HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1915-9-30, Page 7a
3
ACROSS THE BORDER
WHAT IS GOING ON OVER IN
THE STATES.
Latest happenings'. in :Bis; Republic,
Condensed for Busy
Readers.
Michigan physicians will centre ef-
forts on the eradieation of cancer..
Michigan state gamy warden secur-
ed 128 convictions during August.
Off Coney Island the second shark
has been captured within forty-eight
hours. •
Mrs.- Mary Sage, of Glen Falls,
1 Y., aged 107, hopes to, liveto cast
her vote,
Four pandits robbed a man in a
hallway on Brooklyn's busiest corner
in daylight,
J.• H. Hyde,', of Tacoma, Wash.,
claims to have invented' brakes for
ocean liners.
Detroit will only employ American
citizens in future; those not natural-
ized must get out.
Mrs. Newton Grubb, of Wilming-
ton, Pa was badly hurt when a can
of tomatoes burst.
Buffalo advertised for ' a , Polish
nurse for the schools at $720 a year
, • and got no applications:.
Ldiersl-
eot?
Fro
oL' o 'en
PJC KCET SELF -FUER
.fflr her, omeieta°ers
The Pen for h always reedy to'write"on ony kind of paper;
Active Service, •onywltcre. Will last for yeeraafter the warieover,
Regular, Safely and Self -Filling Types, $1.50 and up
Sold at the Beet Local Stores'
L. E. vn'-•. ..^ *et an Company, Limited, Moatreat
Erin's- .Isle
r�n'a--Gree
NEWS BY .MAIL FROM IRELAND'S
GREEN SHORES.
Happenings- in the Emerald Isle of
Interest to All True Irish-
men.
Chicago chemists are Steps have been taken with the
g puzzled at .idea of organizing Ireland as a muni -
the substance in German shells sent tion producing area,
them front the battle front. At a meeting of the North' Kildare
Cyrus Page, pioneer of Little Falls, Farming Society, it was decided to
Minn., left $20,000 of his estate for hold the annual show on September
a town clock ihthe courthouse.i 29th.. 4
' By 'some freak of nature, Joseph . Tile Ulster Unionist Council has
Struble, of Boonton, N.J., has ripe) passed a resolution protesting against
strawberries on a cucumber vine.
Somebody exclusion from the Registra-
Somebody put a skink in the grand tion Bill. .
piano just before a dance at the F ee-A man named Martin Kelly, of
From-Kare-Klub, of Winsted, Conn. I Sawn, employed at D'Arcy's Brewery,
When Louis'Barsley, of, Roselawn, met his death by falling into one of
Pa., hit a stubborn bull it gored him the large vats. -
and took twelve men to rescue him. Sergeant Alber,t Charley, 42nd Bri-
The year-old son of. Herbert Wyatt,l gade, R.F.A., is the latest of the
of Salina, Kan., fell into a jar holding. Athlone soldiers to secure the Die-
n inches of water and drowned.
Jas. Reynoldswas freed for hit-
ting 'a New 'York policeman who in-
vaded his home -without a warrant.
tinguished Conduct Medal.
The death occurred at Dublin of
the Rev. Frank Sadleir, M.A., former -
John Guettinger's will left his gun ly rector of Newcastle Lyons, Hayle
and uniform to the Garman Club at hatch, at the age of seventy-four.
The number of old agee pensions
Cleveland"for parades and funerals.„ payable in Ireland in the last Friday
The son of Mrs. Eliz. Martin, in March, 1914, was 202,202 and on
murdered by a negro at Mui`phybow,'
I11., asks to be the hangman on Oct.
10th.
Kansas State liquor receipts show-
ed 190,000 barrels lessbeer drunk in
July and August than in 1914.
A. wild cat sprang on to the dinner
table of Mrs. Maria Baker at Lone
Bill Beach, L.I., and scattered the
guests.
Kosice Jordan, Roumanian inventor,
will lose his sight from a phosphorus
explosion in his New York laboratory.
