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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1915-10-28, Page 7Duleic's First Ride.
The night after father decided that
Aulcie was old enough to go to school,
oho Weis so exeited that she hardly
slept a wink; and the next morning,
when heswung her up to the saddle
behind her brother Dick, to ride old
Ginger to the schoolhouse two miles
away, she could hardly sit still for
happiness, But Dick sat very still
indeed, d
e d an stared ahead of flim with.
out a word. He did not like to take
his little sister to school, for fear
that the other boys might laugh at
him when he rode .up to thedoor with
a girl in the saddle behind him.
The boys did laugh a little, but not
unkindly, and Duleie laughed back
with delight, She had held so tightly
to her brother all the way over that
she had scarcely looked about her
at all; bttt the motion' had been fine,
and shewas very happy. And yet
Dicic still' looked sulky when he
brought Ginger round at four o'clock
for the trip home. Ile did not' even
smile when two of the big boys and
several envious little girls helped
Duleie up, with mueh laughing. His
very back looked stiff ae Ginger can-
tered away.
But Duleie was too happy to notice
his silence. She was so proud and
glad that she sang a little and talked
a little as they went on. Once or
twice she even forgot father's words
and loosened her hold on Dick; for
every moment it was becoming easier
to ride, and it seemed as if in a little
while she would be able to sit entire-
Iy alone.
Dick could feel the little arms drop
now and then, but he said nothing.
"She ought not to do that," he thought
to himself, "but I can grab, . her if
she starts to fail. She, has no busi-
ness up here, anyhow!"
It' was a bright, windy day in Octo-
ber. ' The roads were very muddy,
but allele, high and dry on her perch,
did not mind a spatter or two, "Ho!"
she said almost aloud. "I'm glad we
live two miles from school!"
Poplar Hill, a quarter of a mile
from home, is very steep. Old Gin-
ger decided that he would take it at
one quick pull, so he gathered himself
together and began to step out as
fast as he could. If he had not been
quite so quick, or if Poplar Hill had
not been quite so steep, the thing
might not have happened; but all at
once, before anyone could say "Jack
Robinson," Duleie was tossed back-
ward. She felt herself going, and
clutched at Ginger's sleek brown sides
as she fell, but there seemed to be no-
thing to get hold of. She also made a
Cully little equeak, but the wind was
noisy in Dick's ears; and besides, he
had heard so many of her funny little
squealsall the way -along that lie
would not have noticed, anyway. 'So,
with one last squeak, off went Duleie,
catching wildly at Ginger's tail its she
fell. It was a long, strong tail, but
slippery, and by it she slid down as a
man slides down a rope from the top
of a house, But Ginger was old and
gentle, and did not even turn his
head. - Plunk! With , a soft' little
thump Dulcie sat suddenly in the
deep mud, her eyes tight shut.
After a second or two She opened
them. There was the bright -world
round her, just as usual, -and half -way
up, the hill were Dick and '.Ginger,
moving fast. She gave a half -fright-
ened, half -angry sob as she looked
after them. "They don't even look
back!" she said. 'They don't care a
bit!"
When Dick trotted, briskly up to
the door, mother ran out on the porch.
'"Where's Dulcie?" she asked in sur-
cprise. "Why didn't you bring her
home with you?"
Dick turned in the, saddle, and his
face grew 'red, then white, "Why, mo-
ther!" he cried.
• When father and Dick, both on
Ginger, found :Duleie, she was still
sitting in the road, not hurt, but cry-
ing softly. Her hat was hanging by
one string, and her dress 'had changed.
from blue to chocolate color, Dick
could hardly get ori his horse quick
enough.
"I forgot to hold on tight, ` Duleie
said to her father.
"I guess," said Dick promptly,
"'twits more because I didn't take
care of you that you fell off, Delete.
Will you be afraid to ride again?"
Dulcio looked a little doubtful, but
shoolt her head.
"Because," said Dick, "I just want
to feel you behind me once morel"—
Youth's Companion.
The Chinese language is very dif-
ficult to learn, for, although there is
no alphabet, it is neeesaiy tomastei
about twenty thousand syllabic char-
acters. `�`
Bob --"That boy of yours is a fine,
tall lad, Jack; you should be proud of
him," Jack—"I ain't,, though," Bob
---"No! How's that?" "Jack "Why,
he is eight inches taller than I aim
and his mother insists on cutting his
trousers down to fit. mel" ,
"Can yen imagine anything more
terrible?" asked wifie after she had
told her husband about the marital
troublesof their next-door neighbor.
