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The Brussels Post, 1916-5-25, Page 3YOUNG FOLKS Bobbie's Adventure. Little Bobbie sat on the steps alone. He looked lonesome and felt more lonesome than he looked. All the oth- er children, nearly a dozen:sef'them, were playing games on the sidewalk near by. Bobbie knew that they were older than he, but still he did not think it fair for them always to play games in which he could not join, "I'M play a game of my own," he (said to himself, as he toddled bravely down the steps to the sidewalk. Bobbie's mother had told his sister Polly to keep watch of him, but Polly was busy with hergame and did not see him leave the steps. Down the street he made his way until he came to the place where an iron fence bor- dered the sidewalk. Through the lat- ticework of which the fence was made, Bobbie could see a sloping lawn and a little lake where some swans were swimming. "That's the place for my game," thought Bobbie, "if I can crawl through the fence." It ,,looked easy enough to get through the fence, but when Bobbie had • pushed his head carefully through the largest hole in the iron latticework he found that he could get no further. He tried his best to wriggle his fat shoulders through, but he could not do it. Then, all red and warm with his IIat1D FORKING WOMEN Will Find New Strength Through the Use of Dr. Williams:. Pink Pills. It is useless to tell a hard working woman to take life easily and not td worry. Every woman at the head of a home; every girl in offices, shops and factories is subjected to more or less worry. These cannot be avoided. Bat it is the duty of every woman and every girl to save her strength as much as possible, and to build up her system to meet unusual demands. Her future health depends upon it, To -guard against a break -down in health the blood must be kept rich, red ,and pure. To keep the blood in this condi- tion nothing can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. They strengthen the nerves, restore .the appetite, bring the glow of health to pallid cheeks, and renewed energy to listless people. Women cannot always rest when -they should, but they can keep up their strength and keep away disease by. the occasional use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Mrs. A. Rhodes, Hamilton, Ont., says: "A few years ago on com- ing to Canada, working long hours, and close confinement began to tell upon me. I was completely run down, and finally could do no work. I was pale, suffered from headaches, did not rest well, and felt altogether very miserable. The doctor said that the trouble was anaemia, and after doc- toring for some weeks without get- ting any relief, I decidedto drop bhe pushing, he tried to pull his head doctor and take Dr. Williams' Pink out, but it would not come out. He Pills. Very soon I began to notice a was caught in a trap! For a mom- ent he tried with all his might; then gills T was again enjoying the best he grew frightened and began to of change for the better, and by the time I had used a half dozen' boxes of the health. scream as loud as he could. I have never had any re - Up the street, Polly and the other turn of the sickness and never felt children heard him an dcame running betterin my life than I do now. I give to the apot. So did other ,persons, my experience, therefore, that it may from all rides. Some of them pulled at Bobbie and some pulled at the fence, ut the harder they pulled the. louder Bobbie cried, and his head would not come out. be used for the benefit of others." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills from any medicine dealer or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi- A passingtrolley car stoppedcine Co., Brockville, Ont. y and .. most of the passengers got off and �] rushed to the sidewalk, Aa policeman ENGLISH WOMEN came hurrying from a near -by tor- !� iL ner. 'Everyone began to tell every- one else what to do, but no one who got near enough to get his hands on Bobbie could pull him from the trap that held him. Bobbie's screams be- came more terrifying. 2.000,000 MORE JOIN TRADES DUR- Suddenly Polly darted up the street DESERTING CITIES toward home. In a few moments she INE YEAR. was flying back again with a bowl in her hand. "I can do it!" she cried. "Let me try!" Everyone was willing enough to let her try, forall the others had tried and failed. With quick movements. Polly rubbed something from the bowl all over Bobbie's neck and the back of his head, and also on the jattice- work that held him. With a few civil work and the industries of the words she stopped his sobs and strug workshops in the hands of women. glee. Then, having taken away his It has been estimated from official fear she gently worked away until, Bobbie's head slipped through and he figures that there were fully 2,000,000 himself was free again, tearful but more women in active employment on happy. March 1, 1916, than on the corres- - "Well done!" said the policeman. ponding day 12 months earlier. More - "What kind of magic have you in over, the number is increasing week that bowl?" by