HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1915-10-14, Page 7► GREATLY DISCOURAGED
GOLDSMITH'S AA'VIICB.
OYER 13"Y'S Il~.LNESS . Though a Spendthrift Realized Advan-
Mrs. Jos. Gaudreau, Notre Dame tapes of Thrift,
des Bois, Rue,, writes: "Last autumn The poet Goldsmith, though his
Our baby was Very sick and Wo were works prove him to have been a man
greatly discouraged, Tho doctor did of almost unprecedented political M-
Sleo time not seem able to help him, .and we be- sight, eeuld not manage his own af• The wear' and strain of life bee eluding the cooks—who have their
A pY Ster . Y gen using Baby's Own Tablets, which fairs, Ile was always in debt, and the tended in recent years to produ own 4quarters—and the orderlies, who
"1 don't want to go.. to bed,,' said soon made him. a fat, healthy child, renews more he received ter. his .writings, r s debility in a .large percentage lodge four in a compartment and !lave.
lit le Marjorie with a pout. Thousands of other mothers give which were oven more papular in his of our population.; Thousands are of
said Aunt Lucy, if you Baby's Own Tablets the same Zaire, life, time than they ere today the'fected with a"feeling they can't ex- along; cheerful dining cat. Tanks in
' Why," " y' P'the roof supply the wards and kitchen
we 'e a little brown girl and lived way. The Tablets regulate the stomach and more he spent and the more dot he ;actly describe. They are always tired p Y
cif in Java, perhaps, or a little black bowels, break up colds and simple fey incurred. At his death ho owed ale and dz ogpy, lade ambition, have pool' with hundreds of gallons of watez,
gir and lived in Africa, you wouldn't vers, expel, worms, cure cone, and. less than' two thousand pounds, which, aPpetito, look pale and suffer from. ..`The special ;feature of these trains
depressing headaches and insomnia. is the separate ward for infectious
have any alae little white bed with a mere teething easy, They are sgld by allowing for the greater purchasing This condition is full of peril. It is cases fitted to the brake van. ' The
medicine dealers or by mail at 25 power of money in that day, would be the. stepping Stone to invalidism, the arrangement of the berths in the
equal at least to 'twenty thousand dot- ;beginning of a shattered constitution. wards set aside for lying down eases
lays now. The great Samuel Johnson, ! We advise everyone in this condition is also new, The berths, .which can
Goldsmith's friend and benefactor, , to tele a good medicine at once and be raised like ,lase in an ordinary
might well exclaim, as he did, "Was, try to' get well while yet there is in
Slee a
�robabl no better advice can sleeping are arranged, in tiers' of
ever poet so trusted 'before.„ time. But, P Y
though Goldsmith was a spendthrift,be given,than to use regularly Dr; three, with the advantage that 86 men
he realized the advantages of that Hamilton's Pills which have become can be comfortably settled in each
If Thin, Nervous
Riin Down, Depressed,
This Will Help!
room has medical stores, a long table,
and all requisites for operations,
There are linen rooms, a pharmacy,
and a kit room far the efficers, who
have a very comfortable mess-rooln,
matched by .a second mess -room for
the four army nurses assigned to each
train. The staff .consists of 42, in -
soft mattress to sleep on.”
' Ana could I go to sleep at all ?"
t as1 ed Marjorie.
` Oh, yes, indeed," her aunt said,
laughing, "but you would sleep on a
mat woven out of dry grasses, with
, down pillows for your head. Or if
you were a little yellow baby,—a
weeny, teeny baby,—you'd sleep in a
bag tied on your sister's back; in the
daytime you would go bumpty-bump
cents a box 'from The Dr.. Williams
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont,
I .