"Yes, I can," replied hubby. "Just
suppose Brown had been a. Mormon
and had to pay alimony to a whole
flock of wives. Wouldn't that be
Worse?"'
PALE .FEEBLE GIRLS
Weakness Generally Conten' on
as 'Womanhood
Approaches.
'Girls upon the threehold of woman-
hood often drift into a decline in spite
of all care and attention, Iiow often
one sees girls who have been strong
and lively become suddenly weak, de-
pressed, irritable and ;listless. It is
the dawn of womanhood -a crisis in
the life of every girl --and prompt
measures should be taken to keep the
blood pure and rich with the red tint
of health, If the blood is not healthy
e
at this critical stage the body is weak -
oiled and grave disorders follow. Dr.
Williams' Pink ;I'iIls have saved then -
sands of young girls from what might
have been life-long invalidism or an
early death, They are blood -builder
of unequaled richness, strengthening
weak nerves and producing a liberal
supply of red, healthy blood which
every girl needs to sustain her
strength. Dr. Williams' Pink Pi11e
have proved their great value over
and over again to young women
whose health was failing. Miss Min-
nie Duffield, Eramosa, Ont., says:
"It gives me great pleasure to tell
you what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
have done for me: When I was ap-
proaching the age of womanhood I
suffered greatly from bloodlessness,
or anaemia. My work was a drag to
me, I had no appetite and never felt
rested in the mornings. d could
scarcely walk for five minutes : at a
time without taking a rest. I was
troubled with severe headaches and
things looked gloomy indeed. I doe-
tared for a long time and got but
little, if any, benefit. I' was advised
to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and
did so, and after taking them for a
time, felt better. I continued taking
the Pill) until I had used six boxes,
wheri I felt like a new person, • and
was again enjoying splendid health.
I would strongly advise any girl who
is weak or fun down to try Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills""
You can get these pills from any
dealer in medicines or by mail at 50
cents a box or six boxes for $2,50
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,.
Brockville, Ont.
M
WORDS OF THE WISE.
To the contented even poverty is
joy; to the discontented even wealth
is vexation.—Chinese Proverb.
Hethat destroys a shilling destroys
all that it might have produced, even
scores of pounds.—Franklin:
Run not into debt either for wares
bought or money borrowed; be con-
tent to wait for things that are not
an absolute necessity, rather than to
run up the score.—Matthew Hale.
It is no small commendation to
manage a little well. He is a good
wagoner who can turn 40 a little
room. To live well in abundance is
the praise of the estate, not of the
person. I will study more how to
givea good account of my little than
to snake it more.—Bishop Hall.'
He who is taught to live upon a
little owes more to his father's wis-
dom than he who has a great deal
Ieft. him does to his father's care.—
William 'Penn.
•
HEALTHYCHILDREN
A child's health depends upon the
state' of his stomach and bowels. If
they are kept regular and sweet the
little one is sure to be healthy.
Baby's Own Tablets are the mother's
best friend in keeping her little ones
well. They act as a gentle laxative;
are absolutely safe and are pleasant
to take. Concerning them Mrs. David
Label, Ste. Perpettie, Que., writes:—
"My baby was so troubled with consti-
pation that he could not sleep day or
night I gave him Baby's Own Tab-
lets and now he is a big healthy boy."
The Tablete,are sold by medicine deal-
ers or by mail at 25 cents a box from
The Dr. Williams' Medicine Go„
Brockville, Ont. •
e•
PROVERBS OF SOLOMON.
He that tilleth the land shall have
plenty of bread; but he that followeth
after vain persons shall have poverty
enough.
Be not thou one of them that
strike hands, or of `them that are
sureties for debts.
The rich ruleth over the poor, and
the borrower is servant unto the
lender.
The sluggard will not plow by
reason of the cold; therefore shall he
beg harvest and have nothing.
Love not sleep lest thou come to
poverty; open thine, eyes and then
shalt be satisfied with bread.
A slothful man hideth his hand to
his bosom, and will not so mrich as
bring it to his mouth again.
There is treasure to be desired and
oil in the dwelling of the wise; but
a foolish man spendeth it up.