Wm. Merrill, postmaster of West
Newbury, Mass., has resigned because
the Government is neutral in the war.
Two special carloads of insane pa-
tients were taken from Morristown,
Pa., State Hospital to Wilkesbarre in-
stitution.
Frank J, Moore and Sarah F. Kil-
Toy;.'just Married at South Norwalk,
Conn., waited 50 years to see if their
love was real.
When Theo Sullivan's bar caught
the last Friday of March, 1915, 198,-
938.
Reinforcements for Belfast ship-
yards and munition factories will ar-
rive in a few weeks from United
States, South Africa, Canada and the
Antipodes.
At the opening of the Mayo As-
sizes Mr. Justice Boyd deplored the
state of recruiting. He said out of a
population of 48,522 in the county,
only 438 volunteered.
Second -Lieutenant R. L. Hender-
son of Belfast, attached to the 4th
Battalion Royal Irish' Rifles, has
been invalided home following an at-
tack of enteric fever.
The O'Mahony D. L., Grange, Con.,
County Wicklow, has presented an
Irish wolfhound to Lieutenant-Colonel
Sir A. A. Weldon, Bart., D.S.O., as a
mascot of the 4th Battalion.
A double murder is reported from.
Collon, County Kildare, of Lawrence
Fern
T much more welcome visitor on the
faint than the agent of get -rich -quick
concerns and mining promoters, and
there is a morel to that if I only had
time to work it out. Because peaches
were saved for such extra special oc-
casions a tradition has grown up
about them in many parts of the
icoentry. Some housewives, otherwise
!very bright and a credit to the far-
' mers' institutes to which they belong,
consider' it en extravagance to pre-
serve peaches unless they get them etI
sacrifice prices. Yet these same wo-
men will pay frees ton to fifteen cents
a quart for currents and berries that
need far more sugar to do them up
than the already sweet peaches. As
peaches usually come in eleven -quart
baskets, you will find if you divide the
price by eleven, that peaches cost less !
per quart than any other fruit. But
because they were once so great a
luxury housewives are slow to realize
that they should have more of them
than of any kind of fruit, for they are
both the cheapest and the best. There
is no reason why every farmer's wife
in the districts where peaches cannot
be grown should not buy them as free-
ly as they do other fruits and have
them not only when the preacher
comes to dinner, but when the boys
and girls come home Irons, the city,
and at all other times when they want
to have something luxurious on the
table.
Also it- should be remembered that
for eating from the hand the peach is.
the best fruit of all, . but you should
use for this purpose only the peaches
that you buy in the full light of day.,
Once upon a. time, or, perhaps I should
say, "Once upon another time,” a
newly arrived Irishman went out with
a friend to steal peaches. It was very
dark, and Pat had been told to grope
along the branches for the fruit.
Presently he whispered, "MoikeI" his
friend answered "Phwaitil" "Has
paiches got legs?" "Naw." "Then,,
begobs, I've . swallowed a straddle
bug."
NOTHING TO EQUAL
the
Middle West
BETWEEN ONTARIO AND BRI.
TISH COLUMBIA.
Items From Provinees Where Many
Ontario Boys and Girls Are
Living.
The G.T.P.. are drilling a well for
oil south of Lethbridge, Alta,
Saskatoon had a surplus on its
annual -exhibition amounting to 0,-
200.
Girl cadets are now frequently seen
in uniform on the streets of Saska-
toon.
Saskatchewan now has a Retail
Merchants' Mutual Fire Insurance
Company.
The Winnipeg telephone . directory
shows 2,467 less connections than a
year ago.
Elbow, Sask., ,ratepayers voted
down a by-law to provide better lire
protection.
The gross income from Edmonton
Exhibition was $60,681, and the sur -
phis $5,497.
Robert Shaw shot a prairie wolf
that was robbing his hen coops at St.
Vital, Winnipeg.
The Bank of Montreal has warned
Regina of the need of greater
economy by the city.
The city of Winnipeg roll of honor
now shows 250 civic employes in the
Canadian contingents.
