. McLeod, is dead at Oko- toks; she was born in Guelph, Ont. The municipal elections at Rus- sia, Sask., were such a fiasco that the former Council is to serve for this year. Alberta Rural Development League will campaign for home makers and advertise the province to agriculturists. Moose Jaw sanctioned the loan if $1,370 ea nineteen applicants for this special assistance to property - Saskatoon discovers that none of its unemployed are willing to go to farm work, so relief to single men is curtailed. Regina asks the Dominion Gov- ernment to deport some of the re- gular unenmployed using the poor shelters of the city. Alex. D. ' McLean, formerly of Aldborough, Ont., his son and daughter, were killed when an ex- press train crashed into his cutter at Bellevierw, Man. W. C. Bslohaaan, of rSaskatnhe- wan Highway Commission, is re- turning to Regina from Salislbury, crippled for life while playing foot- ball at the camp. Rheuuilatism Goes Quickly Its Virus Forever Destroyed EVERY CASE IS CURABLE. Good-bye to Rheumatism! Your aching Joints, your stiff, sore muscles, those sleepless nights and suffering days—good-bye forever— your day is gone. Sufferer, cheer up, and read the good news below. ' "A man met me n year ago, and said; 'don't stay crippled, quit eon- plaining, limber up: My answer was, 'I'm rheumatic, I can't do it' He looked me over in a pitying sort of way and told me to go to the nearest drug store for Nerviline and Perro- zone. Tho combination had cured him. 1 was convinced of his sincerity and followed his instructions. I rub. bed on Nervlllne three times every day—rubbed it right into my aching ;elate The bag nnieift" ,ncepna,d, and e Ibecause m re Unser aucfaetive, Tu draw the virus of the l diseafromro my blood 1 tools two errozone Tab- lets with every meal, I am wen to- day, not an aoho, not pain and no sign of stiffness at all.l' What NNervil ne can do in a ease like this it can do for you too, For nearly forty years Nervilino has been recommended for Rheumatism, Lum- bago and Behnke and 'Lama Back, It Is the one remedy that never die appellate. When a Woman Suffers With Chronic Backache There Is Trouble Ahead, Constantly on their feet, attending to the wants of a large and 'exacting family, women often break down with nervous exhaustion, in the stores, factories, and on a farm are weal£, ailin r women, dragged down with torturlag backache and bearing down pains. Such suffering isn't natural, but it's dangerous, because due to diseased kidneys, The dizziness, insomnia, deranged menses and other symptoms of kidney complaint can't euro themselves, they require the assistance of Dr, Retail. tons Pills which go direct to the seat of the trouble, To give vitality and power to the kidneys, to lend aid to the bladder and liver, to free the blood of poisons, probably there is no remedy so sue- cesstul as Dr. Hamilton's Pills. Por all womanly irregularities their merit Is well known, - Because of their mild, soothing and healing effect, Dr, Hamilton's Pills are safe, and are recommended for girls and women of all ages. 25 cents per, box at all dealers: Recuse any sub- etitute for Dr. Hamilton's Pins of Man- drake and Butternut. WHAT SOLDIERS WEAR NOW. British Soldiers Look Like Robin - Bon Cr'usoeb. War has sbruek a blow at both military smartness and military plc turesqueness. "These two features, which distinguished European wars nowof the past, are now yielding to the practical. The British "Tommy" in the trenches, wearing goatskin coats, rubber boots and knitted pap pulled down over the head, looks. more like a Robinson Crime than a soldier. Prrench Zouaves still wear baggy trouser, Moorish jackets and fez, but .the cloth is colored a green- ish yellow hike the British khaki. Belgians -have changed their regula- tion foolish little pap for a good warm cap, which looks as if made for a chauffeur. Among the changes undergone in the British field: uniform is a Sam Brownbeltmade of webbing instead of. the more oonepicuoue leather. The belt, designed a couple of gen- erations ago by a Britisdr officer in India, supports sword, pistol and canteere and is suspended by a strap crossing the shoulder. It has lately become the rage among Bel- gian officers. In view of the short range in trench fighting, the Bri- tish officer has-been forced to do away wibh the minor elegance of a khaki flannel collar and khaki col- ored necktie. His full -skirted overcoat early gave place to a short coat of the model