JELLICOF.-AT SCHOOL,
'I'fie: Diplomatic Way Ile Made a
Bosom Friend.
at night As a boy Sir John Jeilieoe, Admiral
as she ran and played; or n g of the Grand Fleet, attended a school
you'd sleep on a soft silk quilt on the Rottingdean tlie' little Sussex vis.
door. If you were a little red baby*" n
!age, four mike from Brighton, Apart
"Oh, I know," said Marjorie."They fromthe fact that he was a hard
sleep in a little cradle made' of a worker, Jellicoe was undistinguished
board, wrapped round with cloth and from other boys. He was known,
trimmed with pretty beads. And their however, as a boy of exceptionally
Mothers hang them up in the trees—" high character, and successfully pass-
"But you, never could geese how the ed the very difficult examination
tittle. Eskimo babies sleep. . which was necessary in those days to
Marjorie shook her head. secure admission to the Britannia.
"Why, right in a bag of softest professor MacNaughton, who was
feathers, hung up in the queer little at school with Jellicoe, says that the
hut. The little Lapland baby cuddles admiral possessed a large capacity
down into his hammock made of warm for fun, "and he was certainly di tin-
deerskin; and his mother hangs it guisked beyond any of my . contain -
from
the roof of the sod but poraries at school with a fund of ori--
"I think I'll cuddle down in my bed, malit of which I remember one par -
too," said Marjorie, yawning. or
I t cularly striking instance. • Young
think I like my own clean little white Jellicoe had just entered the school,
bed the best" -Youth's Companion.: and being anew boy, he had to make
his way in the world of school -life.
BRAVES DEADLY GERMAN FIRE." He proceeded in an eminently original
way.
Canadian Signaller Strung 'Phone "There was a senior boy in the
Wire as Bullets flailed. school," continues the professor,
A staff officer attached to one of "whose- name, I think, was Ingram.
the Canadian divisions at Folkestone Now, those who know anything about.
has just returnedfront the trenches. school life will know that it is hedged
in Flanders. Twelve months ago he about with all sorts of rules and
was a civil engineer in Western. Can-' points of etiquette, and that it is ex-
ada, but he was one of the first to tremely difficult for a new boy, espe-
answer the call of the mother country, cially at his first comifig,to gain the
and has several times been at close friendship or confidence of one who
grips at the front. He has witnessed has already an established place in
deeds that have won the V.C. and the the school. But John Jellicoe had
Distinguished Conduct Medal. evidently determined that it was
"But if you were to ask me what worth while to cultivate the friendship
was the coolest . deed I have ever of this senior boy; and he set about it
seen," he said, "I could pick out a in the following very original way:
certain signaller, whose name I do "A game of football was =being
not know and whose gallant action' I played in the afternoon on the small
believe has been. overlooked. playing field which lay within the
"It was a simple affair. He was a school precincts. On one occasion the.
Canadian. I had spent a night in the bell went out of bounds;' and Jellicoe
trenches. The morning shells were went to fetch it. Instead of throwing
beginning to find it, and orie shell it back in the ordinary manner. he
severed our telephone lines. Without ran hack with the ball in his hand,
waiting for the order this young sig- and, on corning close to Ingram, made
nailer leaped over the parapet, un- a neat dr"op-kick, so that the ball
coilinga new wire as he ran through bounded against him with some force.
a perfect .rain of bullets and shrap- There was a shout of laughter and
nes.He got the wire fixed, and on his applause, and away ran Jellicoe, pur-
way back he actually stopped to re- sued by Ingram, to a corner of the
pair another. He stood there quite field, where they indulged for some
calmly, just as if he didn't know the moments in a friendly tussle before
awful risk he was running. I expect- resuming the game. •
ed to see him drop every second, but "From that day Jellicoe and Ingram
he ran back to the trenches untouched, became bosom friends, and though
and all he said when he flung aside this trivial incident occurred more
the empty coil was: 'Whew! 'I think than forty years ago, it has always
that's all right now.'" remained in my memory. I do not in -
The height of the ambition of the deed remember, either at this or at
Canadians at Folkestone, next to kill- any other of the schools where I was
ing Germans, is to march through the educated, any instance of equally suc-
streets-of "dear old London," as the cessful, and original boyish dipio-
officer called it, and let the people see mncy,"
them. "You stay-at-home Londoners,"
he said, "cannot understand the yearn- A DOCTOR'S EXPERIENCE
ing of our Canadians to be in the Em-_
pire's capital. We hear from the boys
at the front every, day and every bit Medicine Not Needed In This Case.