Calgary municipal voters' list this
year contains 41,537 names, an in-
crease of 10 per cent.
Harry Cooper, grocery clerk, Ed-
monton, died as the result of a fall
down a freight hoist shaft.
As Dr. Woodland slept at Medicine
Hat a burglar in his home took $30
from his trousers' pocket.
Crab apples grown in Winnipeg
are the rare exhibits now at the Min-
ister of Agriculture's office.
Melfort, Sask., shipped out 34 car-
loads of Carrot River Valley beef in
one Week, valued at $42,000.
Rudolph Walters, Austrian, " serv-
ing 12 months in the new provincial
jail at Regina, has escaped.
Swift Current's land tax sale . on
October 1st Will consist of 4,890 par-
cels of laud now in arrears.
Hayden, an did age pensioner, and Saskatchewan is holding a deep
fire at New Brunswick, N.J., 100 enquiry into school reform and edu-
farmers responded to the alarm in his sister, Mary Ann Hayden, being eational work in the province.
their' own autos. found in their house beaten to death. The New: Telegram of Calgary
A slight blister on the leg of H. While sakimming the tops of pans of claims it has 27 employes in the
E. Duffenbach, Bloomsburg, Pa., cans boiling glue in a Dublin factory, ranks of the Canadian Militia.
ed an abscess, amputation of the leg
and then death.
License fees of motorists and chaf-
feurs amount now to $1,780,000 in,
New York State; an increase of $320,-
000
320;000 over 1914.
At the district court for Wyandotte
county, Kansas, women will sit on tl
e,,,,scrhsls.
Simon Toole, aged 19, fellainto one
of the pans and was. so terribly scald-
ed that he died soon afterwards.
Peter McAra, senior veteran of the
Indian' Mutiny, who went to Regina
32 years ago, is dead, aged 75.
A largely -attended meeting;, pre- Thewife, under new acts, has to
sided over by Sir John )twin, J.P.,, sign agreements and mortgages
was held at Tallaght, for the purpose on homesteads in the west.
of explaining to the young men of the Alberta is alarmed over the ap-
district their duty in the present pearance of the sow thistle in the
province—the curse of • Manitoba
farms.
High lopes for war :munition or-
ders are roused in Calgary. Thecity
thinks the C.P.R. shops will be used
as a plant.
THE PREACHER'S FRUIT.
Peaches Cost Less Per Quart Than
Any Other Fruit.
Once upon ,a time—you see I know
how tobegin a story in the right way
—a barefoot boy danced by the road-
side and shouted gleefully, writes Pe-
ter McArthur. It was in Canada, back
in the nineteenth century, in the pio-
neer days. The little boy was healthy
and freckled, and what he lacked in
clothes he made up in the kind of
body one should have inside of clothes.
And he was very, very happy. In
fact the was so happy that a passing
friend stopped to ask him the cause
of it all.
"Hurray!" . shouted he of the
freckles.
"Why so happy?" asked the friend.
"The preacher is coming to din-
ner I"
in-nerl"
"I didn't know you were so fond of
him."
"1 aint, but whenever the preacher
comes to dinner we always have
peach preserves."
It really is not much of a story,
and I am giving it on account of its
arch -e -o -log -i -cal interest, and not be-
cause it Is, so very funny. It dates
back to the days when people merely
knew that peaches aro thebest of
fruits and had hot discovered that
he
latthe place t o raise t
Canada best
very best of them, The woman who
Was fortunate enough' to get some
from a sheltered orchard of from a
lone tree that was so fortunately
situated that it escaped the frost, put
hip a few to have fo}'such special
occasions as the visit of the preacher.
In those days the minister was a
jury this; month; there are some mur-
der cases down.
•'Because she had large feet and
smoked cigarettes a young woman of
Sparrow, Okla., was arrested as a
man in Kansas City.
Mrs. Helena Geberg refused to be
rescued from her burning home at
Philadelphia until the firemen saved
$1,000 in her handbag.