Ask
Your Doctor
about' this food formulae. It's Dr.
Jaekson's'Ronlan Meal, 30% whole
berries of wheat. 35% whole berries
of rye; both' granulated,: not crushed.
25% deodorized and tasteless flax-
seed and 10% wheat bran, It makes.
delightful nut -brown porridge, pan-
cakes, bread, and all baked products.
71 .nourishes bettor than merit, Pres
vents indigestion and positively re-
lieves constipation or "money back."
At all 'grocer's, 10 cents and 25 cents.
TIIE "WASTERS."
Many Directions in Which the British
Celtic' Says,.
Only when the items of our .ex
penditure are oxereinod in detail can
we fully realize in how many discs
tions we could save and assist the no-
tion to find the 4,000,000 a day no-
cessary to carry on the war against
Germany, says Landon Answers,
Gentlemen used to figures give its
the appalling information that the
average spent by each•'houeohold in
the eountry on strong drink per week
is 65, Od. If this sum were reduced
to 85. 3d„ we should save £80,000,000,
Ten years ago we drank 10 oz, of
tea less per head that we drink now,,
We could easily 'revert to the old
quantity. If we did we should be 20,-
000,009 of tea a year better off.
One pound of tea ought of make 150
cups, Bow many cups does this mean
a year? Three thousand million:
Every male over sixteen years of
age in the country smokes an aver-
age of GIA oz. cigars and tobacco a
week. Half an ounce a day each iso
too much. We can easily save in
smokes,
Meat is another tremendous item
We could curtail. Cheese has an
equal food value. eAnd peas, beans,
and lentils will eke out whatever meat
we have wonderfully.
WHERE DOES GOLD GO?
Many a Treasure of Ancient Days
Has' Vanished Completely.
What becomes of gold? queries The
Chicago Journal. It is one of the
eldest metals in human use—there
are gold beads dating back to' the
stone age. It is an object of almost
universal desire. It is proof against
almost all the influences which de-
stroy other metals, and it has been
mined in enormous quantities, yet to-
day more than two-thirds of the gold
in use has been dug since 1849.
What becomes of the rest? Where
is the gold that set Jason wandering
into the Black Sea, that 'filled the
treasures of Croesus, that paid the
terrific tribute which Persian kings
assessed against the Punjab? What
has happened to the yellow dust and
"electrum"—an alloy of gold and
silver which negro traders brought
down the Nile to Egypt for four or
five thousand years? Ancient gold,
like that of modern times, was used
for money) and for ornaments, but
both have disappeared. Where?
The most enduring of metals, and
yet, the -most evanescent; perpetually
sought and yet constantly escaping
the hands of even the successful seek-
er—that is gold. What is the reason
for its curious elusiveness?
-Corns Applied In
5 Seconds
Sore, blistering feet
Cured from cornpin�ehed
toss can be.:•cured
Qua
S , by Putnam's Ex-
., tractor in 24 hears.
Z���3333aaaa "Putnam's', soothes
way that drawing pain, eas'es:ins'tant-
ly, makes the feet feel good at once,
Get a 25c. bottle of "Putnams"today.
HOW SHELLS. DISABLE MEN.
Changes in Atmospheric Pressure by
Explosions Are Odd.
Not hysteria, but the most profound
nervous demoralization, may result
merely from the blasts of wind pro-
duced by shell explosions, according
to the London Lancet, which gives
some of the observations of Paul Ha-
vant, as related by him to the
Academie de Medicine de Paris,
M. Havant observed a case in No-
vember, 1914, where, after a shell ex-
plosion, a man was carried to the am-
bulance station suffering from para-
plegia, which is a paralysis of the
lower half of the. body. In March,
1915, the explosion of a bomb a trifle
over a yard away left a man paralyz-
ed on his left side and unable to speak.,
In both these cases all feeling had
been destroyed in the paralyzed parts
and there was nowhere any external
wound. The second case got well in
twelve days, except for some stiffness
in the left leg.
In another instance an explosion,
made one victim almost comatose.
Violent headaches and deafness in the
left ear were observed.
The explosion of a mine near a
'trench sent another man staggering
for help and talking incoherently. Ile
recovered in ten days.