of news makes them more impatient Itis hard lo convince some people
to be out there. The wives of two of that tea or coffee does them an injury!
our men who were taken prisoners'by They lay their bad feelings to ahnpst
the Saxons are staying in this hotel, every cause but the true and unsus-
and the husbands sent up a desolate pected one.
cry the other day from the prisoners' But the doctor knows. . His wide
camp for their tennis flannels. On +experience has proven to him that, to
the whole, our men have been treated some systems, tea and coffee are in -
well by the Saxons. At first they sidious poisons that undermine the
were not. They complained of harsh health. Ask him if tea or coffee is a
treatment on the trains to Germany, cause of constipation, stomach and
some of the officers' being sandwiched nervous troubles.
in between captured Turcos." "I have been a coffee drinker all
The officer related a fresh story 'my life, and when taken sick two
about Canadians at the front: "Their years ago with nervous prostration,
arrival in the trenches, of course, was the doctor said that my nervous sys-
kept secret, but in the morning we tem was broken down and that I
heard the Germans call out, 'Hullo, would have to give up coffee.
Canadians! Where are your horses 1' "I got so weak and shaky I could
Shortly afterwards the Germans stuck not work, and reading an advertise-
, up a dummy horse on the parapet. ment of Postum I asked my grocer if
Our men riddled it with bullets•The he had any of it. He said, 'Yes,' and
Germans then took it down, and it that he used it in his family and it
reappeared swathed in bandages. was all it claimed to be.
"Our men kept up the joke. 'Hullo! . "So I quit coffee and commenced
you Germans! Where are your sau- to use Postum steadily, and in about
sages?' they shouted, and, they filled two weeks I could sleep better and
some old socks with sand and strung get up in themorning feeling fresh.
them together on a rope between two In about two months I began to gain
sticks. 'Here they are. Now come flesh. I weighed obly 146 pounds
and fetch them.' But the Germans .when I commenced on Postum and
wisely kept their !reads down," now I weigh 16'7 and feel better than
'I' I did at 20 years of age.
Camera Shot Through the Air. "I am worlcing every day and sleep
The military camera of a Saxon well at night. My two children were
named Maul is carried by a rocket coffee drinkers, but they have not
over the landscape which is to be pilo- drank any since Postum came into the
tographed. The rocket, twenty feet house, and are far more healthy than
long and weighing' fifty pounds, is they were before." 'Name given by
mounted on a special support, which is Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont.
raised to the degree necessary and Postum comes in two forms:
aimed by means of sights, and the Postum Cereal—the original form
electrically ignited powder charge —must be well boiled. 15c -and 25c
carries the rocket to a height of about packages.
2,000 feet. As it turns to fall, expo Instant Postum—a soluble powde
sure is made by an electro -pneumatic dissolves 'quickly in a cup of ho
shutter, worked by a small battery. water, and, with cream and sugarr
Directly afterward a parachute opens, makes a deliciousbeverage instantly
holds the camera thirsty feet above the 30e and 50c tins.
rocket, and the whole appar;,atus falls Both kinds are equally dellciou
gently to the ground. Very distinct •and cost about the same per cup.
pletures seven inches square aro ob• "There's a Reason" for Postum.
thrift which, could he have practised
it, would have made him his own oras-
ter instead of the slave of publishers;
and money -lenders. Writing to a bro-1
ther about the training of his son,
poor Goldsmith said: "Teach, my dear
l
sir, to your son thrift and economy.
Let his poor wandering uncle's exam-
ple be placed before his eyes, I. had
contracted the habits and notions of a
philosopher while I was exposing my-
self to the insidious approaches of
cunning; and often by being, even
with my narrow finances, charitable to
excess, I forgot the rules of justice,
and placed myself in the very situa-
tion of the wretch who thanked me
for my bounty."