The former commissioner, treasur-
er and recorder of the City of Nash-
ville, Tenn., are under arrest for lar-
ceny;of municipal funds.
Mrs. %Emma Schute, of Somerville,
0.; was found wandering in New
York with $8,000 hidden in her cloth-
` ing as well as fat bank books.
NOVEL PARING MACHINE.
FRESH AT 'NIGHT
If One Uses the Right Kind of Food.
If by proper selection of food one
can feel strong and freshat the end
of a day's work, it is worth while to
know the kind of food that will pro-
duce this result:
A school teacher in the West says
in this connection:
"At the time I commenced the use
of Grape -Nuts my health was, so poor
that I thought I would have to give
up my work altogether. I was rapid-
ly losing -in weight; had little appetite,
was nervous and sleepless, and exper-
ienced almost constantly a feeling of
exhaustion. '
"I tried various remedies without
good results; then I determined to
Only the "Eyes" of Potatoes' Have to give particular attention to my food,
Be; Removed by Hand. and have learned something of the
"A machine fmproperties of Grape -Nuts for rebuild-
ing, body, brain and nerves.
which :doesthe work better than it ''Since using Grape -Nuts I, have
can be done by hand and in much less made a constant and rapid improve-
• time, has been recently invented," ment in health, in spite of the fact
says'the World's Work.. "A peck of that all this time I have been en-
gaged in strenuous and exacting
work.
I have gained twelve pounds in
weight and have a good appetite, my
nerves are steady and I sleep sound.
water is discharged and in which the I have such strength end reserve force
vegetables to be peeled are placed, is that I feel almost as strong' and fresh
revolved by a small motor. ' The cen- at the close of a day's work as et the
trifdgal 'movement causes each vege- beginning.
table tostrike against the abrasive "Before, using Grape -Nuts I was
lining, The water softens the skins troubled much with weak eyes, but as
of .the.vegetables, and contact with my vitality increased the eyes became'
the rough
surfacequickly scrapes he droner.
ner.
skin afT. The vater, passing through "I never heard
of
another food as
the machine, carries off all the dirt nutritious and economical as Grape -
and refuse, leaving the vegetable Nuts."
smooth and clean. 'There's a Reason.'
,
"The only hand work required is in Name given by Canadian Post=
the removal of the °eyes in potatoes Co., Windsor, Ont.
or the cleaning of indentations,too Ever rend the; above letter 2 a new
deep!to he •i'eachdd by the'bt'echaiciil -ono anpeara front tanto to time, • '1'lioy
are genuine, true, and hill of hunt=
process."' - intro:oat.
vegetable can be pared by this ma-
chine in one minute,
"The machine' =islets of a bowl
with all abrasive lining. This bowl,
into the centre of which a stream of
BABY'S OWN TABLETS
There is nothing to equal Baby's
Own Tablets for little ones. They are
absolutely safe and are guaranteed
free from opiates and never fail in
giving relief from the minor ills of
babyhood and childhood. Concerning
them Mrs. Albert Bergeron, St. Aga -
pit, Que., writes: "My baby was suf-
fering from constipation and teething
troubles and Baby's Own Tablets
quickly cured him. Now I always
keep them in the house." The Tablets
are sold by medicine dealers or by
mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr.
Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
,
BET $5,000 TO A CARROT.
King Edwar d Won, and He Gave
Late Steel Man Costly Trinket.
Henry Steel, head of the great Eng-
lish steel firm of Steel, Peech and To-
zer, who has just died at his home in
Sheffield, was perhaps best known
outside trade circles as the man who
laid King Edward, then Prince of
Wales, $5,000 to a carrot against a
horse at the Epsom races. The Prince
lost and paid with a carrot formed'of
coral mounted in gold.
Steel and his partner, Peech, form-
ed•the greatest firm of bookmakers on
the English turf 50 years ago. The
fortune which they made on the race-
track enabled them to enter the iron
and steel industry as pioneers in 1875.
Steel died at the age of 83.
Tea on the Battlefield.