Such eases, thinks M. Revaut, are
due to the swift change in atreos
pheric pressure caused by the explo-
sion. This causes hemorrhages in
the nervous system. They are more
common on the firing line than
hysteria,
S
If there is any particular thing. you
are really fond of doing,` you may
be quite sure that, sooner or later, a
society will be started' to suppress it..
Fountain -pens are tested by an in-
strument called a micrometer. If one
piece of the mechanism is. out even
a six -hundredth part of an inch, .the
micrometer rejects it as faulty.
"Teacher has been telling us a lot
about improper nouns,"said the little
girl. "I don't know what, things ere
doming tot" replied the grandmother;
"nothing improper was ever taught
when I was at school."
""Pa" said Tommy ""my. Sunda
, , Y
Schoolteacher said if I'm good I'll go
to heaven." "Well, you said if I was
good I'd go to the • circus, Now, I
want to know who's fibbing, you or
her."
Wonderful Dl raclosiYorJce
On Weak Stomachs
By Dr, Hamilton's ilton's fills
Thr are despairing men and wo„
men by the thousands in this City
whose stomachs keep them in con-
stent misery that can be' qguiekly re-
stored to vigoroue health by Dr,
Hamilton's T'il'ls. We know of no
Ohm* medicine that possesses the
power to kindle into new life the ex.
hausted energies of chronic stomach
Sufferers, There is an extraordinary
power in Dr. Hamilton's Pills that
searches out the weals spots that
braces up the delicate glands and Com-
plex workings of the stomach and
bowels. There aro invigorating,
stimulating tonic ingredients in Dr.
Hamilton's Pills which are derived
from powerful juices taken from
rare herbs and roots, and these ate
scientifically combined with other
medicinal products so as to assist in
a harmonious and proper' working of
the entire system, The ingredients
of Dr, Hamilton's Pills, coming from
the great storehouse of Mother Na,
ture herself, can be relied upon to
be harmless. Guaranteed results fol-
low to all who use Dr. Hamilton's
Pills for Stomach Weakness, Gas,
Sourness, Headache, Biliousness or
Constipation. Seekers of the better
health can not do better than invest
25c. in this health -bringing family
medicine.
CANADIANS ARE SAVERS.
Have One Hundred Dollars .Each in
Bank. „
It does not do to judge of the sow-
ings of a country by thesums in the
banks alone. The French peasant,
for instance, uses the savings bank
only as a place for his loose change,
and when he has accumulated a few congested or sore?
francs he takes the money out and If so, you are the very person that
buys "rents" or national debt scrip. Nerviline will cure in a jiffy,
In other words, he has been doing Nerviline is strong and penetrating.
for years what British statesmen are It sinks right into the tissues, takes
urging their people to do he hands l out inflammation and soreness, de-
tr id d rful
;Bub Nerviline over the chest—rule on
2,000 MILES OF KHAKI,
One Yorkshire Mill's Contribution to
War Office "Weekly,
The chief argument advanced by
:the enemies of compulsory military
service is the danger .of crippling the
essential trades of Great Britain, and
pertieularly the industries engaged in
the manufacture of welt material, An
idea of the tremendous scale on which
war equipment of. every description
is being manufactured in Great Bris
taro is found in statistics rotating to.
the textile industries in Leeds and
other Yorkshire towns where mills,
big and small, are working night and
day to turn- out huge quantities of
khaki cloth not only for the British
troops but for those of the allies as
.well. The belligerent troops are, now
taking to wearing khaki and the other
allies are 'evidently doing the same,
for French, Russian and Italian offi-
cors are often'seen wearing khaki
uniforms of the regulation type.
In one,big mill in Yorkshire 2,000
miles of Khaki, about fifty-six inches
wide, is. being woven, dyed and turn.
ed into 200,000 complete suits for'sol-
diers in a week. When the war start-
ed how and where to get khaki and
tailors to make it up into garments
quickly enough to keep pace with re-
cruitieg and needs of the forces in the
field was almost as serious a pr•
oblem
00 that of inducing men to enlist.
Both these problems, however, were
solved with equal rapidity.
1- ry
Chest.Colds and Hoarseness
Quickly Bulled Away
"Nerviline" Gives Speedy Relief
and Cures Over Night.
Got a cold?