Joints Quit Aching
Soreness Goes Away
NO MORE STIFFNESS, PAIN
OR MISERY IN YOUR BACK
OR SIDE OR LIMBS!
Wonderful "Nerviline" is the Remedy.
A marvelous pain reliever.
Not an ordinary liniment—just
about five times more powerful, more
penetrating, more pain -subduing than plied; "and, as you have seen him so
any thick, oily or ' ammonia liniment. lately, and marked him so particular-
Nerviline fairly eats up the pain and ly, you can in all probability conduct
stiffness in chronic rheumatic joints, us to him."
gives quick relief to those throbbing "My friends," said the.dervise, "I
pains, and never burns or even stains have never seen. your camel, nor even
heard of him; but from you!"
"A •pretty story, truly," said the
merchant; "but where are the jewels
which formed a part of his burden?"
"I have seen neither your camel
blessing. ate warm,. soothing action nor' your jewels," repeated the der-
brough relief I had given up hoping vise.
for. I rubbed on quantities of Nervi- On this they seized his person, and
line and improved steadily. I also. took forthwith hurried him before the cadi;
Ferrozone at mealtime in order to
purify and enrich niy blood. I am to- but on the strictest search nothing
famous in restoring the sick to good ward. As in all the specially -built
health. A general' toning up of the
system at • once takes place. The
whole body is vitalized by rieher and
purer blood, The appetite is inereas-
ed, food is' digested- and naturally
strength' rapidly increases. Headaches
go because the bowels are regulated
and all wastes are carried' off. There
is no experiment about' using Dr.
Hamilton's Pills because they cer-
tainly restore the sick as a 'trial will
quickly prove. Just as good for the
old as the young, and suitable to the
needs of men, women and children.
This grand family medicine should be
in every, home.
q.
THE FRUITS OF OBSERVATION:
•
How a Dervise Described a Lost
Camel.
A Dervise was journeying alone in
a desert, when two merchants sud-
denly met him.
"You have lost a camel," said he to
the merchants.
"Indeed we have," they replied.
"Was he not blind in the right eye,
and lame in the left leg?" said the
dervise.
"He was," replied the merchants.
"And was he not loaded with honey
on one side and wheat on the other?"
"Most certainly he was," they - re -
the skin.
"Rheumatism kept my joints swol-
len and sore for ten years. My right
knee joint was often too painful to al-
low me to walk.. In this crippled tor-
tured condition I found Nerviline a
t
s
tained.
day well and can recommend my
treatment most conscientiously.
(Signed) • C. PARKS,
Prince Albert.
could be found upon him, nor 'could
any evidence whatever be adduced to
convict him either -of falsehood or of
theft.
Not an ache or pain in the muscles They were about to proceed against
or joints that Nerviline won't cure. him as a sorcerer when the dewire,
It's wonderful -for lumbago and with great calmness, thus addressed
sciatica; and toothache.halstiff neck.
earache Nerviline is the Court:—"I have been much amts.
simply . a wonder. Best family lini- ed at your surprise, and own that
ment known and largely used for the there has been some ground for, your
past forty years. Sold by dealers suspicions; but I have lived long and
everywhere, large family size bottle alone, and I can find ample scope for
50c., small trial size 25c. Refuse a
substitute, take only "Nerviline.
e•
LORD KITCHENER'S TASK.
He Is Making Ready for the Knock-
out Blow.
It is puzzling many what we are
doing with the armies we have rais-
ed. Everyone expected certain activi-
ties when we had reached a certain
strength, and in mare than one influ-
ential quarter the feeling has been
expressed that Lord Kitchener should
now take his true position as Brit-
ain's foremost soldier, writes an Eng-
lish correspondent.