Tea suddenly becomes, one of the
items of war material, and the price
has gone up in the primary market
about thirty per cent., with prospects
of a real shortage and still further
advances in price. When warring
armies start buying tea for rations
on the field with its attendant great
waste, and the entire Russian people
are suddenly deprivedof vodka and
turned to tea, then it can scarcely
be surprising that such a fluctuation
should occur in the price of tea.
Messrs. Henderson & Co.'s latest
monthly circular issued from Ceylon
and just to hand states: "A feature
of the market was the record prices
paid for flavory teas... The oldest
members of the tea trade in Ceylon
could not remember such high prices
being realized before."
WONDERFUL RUINS.
Famous Citadel of the Black King,
Christian.
On the summit of a Haitian mount-
ain over four thousand feet high
stand the wonderful ruins of the great
citadel of La Ferriere. It was built
by the, black king, Christian. Some
of the walls are eight feet high, six-
teen feet thick and heavy batteries
of fifty-six and thirty-two pound guns
are in position. They were laid to
guard every approach of what was
intended to be the last asylum of
Haitian independence.
Springs of water still exist in the
'interior and there were secret subter-
ranean passages and chambers for
holding hoarded treasures, many of
'which are supposed still to be (hidden
there.Although partially destroyed
by the earthquake in 1842, which de..
nholished nearly all of the important
buildings in the country, the colossal
ruins of the citadel still attest the
gigantic works and the world still
wonders how the material for the con-
etrnetion and armahnent was raised to
Appendicitis Prevented
Life Lengthened
Health Maintained
Doctors say if people kept their
bowels in proper order there would he
no such disease on record as'appendi-
eitis, It is due solely to neglect, and
is therefore preventable. If you have
constipation, bad breath or headache
you need medicine right away. The
moment you suspect your bowels are
clogged you should take Dr. Hamil-
ton's Pills, the smoothest regulator of
them all. They move the bowels and
cleanse the ,liver so smoothly You
scarcely notice the, effect. But you
get the action just the same. Taken
at night you wake up next morning,
clear heeded, hungry, rested, ener-
getic, feeling like a different man.
Why don't you spend a'quarter to -day
and try Dr. Hamilton's Pills. They
work so easy, just as nature would
order, never gripe or cause headache,
Finest thing for folks that are out
of sorts, depressed, lacking in color
and spirits. Folks that use Dr: Hamil-
ton's Pills are never sick, never have
an ache or a pain,—feel good all the
time simply because the system is
clean, regulated and healthy. This
you can easily prove yourself.
TRUE PATRIOTISM.
The excellent patriotic work of the
File Indians at Balearros, Sasle con-
tinues, and the Canadian Pacific
through Mr. W. 1?:, Baker, the Secre-
tary of the Company, has received
another encouraging report. It was
in October last year that thirty-three
of these colonists subscribed $502.10
to the Patriotic Fund, each farmer
giving a certain number of bushels of
grain, which when sold amounted to
the above sum, During the winter
that followed, the now famous File
Indian Brass Band, gave concerts,
thereby raising another $212.00, which
went to the Belgian Relief Fund, and
since March last, the Red Cross
Branch of this Colony has raised
$600.00 and endowed a bed in Clive -
den Hospital. The young Indian wo-
men have done a great deal of knit-
ting and sewing. The branch has a
membership of 86, while there are
only 'one hundred and sixty souls—
thirty-eight men, twenty-six women
and ninety-six children—in the colony.
The patriotism of these Indians does
not stop here. Two young men went
to the front with the second contin-
gent, and six more are going with the
next. The File Indians lay claim to
having the oldest Red Cross Society
Member in the British Empire in the
person of Pointed Cap. This, cele-
brated character says that he is the
ripe old age of 107, and on November
12th next will attain his 108th year.
He is now an "associate member" of
the Red Cross, and proudly wears on
his heart the little red cross, the em-
blem of the society. It is quite pos-
sible that in addition to the six latest
recruits for the front, older members
of the colony will go, as one man who
is the father of nine children has ex-
pressed his intention of so doing, and
his wife says "I will not stop him."