Is your voice raspy -is your. chest
his savings over to the Government s oys eo s in a truly wonderful way
to be used for the nation's purposes, lots of it, and watch that tightness
he receiving interest. The thrifty disappear. Nerviline won't blister, it
Dane buys shares in co-operative pro-, sinks in too fast -doesn't simply stay
ducing agencies of one kind or an- on the surface like a thick, oily lini-
other, furnishing thus the capital that melt would. If the throat is raspy.
has made of his country one of the and sore, rub it well outside with
of the modern intensive Nerviline, and use Nerviline as a gar-
marvelsfarmin And so with manyothers, gee diluted with warm water. Just
g• one or two treatments like this and
Nevertheless, the deposits in the say- your voice and throat will be quick
inn banks are some index of the pro -1 normal again.
gress the people are making in thrift.' Just think of it -for forty years the
A compendious statement of the i largest used family medicine in this
facts is contained in the statistical! country-Nerviline must be good,
of the United States. It must quickly relieve and euro a bun -
abstract
shows that Canadians have an aver- clred ills that befall every family. Try
11 for earache, toothache, coughs,
age of $1.77 per head in the old' colds, sore chest, hoarseness and muss
Government savings banks naw oper- cular pains in every part of the body.
ating mainly in the Maritime Pro -1 Large family size bottle, 50c.; trial
vines, and 35.19 per head in the size 25c. at all dealers,
post -office savings banks. Private
savings banks, among them being Many German Lawyers Killed.
two specially large institutions oper- According to the Deutsche Juris-
t y g ten Zeitung, 1,964 German lawyers
sting in the Montreal district, account
for another. $5.20 per head. But the bad been killed up to August 20,
principal savings deposits of Cana -4; among them being 10 professors of
dians are those in the chartered banks, l low, 414 high administrative officials
representing about $88.78 per head.'and judges, 1,176 minas judges, and
Thus the savings banked by Cana 366 solicitors.
diens amounted to $100.94 per head. An Advantage,
This is a higher figure than is reach-
ed by any other country in the world.
Next conies Switzerland, with $86.57,
closely followed by New Zealand with
$84.88, and the Commonwealth of
Australia with 383.91, and Denmark
with $80.59. In their postal and pub-
lic savings banks Frenchmen in the
year before the war' had only $27.56'
per head.
HARD ON CHILDREN
When Teacher Has the Habit.
"Best is best, and best will ever
live." When a person feels this way
about Postum they are glad to give
testimony for the benefit of others.
A school teacher writes: "I had
been a coffee drinker since my child-
hood, and the last few years it had
injured me seriously." (Tea produces
about the same effects as coffee, be-
cause they both contain the drugs,
caffeine and tannin).
"One cup of coffee taken at break-
fast would souse me to become so
nervous that I could scarcely go
through with the day's duties, and
this nervousness was often accom-
panied by deep depression of spirits
and heart palpitation.
"I am a teacher by profession, and
when under the influence of coffee had
to struggle against crossness when in
the school room.
"When talking this over with my
physician, he suggested. that I try
Postum, so I purchased a package and
made it carefully according to the di-
rections; found it excellent of flavour,
and nourishing.
"In a short time I noticed very
gratifying effects. My nervousness
disappeared, I was not irritated by
My pupils, life seemed full of 'sun
shine, and my heart troubled me no
longer.
"I attribute my change in health
and spirits to, Postum alone."
Name given by Canadian Postum
Co., Windsor, Ont.
Postum comes in two forms:
Postum Cereal—the original form—
must be well boiled. 15c and 25c
packages.
Instant Postum—a soluble powder
--dissolves quickly in a cup of hot
water, and, with cream and sugar,
makes a delicious beverage instantly.
SOe and 500 tins.
Both kinds are equally, delicious and
cost about the same per cup.
"There's e Reason" for Postum.
—sold by Grocers.
"There's one advantage in being
poor."
"What is it?"
"You never have to lie to escape
indorsing somebody's note."
1'1 ua�L afAlul%Ax,,,i
f.0 Tun „"n,•r,•T 1118111 8
4GlhL IMII
e rrtT,0r1
�I•; N1vECRONTO,�QN1R`iah
MADE IN CANADA
azimerseasmette Amy
ROYAL
YEAST CAKE
It'1'AHE P RFgCT I3REA'D
Bread made in the home with Royal
Yeast will keep fresh and moist longer
than that made with any other,
Food Scientists claim that there is
more nourishment in a pound ofgood
home made bread than in epound.of
meat. Consider the difference inoost.