I'believe that the nation would be
almost unanimous in transferring
Kitchener to the field, but we must
first of all be sure that his work at.
home is finished. He set out to per-
form what seemed an impossible task,
namely, the raising of an army num-
bered not by thousands but by mil-
lions. There was only one man in
Britain capable of even tackling that
job—Bitcherier.
That task is not yet finished, for
Lord Kitchener will make one more
appeal—and it will be the last. Mark
that. The register will be his guide
as to the number of men he will ask
for, and he knows that the call will be
answered. He is in no great hurry to
make that call, for rightly we are
now dealing with arms before the
man, and certain events may even
happen that will enable the Allies to
win victory at present strength; but
it is well known in military circles
that Lord Kitchener will not consider
his work at the War Office done until
Britain has a reserve superior to any
of the Great Powers. '
Lord Kitchener is the silent yuan of
war, and he is making ready for the
knock -out blow. We have not yet re-
taliated upon ' the Germans with a
Weapon like the poison gas, but that
does not mean that we cannot.
Kitchener is trot only building up
armiest he Is creating weapons and
preparing surprises. The scientist
and the inventor have been called up
by Britain's strong man. When the
hour comes to employ the new weap-
ons and the new armies Germany will
do more than talk of peace, then
'Kitchener win take his true' position
as leader of the British Army in the
West,
Henry VIII. was the first English
observation even in a desert I knew.
that I had crossed the track of a
cemel that had strayed from its own-
er, l .cause I saw no mark of any hu-
man footstep on the same route. I Jones was recently sent by his em- tience of Job!" exclaimed the village
knew that the animal was blind of one plover to collect an account from; minister as he threw aside the local
eye, because it had cropped the herb; Smith, notorious for his slackness in' paper. "Why, what's the matter,
age only on the one side of its path; t making payments. After several vain (dear ?2' asked his wife. "Last Sun -
thethat it was lame in one leg, from, attempts to obtain a settlement, Jones! day I preached from the text `Be ye
the faint impression which that par- I remarked, "Well, at least let me know! therefore steadfast,'" answered the
titular foot had produced upon the on what date I may expect payment,' f good man, "but the printer makes it
sand. I concluded that the animal had I pread, 'Be ye there for breakfast' "
1 Smith t? replied—"Do you takedme for a
lost one tooth because wherever Il prophet?" "No," responded Jones.
gazed a small tuft of herbage had; "Up to the present I have always re -
been left uninjured in the centre of garded you as a loss."
its bite. As to that which formed the - , T�-
burthen of the beast the busy ants in- Instant
formed me that it was corn on the one Corns Retie!
side, and the clustering flies that it
was honey on the other."
trains, these cars are loaded through
doors at the side. instead of through
the openwindows, which was the old
style. The two trains just finished
are part of a fleet of 24 which carry
British wounded from the front to the
base hospitals and the ports in France,
Russia Buys Large Quantities of Tea.
The Canadian demand for Indian
and Ceylon teas increase yearly.
and if one adds to this the many
other contingencies brought about by
the war, it can readily be understood
why the cost of tea is increasing.
Russia is taking enormous quantities,
and their buyers pay the very high-
est prices. The abnormal buying
has forced quotations up over lac a
pound higher than nine months ago.
d.
THE CIGARETTE IN BATTLE.
Incident at the Front Which Showed
Great Coolness.
The British is born with an equable
and composed temperament, writes W.
Douglas Newton in the Royal Maga-
zine. His emotions are forced into
the channel of that temperament by
his own distaste of outward show,.
and more, by his life's companions'
distaste for outward show. Whatever
his emotions they are forced to flow
in the same groove, and therefore, he
does not change. He is always the
same, whether he is going at a steady
jog -trot through business life, or whe-
ther he is fighting Germany. And be-
ing always the same, you can neither
make him excited—that is in the hys-
terical German or the emotional Gal-
lic ways—on the battlefield, or afraid.
He is always himself, and himself has
not altered for a century.