of the seaman's pea -jacket, which is found warmer than the old model, besides being free from the annoyance of skirts. The men of de' ranks have of their own accord cut off their overcoat tail because of their dragging in the mud. France is re -uniforming its troops in the new tri -color cloth, a combi- nation of the 'three colors of the national flag and a bluish color. It is used for the eharaateristic great- coats of the men and for officers' jackets. Corns Instant DropRelief ® 9 ® , Paint Putnam's 50 - Corn Extractor to- night, and corns feel better in the morn- ing. Magical t h e way "Putnam's" eases the pain, destroys the ;roots, kills a corn for all time. No pain. Cure guaranteed. Get a 25c. bottle of "Putnam's" Extractor to -day. Neck and Nut. Mrs, Youngbride—I want to get a hat for my husband. It's a sur- prise for him. 'Oler-k—What size, madam?" Mrs. Y.—Really I forgot to find. out. But he wears a 15 ooiiar, so I suppose he'd want 20 or 22 in a hat, wouldn't he l" MInard's Liniment Cures Burns, Eta. For the Cat. He is the most tenderhearted man I ever sew." "Kind be ani- mals 1" "I should say ea. Why, when he. found the family oat insist- ed on sleeping in the coal -bin, lie immediately ordered a ton of soft opal." YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL YOU Try Murine leyeRemedy for Red Weak, Watery Ryas and Granulated 'eyelids; foo Smarting-. Met Eye Comfort Write for Book of the Rye Met mail Free. Murine Rye Remedy 0o., Chicago. Met Her Match. A party of tourists were going through a small town, having the time of their lives, laughing aed joking. One of them thought she would have some fun, toad called a littrle girl standing near. "Are there any shows in town " To which the little girl answered, ' Gin ly the one you, people are mak- A nue ber of Irish soldiers were burying German dead, Soddenly out of bile trend *sane a voice. "I woes not deed 1" The soldiers stop- ped shovelling and looked to the sergesunt for instruction's. "Go ahead," said the sergeant. "Yez can't believe a Word those bloomin' Gernetes say " Minced's Liniment curse Dandruff. Out FOOLED GERMAN CENSOR. Wedsllnliui t Prisoner of War, Sent News Easily. Itis a great advantage to passes5 a knowledge of W.eleh, if you hap- pen to be a prisoner of war, Welsh prisoners of war in Germany are able to notify their friends at home more fully of the oonditione of pri- son and Internsiuent camp life than are their Engli.Ell colleagues, and that without having recourse to the doubtful safeguard: of invisible ialk. A letter which paeeed the Gorman sensor, and will long be kept as a Lennlowinyg treasure, contains the fol - "You will be glad to 'hear news of old friends. Mr. Bwyd (food) is very bad here, Mr. Bortz (bread) is very much darker than when you saw hide, and is quite hard. I ne- ver see Mr. Cig (meat), and Mr. Ymenye (butter), but seldom., he was very bad•, indeed, the last few times I met hien, I used at first to meet Mr, Llaeth (milk) every day, but he has not been here now for seine time. lake words given in brackets are the Englishequivelsnts of the Weisz word immediately preceding. The letter was written. in Englds+h, throughout, .excepting the 1Velsh words, whicth the German oemsoa took to be names of other English prisoners, BABY'S OWN TABLETS A GREAT BLESSING Mrs. Jae. E, Mailman, Gegoggin, LS., writes: "I -gave Baby's Own Tablets to my baby boy for eon stripation and teething troubles and have fermi them a great blessing. I think the Tablets should be in every home where there are young ohildren." The Tablets are an ab- solutely safe remedy for little ones, being backed by the guarantee of a Government analyst to be free from opiates and narcotics. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. e•— Jones' Inventory. "I see that Jones•has failed, Has he any assets " "Nothing of any value; the in- ventory which he filed with his peti- tion in bankruptcy shows that he had 230 wedding presents. Mlnard's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia. Ke Was. "Jane, what time is it?" called .down the irate father. "I don't know. The clock isn't going" "But I am." spoke up the young man, who could take a hint. LOW FARES 'ro THE CALIFORNIA EXPOSITIONS. Via Chicago & North Western Ry. Pour splendid daily' trains from the New Passenger Terminal, Chicago to San Francisco. Los Angelos and San Diego. Wide ohoioe of scenic and direct routes. Double traok. Automatic electric safety signals all the way. Let, us plan your trip and furnish fold• ere and full particulars. B. H. Bennett, Gen, Agt., 46 Yong° St., Toronto, Ont. Pat Again. Three men were brought up in a factory for coming late. Master— "Excuse, Sandy 1" "I had to mind the baby." 