E.W,GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED
TORONTO, ONT
WINNIPEG MONTREAL
On the .Safe Side,
"So you intend to be a soldier
when you grow up. Don't you know
you'll be in danger of getting ]tilled?"
"Who by?"
"Why, the enemy."
"Then Pll be the enemy."
Minard's Lisisuent Rericrees Neuralgia.
Careless.
"What a terrible cold your daugh-
ter has."
"Yes, the foolish girl. She went
out the other afternoon in her sum-
mer furs and neglected°to keep them
hooked about the throat"
Idinerd'.o.Liniment Cures Dandruff.
What He Knew.
The lawyer shook his finger warn-
ingly at the witness and said;
"Now, we want to hear just what
you know, not what some one else
knows, or what you think, or any-
thing of that kind, but what you
know. Do you understand?"
"Wal, I know," responded the wit-
ness with emphasis, as he lifted .one
limber leg and laid it across the
other; "I know that Clay Grub said
that Bill Thompson told him that he
heard John Thomas' wife tell Sid
Shuford's gal that her husband was
there when the fight took place, and
that he said that they slung each
other around in the bushes right con-
siderable."
onsiderable."
The lawyer glared at the witness
and said curtly: "You may stand
down, sir."
Always So.
"Now, my son, you are married. Be
what a man ought to be."
"How do I know just what a man
ought to. be?"
"Your wife will furnish full plans
and specifications."
Alcohol Gives Way to Tea.
The restriction of the sale of spirits
in England has resulted in a greatly
increased consumption of tea, and
even though the new laws regarding
the use of alcohol should be relaxed
after the war a large percentage of
people will have acquired a perman-
ent taste for nature's stimulant—tea.
Undoubtedly the consumption of tea
is increasing throughout the world,
emg and will continue to increase at a
greater rate during the next few
years, and until the supply can cope
with the demand higher prices for
tea must be expected.
Royal Economy Not New.
The strict economy which the Bri-
tish King and Queen have exercised
in the royal household as an example
to the nation since the war began is
no new thing in the present dynasty.
Strange as it may seem, Queen Vic-
toria
iatoria was more extravagant in the
royal menage than either her son,
King Edward, or her grandson, King
George.
Perfectly Pardonable.
We believe MINARD'S LINIMENT
is the best:
Mathias Foley, Oil City, Ont.
Joseph Snow, Norway, Me.
Charles Whooten, Mulgrave, N.S.
Rev. R. 0. Armstrong, Mulgrave,
N.S.
Pierre Landers, Sen., Pokemouche,
N.B.
READ ADVERTISEMENTS.
By That Wise Practice People Help
Lower Prices.
"Have women the strength of mind
to conduct themselves in politics like
men? Could a woman, like Caesar,
have refused the crown?"
"I think so," said the lady ad-
dressed. "Of course, she might have
tried it on just to see if it tvas a
. fit."
If a merchant can be sure teat e
whole purchasing public of his local-
ity would buy certain goods from him
he could, and would, reduce the prices
of those goods. This is the "unattain-
able ideal." But we make great pro-
gress in this direction by cultivating
the habit of reading advertisements.
Not all the public, but a great portion
of it, is moved by an advertisement
well written and well displayed. By
this means the merchant wins the cus-
tom of a large portion of his public
and can afford to—and does—lower
Ms prices accordingly, The mer-
chant's advertising does for the sale
of all goods to the public what the
grain exchange does for 'the sale of
wheat to dealers, it makes known the
prices at which bargains are offered
and, facilitating business, leads to a
reduction of prices. The people who
read the advertisements in the daily
papers are, in effect, members of a
great, marketing organization.
e•
Minard'e 84ninten0 for solo everywltero,
Yachts have been made wholly of
aluminium.