War to him must be carried on in
the same way as his ledgers were
filled up, and his lawn mown in civil-
ian life. In the former state he fre-
quently paused to light a pipe and
contemplate the universe, in his new
state he continues the habit. In one
of the fights a private smoked steadily
as he fired at the advancing Germans.
He puffed at his cigarette between his
shots, put the cigarette on a stone,.
fired, and took the cigarette again.
When he came back from a bayonet
charge his chief concern was not the
success his battalion had attained, but
the fact that the cigarette had smoked
itself out. The charge was a minor
success of many successes. The ciga-
rette was the last.
Notorious For His Slackness.
N(S�1FW81151 LIWl!:
mammal J111nall I 1 1 IMI
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Read the label
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TORONTO, ONT.
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JAP TOYS' ARE NOT DURABLE.
Consequently New Industry in the
Orient Has Dropped Off.
Japan's trade in toys, which once
showed a steadily increasing tendency,
owing to the recession • of Austrian
and German merchants from the trade
arena, is reported from Yokohama to
have shown quite a contrary tendency
lately.
Immediately after the outbreak of
war American and Japanese toy mak-
ers were suddenly called upon to sup-
ply toys that had been furnished by
Austrian and German manufacturers.
The Japanese manufacturers particu-
larly were looked to by the dealers in
the Philippines, the Dutch Indies, and
India, for the supply of colored -paper
toys, small flags, and wooden models.
Thus trade showed a great dxpen-
sion and inspired hope in the Japanese
manufacturers, who then sent their re-
presentatives to those southern mar-
kets and investigated the possibility
of the line. Some of them had al-
ready carried out a great increase in
their operations. Before, however, the
extension had been fully effected, the
sudden contraction of trade came.
Japanese toysappear good, but are
declared to be not durable. The color-
ing is also said to be poor and not
durable, particularly when the goods
are sent to southern lands.
Constipation Relieved or
"Money Back." No Drugs.
Dr. Jackson's Roman Meal is sold
with this guarantee. It is simply a
most delicious food. It make por-
ridge, pancakes, and all baked pro-
ducts. All may be eaten hot without
distress and nourish better than meat,
Be sensible, at least try it. Costs
little, only 10 cents and 25 cents. At
all grocers.
d•
In War Times.
Tramp—Please, mum, I'm a Bel-
gian refugee.
Lady—Are you? Mention a town
in Belgium.
Tramp (cogitating a moment)—I
would, mum, but they have all been
destroyed.
samara's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
Very Trying.
"Well, that's enough to try the pa -
FINE TRAIN AMBULANCE.
New One Built in England a Rolling
Hospital and Hotel.
The latest thing in train ambu-
lances, built by the London & North-
Western Railway at a cost of some
$35,000 for service in France, is quite
the most perfect of the kind ever seen.
The train, whose carriages all con-
nect so that on a straight line one can
look along 800 feet of corridor, is
steam heated and electric lighted
throughout, while every car is pro-
vided with electric ventilating fans.
The two kitchens, marvels of compact
equipment, aroused much enthusiasm,
They will supply the wounded mon as
soon as they are brought on board
with hot drinks and soup, to be fol-
lowed later with delicious stews and
more substantial fare. The treatment
—sOld by Grocers.. Sovereign to be styled "His Majesty." ED. 6.
Drop
Out
Minand's Liniment Relieves Neuralgia.
Sharp Practice.
One night in a country village bar-
ber's shop a knight of the lather and
Paint on Putnam's ; brush was performing the operation
Corn Extractor to- ' of shaving a customer with a very
night, and cornu feel dull razor. "Stop," said the custom-
er, "that won't do." "What's the
matter, boss?" "The razor pulls."
"Well, no matter for that, sir. If the
better In the morn-
ing. Magical t h e
way "Putnam'."
easelkillse athe corn for an time. the No pan. handle of the razor don't break the
Cure guaranteed. Get a 26o. bottle of beard's bound to come off."
"Putnam's" Extractor today.
Pointed.
The subject of the discussion was
the imperfection of man. The scep-
tical men held that human beings
aren't so very wonderful, after ` all,
and the preacher didn't agree with
him.