'Yours, Henry 1" "Had a cold, sir." "Now, Pat, yours?" "Sure, yer honor, some- one took the doorstep away and we couldn't get out." We hate Leen using MINARD'S LINI- MENT in our home for a number of years and no other Liniment but MINARD•S, and we own recommend it highly for sprains, pains ot ale alma, soreness of the throat. head- ache or anything of that cont. We will not be without it ono single day, for we got IL new bottle before thhe other is all used. I pan recommend it highly to any. 010. 301iN WAKEFIELD. SaHaTe Island's. Lunenburg Co„ N.S. Reform Promised. Husband I don't approve if your owing these little bills here, there and everywhere. Wife—Very well, dear; I'll make them bigger. samara's Liniment for sale everywhere. A Warm Reception: First Burglar—Hullo, Bull. Why a, ayou'd beet oy+clonei oe aIamet ny u What's wrong 1 Sewall Burgibar — I got into a house where the woman was wait- ing for her husband, and she mis- took me for •him, Noticing one of hes small , boys nibbling at some luncheon in school one day, the tealdher milled the eul- �ippda'nt to the dewy. "You know," she bii,egan sternly, ":that you meet not eat ditty ni$. lesson Nouns I New, as punashn enl you mus�t'stand here in front of t e ekes tied eat every i as �j al and le." 'iltis sm 1 Illb d bit of ue was atoldl a curious grin over - spreading this lame,. The teacher aufaunderstood that grin until the lest scrap had disappeared, when, from 'time ems, a small voioe wailed in tearful accents; : "Plea+se, teach- er, that wasn't his lunch he twos satin' ; it was mine." Delicately flavoured— Highly colleen• trated. O[JPS WHY WORRY 1 Choose your variety and ask your grocer for "Clark's". FARMS FOR SALE, N. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street. Toronto, TI YOU WANT TO BAIT 011 SSW, - A 1 Frait, Stook, Grain or Dairy Parra, trite II, W. Dawson, Bramptop. or 90 borne St.. Termite, N. W. DAWSON, cotborne St, Toronto. NURSERY STOCK, TRAWBF.RRIES, RASPBERRIIaS, PO. 1,7 T %TOES, Catalogue free. MoOonneli & Son. Port Burwell, 0nt, MISCELLANEOUS, In ANGER. TUMORS. - LUMPS, nT0- V Internal and asternal, cared with. out pain by our home treatment. Write se before too lata. Dr. Heilman llodlost Co.. limited. Collins -wood. Oat ATENTS OF INVENTIONS P1080N, PIGEON a DAVIS yta 9Write es ter letermat on • Montreal "RESTFUL ISLES OF SUMMER LOVELINESS." Offering all outdoor aporia, social aotivitloe and a climate and sooner), unequaled in tl,o 'tropics. S.S. 'SERatODIAN," fastest, most luxurious and only Steamship Iand- Ing passengers without tranafer. Salle from Neu- Tori: every Wednes- day, 11 a.m. Pare $25.00 for Round 11.111, including berth and meals. WEST INDIES Delightful i0 -dry Cruises to tl:e Antilles; sailings from N.T. Mar. and. 1411,, 26th, 2.00 p.m. Apply for t:rl;ets and 111s, booklet. Canada Steamship Lines. limited, 46 Tong.) St., Toronto, or any Ticket • Agent. HAWK BICYCLES An up-to-date nigh Grade BlcyclefitLe i 6tbR0le •Chain Neu, Departure Coas.'e 1lrake and Nubs, Detachable Thy; high grade equfpmen t, inelnd- 1m Mudguards, 22.50P$ fo `FREE 1915 Catalogue, 70 pages of Riercies, Seudri,e, nerd Repair Nateial. You an buy your supplies from us at Wholesale P:aees. T. W. BOYD & SON, 27 Notre Dame St. WVesi, Mantreal. E NGINEI FOR SALE Hew Wheelock is k 42 Automatic Valve Complete operating condition, flywheel, fraise, belt, cylinders and all parts. Can be shown running at present time. Will sell at less than half cost price, S. FRANK WiLSON 41 SONS ' 73 Adelaide S4, West, Toronto • liksaimatemnimannsannsermeso Murphy, the foreman, was sent to the railroad office to report a slight accident in the gang repair- ing the track. He was :handed a blank and got along all right itntil he came to the space headed "Re- marks." After staring at it a while he beckoned to the clerk„ "What's the hatter, Pat1" asked that offieial. "Well, ser," said Murpuly, "ye see it was Bill's big toe he hit avid th' hammer and it wouldn't auk well for me t' write down th' remarks Bill made." REMEMBER! The ointment you 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! Zan Bek is purelyherbel. No pois- onous coloring. Use it always. 50e. Box al all Druggists and Storer. ED. u. SSUE11-115,'