The Egyptians, believing that dead
people' needed the things they have
used when alive, sometimes killed the
favorite slave and horse of the cleacl
man. In India, for the same reason,
widows were burned with the corpses
of their husbands,
Miaaed's Liniment Clues Stuns, Eta
T UH(, SWOLLEN GL ANDS
that make a horse Wheeze,
Roar, have Thick Wind
or Choke -down, can be
reduced with
also other Bunches or Swellings, No blister
,no hair gone, and horse kept at work, Eco-
mmmical—oblya few drops required titan ap
plication. $2 per bottle delivered, Book 3 M free
ABSOR1IINit, 311., the antiseptic liniment fo
mankind, reduces Cysts, Wens, Painful,
Swollen Veins and Ulcefs.$1�and $2 a bottle a
dealers or delivered. Book Evidence" free,
W; p,
80100, P, 0.7., 511 Lymans Bldg., Mnneval, bon,
Mottled did AbsorbIoe, Jr., are made 10 Olinda,
ED. 6. ISSUE 43—'15.
CHAPLIN1SMS.
Life is a hurdle race over "ifs" and
"buts."
Any woman can manage a man if
she can only prevent him from knowe
ing it,
Why is it that nothing tastes quite
as good as the thing that doesn't
agree with you?
A lot of people go on praising "the
good old times," and hoping they
will never come back.
Suppose education is a good thing.
All the same, this world is full of fa-
thers who have to support sons who
know ten times as much as their fa-
thers do.
REMEMBER 1 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 (each as many of the
cheap ointments contain) get
into your child's blood 1 Zam-
Bute is purely herbal. 'No pois-
onous coloring. Use it always.
50c. Dox at .411 Druggists and Store,.
PARMS Volt SALE,
'QF 1,008(NG FOR A FARM. CON -
J. suit me. I have over two hundreds On
my list, located In the best sections of
Ontario, All sizes. H. W. Dawson,
Brampton,
NEWSPAPERS POR, SALE.
A'BIOFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB
J, Offices for sale to good Ontario
towns. The most useful and interesting
of all businesses. Full information on
application to Wilson Publishing Com-
pany. 73 Rest -Adelaide St..,,Toronto.
MISCELLANEOUS.
i-1 ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC.
4J internal. and external, oared with-
out pain by our home treatment. Write
us, before too late. Dr, Bellman Medical
Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont.
THE RIGHT SCHOOL TO ATTEN3:11
���i i?GELLIOtTT
G!/.Pedd/
range and Charles Sts., Toronto.
demandr
graduates
furim.
our supply. Commence now. Calendar
free. W. 1. ELLIOTT, Principal.
a STIPFD
y CAT 1111
LIKE C
I Will Gladly Tell You
How—FREE.
HEALS DAY & HIST
It is a new way. It is something abso-
lutely different. No lotions, sprays Or
sickly smelling salves or -creams. No at.
N thlnq toasmo apparatus of any kind.
or inhale, No
steaming, or rub-
bing or infections.
No electricity .08
vibration or maa-
sago. No powder;
ma-
ne plasters; no
keeping 10 the
house. Nothing of
that kind at all.
Something n e w
and different —
something delight-
ful and healthful.
--something in-
stantly successful,
You do not have
to wait, and lin-
ger, and pay out
a lot of money
You can stop 1t
over night—and I
will gladly tell 1 ou how --PREM. I am
not a doctor and this is not a so-eallod
doctor's prescription—but I an, 'cured.'
and my friends are cured and you can be
cu11red.1ceomgiToure, suffering w111 stop at once
ii AM FREE—You Can Be Free
My catatt'h made me. in. It darted My
mind, It undermined my health and wee
weakening my wilt, The hawking and
coughing lade mo obnoxious to all, and
my foul breath made even my loved ones
avoid me secretly. My delight in 1100
was dulled and my facultics. Impaired, I
Irnew that In time it would bring me to
ah untimely grave because every mo-
ment of the any and night it was slowly
ret surely sapping my vitality,
But I found a cure, and I am ready to
tell you about it 21E81. 'Write mo
promptly.
RISK JUST ONE CENT
Send no money. - Just your name and
address en a postal card. Say: Dear
Gam Katz, Please tell. me how you ousel
Vous catarrh and how -Lean euro mine."
'Slat's 011 you need to say, I will under•
stand, anti 8 will write to y°u with com-
Piete inforreatien E3:01 , ,at °nee Bo
not. delay, Send the Postal nerd or write
Inc a latter to -day. Don't think 00 turn-
ing this nage until you have asked for
this wonderful treatment that ca11 do
for you what it has done for me
SAIIS ieeA10O, nom 552884.
14:1 rartttual St. .. •. 1008*ntb, 001,