Despite the fact that a hailstorm last
month destroyed all the crops in the
colony, the File Indians are not down-
hearted, and have made arrangements
to continue their good work during
the coming winter months to aid the
boys across the sea, thus showing a
patriotism worthy of a king.
.3—
Milkmaids in London.
Milkmen in the suburbs are gradu-
ally being replaced by millcmaids, and
one is sure the milkmaids will not
stand the week's task of the male
"pram round," which is a seven day's
journey. They will not emit the morn-
ing howl of the milkman, but some-
thing sweeter and fresher. But one
would like to be sure that her milk-
maid's dress is as appropriate as that
of the short -skirted milkmaids we can
even now remember, with the yokes on
their necks and the pails port and
starboard!
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
The Main Difficulty.
The manager of a factory recently
engaged a new man and gave instruc-
tions to the foreman to instruct him
in his duties. A few days afterward
the manager inquired whether the
new man . was progressing with his
work.
The foreman who had not agreed
very well with the man in question,
exclaimed angrily:
" Progresssingl There's been a lot
of progress. I taught lhim everything.
I know and he is still an ignorant
fool!"
It is easier "to get into society",
than to keep from being talked about
afterwards.
Out of every 1,000 births, eleven
are twins.
the top of the mountain; i Ell 6.
ISSUE 39—'15.
THE GRANDEES QV SPAIN,
When They All Wore Their Hats in
the Presence of the Ring.
A grandee of Spain enjoys the pri-
vilege; granted him many hundreds of
years ago, of remaining "covered" in
the presence of his sovereign; This
eustom slates from the period when,
according to the theory then held, the
king was "the first among equals."
Tho ancient formula always at the
coronation of icings of old Spain was:
"We, your equals, choose you to
reign over us." And the king as-
eented in this declaration of his no-
bles,
There was a time when all gran-
dees of Spain wore their hats in the
presence of the king, but in time the
idea of caste began to prevail, even
among the grandees, with the result
that tbey were eventually divided into
three classes, and these classes were
distinguished by the hat etiquette.
The first class entered the royal
presence covered, and, after an ad-
vance of a few steps, put on their
hats, unbidden by the king ,and the
third class also entered uncovered but
did not "cover" until requested to do
so by the Icing. Then, according to
the etiquette, "all were equal."
There have been grandees who were
not Spaniards,—notably the Duke of
Wellington, upon whom 'the Cortes
conferred the honor in recognition of
his services to the state.
ss
Corns Applied In
6 Seconds
Sore, blistering feet
Cured from cenerin,ched
foie can be cared
by Putnam's Ex-
tractor to 24 ho'tnii,
"Putnam's" soothes
away that drawing pain, eases Instant -
makes the feet feel good at once.
Get a 250. bottle of "Putnam's tosday.
Worse Than Killed.
In Glasgow, as elsewhere, a num-
ber of good ladies are engaged in
visiting the forlorn matrons whose
husbands have gone to the front. One
of these ladies the other day found
the object of her solicitude dissolved
in tears.
"Why, Mrs. Macpherson," she said,
"whatever is the matter? Is your
good man wounded?"
"Waur, waur," sobbed the poor
wife.
"Worsel" said the visitor gently. "1
hope he is not killed."
"Waur than that," replied the suf-
ferer.
"Worse than that? Why, what
could be worse than that?"
With a wild burst of tears the af-
flicted one explained, "He's hams!"
His Status.
"Is your wife going to give many
parties next winter?"
"I don't know," replied Mr. Cum-
rox. "I never ask any questions about
her social affairs. Pm lucky to be in-
vited."
715inard'a Liniment Believes Neuralgia.
Unjust Discrimination.
"Oh, no!" soliloquized Johnny bit-
terly, "there ain't any favorites in
this family. Oh, no! If I bite my
finger nails I get a rap over the
knuckles, but if the baby eats his
whole foot they think it's cute."