"But, surely," protested the scof-
fer, "you must admit that man is a.
bungle job? Why, even you, in
your work, must have noted many de-
fects in the human organism, and
have thought of better physical con-
trivances,"
The preacher smiled gently.
"Yes, I have," he replied in cool
sarcastic tones. "You see when I
want to shut out anything disagree-
able from my sight. I can always.
draw down my eyelids, like this; but
unfortunately I haven't any flaps to
my ears."
Evasive.
Ted—She wrote asking to break
the engagement, and I don't know
what to do.
NedSend her a diplomatic reply
that will keep the question open, and
perhaps she'll change her mind,
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
In yacht -racing every yacht 10
bound by rules to abandon the race
and go.to the assistance of any yacht
ISSUE 41—'15. or person in peril.
Presence of Mind.
Klein (to partner) --Quick, Eck+
stein, a man fell.trou de cola holel
Eckstein—Clap de cover on, Ikey.
while I run for de cop! If we don't
Arrest him for stealin' coal he'll sue
us for damages!
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Dear Sirs —I can recommend Mi-
NARD'S LINIMENT for Rheuma-
tism and Sprains, as I have used it
for both with excellent results.
Yours truly,
T. B. LAVERS,
St. John.
Indefinite,
Mrs. Snooper—Men make me tired.
Mrs. Swayback—What's the matter
now?
Mrs. Snooper -My husband saw
Mrs. Keedick yesterday and I asked
him what she had on, and he replied.
"Oh, clothes."
Minard's Liniment Cures Earns, Eta
By rising two hours earlier every
morning than you are accustomed to
you would, in forty years, add ten
years of eight-hour days to your life.
PAWNS FOR SALE.
1F LOOKING FOR A FARM, CON -
J.. suit me. I have over two hundred on
my list, located In the best sections of
Ontario. All sizes. I2'. W. Dawson,
13rampton.
AGENTS WANTED.
qquu.�. DAY ALSO COMMISSION FOR
,0,.d Local Representative. Slither Sex.
Experience unnecessary. Spare time ao-
canted. Nichols, Limited, Spading Ave.,
Toronto.
NEWSPAPERS FOR SALE.
lipEt0FIT-MAKING 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 o tCCora-
pany, 78 West Adelaide St.,
e%ISCELLANEOt1S.
"1 ANCBR, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC.
�Ll internal and external, cured with-
out pain by our home treatment. Write
us before too late. Dr. Rellnan Medical
Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont.
TUE EGET SO80OL TO ATTEND
L. iOTT
Tonga and Charles Sts, Toronto.
They demand for our graduates during
ourg supe y Comma co now �odalendar
free. W. J. ELLIOTT,' Principal
-r yr
gotREty SPAT
Will reduce Inflamed, Strained,
Swollen Tendons, Ligaments,
orMuscles. Stopsthelamenessapd
pain from a Splint, Side Bone or
Bone Spavin. No blister, no hair
gone and horse can be used. $2a
bottle at druggists or delivered. De.
scribe your case for special ;nstruc.
tion and interesting horse Book 2 M Free.
ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic linimentfor
mankind reduces Strained, Tore. Liga-
menta,ete. dlcn Glenda, Veins or dameclesi
Heels Cute• Sores. Ulcers. Allays pain. Prlee
neeabdr•'-ro nr.' ,r,ed. Bnok"Eridenre"(rel.
W. F.108110, P. 0. F., 616 Lyman Bldg , Montreal, Cam
Absorblac sad Absorblae, It., ire made la Maar!
WE
i
UY IT
Perhaps you have been sending your supply of
Milk to a local factory,—thea you do not know the
advantages of sending to the Largest and, Most
Up -to -Date Dairy in Canada. LET US TELL YOU.
WRITE NOW for information and copy of contract.
Give your shipping station and railway. •
City air C s'. Ltd.,
TORONTO, ONT.
SPADINA CRESCENT