This is to certify that I have used
MINARD'S LINIMENT in my fam-
ily for years, and consider it the best
liniment on the market. I have found
it excellent for horse flesh.
(Signed)
W. S. PINEO.
"Woodlands," Middleton, N. S.
Cautious.
He—"Why do you refuse Ethers
hand to Mr. Nocoyne? Don't you
want your daughter married off ?"
He—"Yes; what I am trying to
avoid is having a son-in-law married
on."
Minard's Liniment Cures' Ennis, Ate.
To remove tight rings from fingers,
pass the end of a piece of fine twine
underneath the ring and wind it even-
ly around the finger upward as far as
the middle joint. Then take hold of
the lower end of the string beneath
the ring, and begin slowly to unwind
upward, when the ring will gradually
move along the twine toward the tip
of the finger and some off.
GILLETT'S
EATS DIRT .,
twSILLEoTT'COMPANY Mho!nip
V '✓WNI,CG T FtONTo own
Especially Fat People.
"The higher up people get, the less
they are inclined to envy their fel-
lows,"
"I don't think that applies to upper
berths in Pullmans."
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff:''
All Things Come.
"I don't know why we carie in
here," said Mrs. Bored, as she settled
herself down in a restaurant. "I'm
not a bit hungry."
"That's all right," said . her hug.
band. "Just you sit here and wait."
"Wait! But why? I'm not hungry,
as I said before."
"Never mind, dear. You will be by
the time the waiter brings our food."
The teeth of the badger are very
peculiar, for, instead of resting on
each other when the animal's mouth
is closed, they fit into each other.
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! Zam-
Buk is purely herbal. No pois-
onous coloring. Use it always.
50c. Box at All Druggists and Stoma
EBB,MS FOB SALE.
'g F LOOKING P0.1 A FABSI. CONSUL'S
A. me. I have over Two Hundred on my
@'.et, located in the beet sections• o! On.
tame. All eizea. FI. W Dawson. Brampton,
NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE.
AROFIT-NIANING NEWS AND JOB
Offices for sale In good Ontario
towns. The most useful and interesting
of all businesses. Full information on
application to Wilson Publishing Com-
pany, 78 West Adelaide St., Toronto.
MISCELLANEOUS.
CANCER, TUMORS, Lumps, ETC.
internal and external, cured with-
out pain by our home treatment. Write
us before too late. Dr. Rehman Medical
Co.. Limited, Collingwood, Ont.
ONTA.RI0'S BEST BUSINESS SCHOOL.
Yonge and Chanes Ste., TOaSONTO.
Wo place many graduates in potations.
Write to -day for College Calendar.
W'. S. Elliott, Principal, 734 Yonge Street,
TORONTO.
Reduces Bursal Enlargements,
Thickened, Swollen Tissues,
Curbs, Filled Tendons, Sore,
nese from Bruises or Strains;
stops Spavin Lameness, allays pain.
Does not blister, remove the hair or
lay up the horse. $2.00 a bottle
at druggists or delivered. Book 1 M free.
ABSORBINE, JR., for mankind—an
antiseptic liniment for bruises, cuts, wotinde,
strains, painful ollen veins or glands. It
heals and soothswes. $1.00 a bottle at drug-,
gists or postpaid, Will tell you more if you
write. Made in the U, S. A. by
W
F,10056, P, 0, F., 115 Lymans Bldg,, Montreal, 0 n.
"OvC. � � ,,,maesess S i ern •" Boit'tom 550:0
Motor Beery i1a
Freight Prepaid to an y hallway Station in
Ontario. Length 15 Ft., 'Beam s Ft. 9 In.,
6 In. ANT :l� � TO . 1
Depth 1 Ft.0 S. I` FITS.
p
•f,"peaiacation No. 213 giving engine prioes on request. Get our quotations
on—"Tho. Pandang Line" Commeroial slid Pleasure Launches, Tiew,
boats and Canoes.
TI#>f GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, PENE'ANG, C. :