week. "It is grease," said Polly, holding up Every class of women, including ' the bowl. "I saw mother use it once those previously regarded as leisured to get off a tight ring, and I thought and well-to-do, are adding to the total. that if it was good for fingers it The call is reaching the remotest ham - would be good for Bobbie's head." lets as well as the quiet market towns, "So it was," said the policeman, "but and the women and girls are respond - your cool head was even better than Ing. The women are mobilizing in a the grease." great army, ready -to serve wherever When Polly led Bobbie home and they are most needed—even to the told her story, her mother said, "You hard labor of the tilling of the soil. did wrong not to watch Bobbie, as I Such changes in the national, com- told you, but I am proud that you act- merciful and industrial spheres are ed so quickly."—Youth's Companion. SO tP SHORTAGE IN AUSTRIA. Receive Better Pay and More Con- sideration by Employes in Munition Mills. Hardly less remarkable than the swift transformation of England into a powerful military nation has been the silent upheaval that has placed the naturally creating considerable read- justment of social conditions, with the result that the Young Women's Chris- tian Associatiton, Women's Unions, Big Advance in Prices of Both Toilet suffragist organizations and scores of. and Laundry Grades. women's clubs are confronted with Owing to the shortage o£ oils and many new problems in helping to care. fats the price of soap in Austria has for the thousands of women suddenly advanced enormously. Fine scented thrown into a new environment, soap now cost six or seven times as 'The Initial Difficulty much as before the war. To be dealt with has been that of Laundry soaps at the beginning of housing the workers in the munition the war cost about 3 cents a pound factories. All sorts of factories have at -wholesale, but now they are priced been requisitioned in the provincial at 16 to 19 cents. Meantime foreign towns up and down the country, soaps have been brought in, bub these calling for large drafts of workers sell for as much as 15 cents a pound, from outside. Lodgings have been though very inferior, containing only hard to find, andof course, following some 20 per cent. of fats. alt laws of supply and demand haver In the last few weeks the soap been costly, even if they could be manufacturers have found it almost found at all. Railway communica impossible to get raw material, and Hon with places at any distance have seine of the largest soap uvorits which been unsatisfactory, especially for formerly dealt only in carload lots are those on the night shifts.' Only in now glad if they can deliver a few the larger centres of population has. cases. the service of trim cars or omnibuses Acute Hearing, been of any help to those living at a distance. A number of candidates for the Thousands upon thousands of young London police force were being ex- .women and girls Were suddenly shift- antined by a doctor the other day, and ed from their familiar surroundings'in a pretty stiff examination it was, too. the larger cities to the now life in the At length it came to testing the men's country where many of the huge sense of hearing, and, said the exam- munition factories have been erected., finer: The manufacture of high explosives is "Do you see this watch?" not permitted in the vicinity of homes. "Yes." Therefore, canteens had to be .es, "Do you hear it tick?' "Certainly; quite plainly." "Stand farther back." Candidate retires three paces. "Do you hear it now?" ayes:' "Well, you most be smart, for the Perhaps the ideal conditions have watch has not been -going for a week," been reached by one famous firm en- tablished close to such works so that the women would not have to go long distances for their meals and relieve them of much fatigue and strain, A Colony for Workers. . gaged in the manufacture of cordae. Mr, ]looks—"So you rratlt to marry A colony for the workers was erected my daughter. Well, young man, what in a long'series of wooden huts, each are yc ur pros'llbcts t Young Man ---r containing some 28 two -bedded rooms.' "1';xcerleet•--if you d,5n't spoil them 0 It the centre of all is n.dining hall a perfectly equipped kitchen, al recreation room and , a small model! hospital, As soon as those pians had been approved the firm had one oft the women's organizations take up the responsibilities for them in behalf of the girls employed. Public imagination is more stirred at the idea of women's labor in shell,' fuse andexplozive making than it is over the vast Luny engaged in the! more humdrum round of business rou-1 tine, But the fact is that the women who,„is forced to work in the offices of the Government, municipalities, banks; factories and stores is much worse off than her sister in the muni- tions wole m, She reeeives less pay and very little attention is paid to her Welfare. But she is sustaining the fabric of the state to no less extent. TAX ON MATCHES NOT NEW. English Statesmen Borrowed Idea From U. S. in 1871. This is not the first time that a British Chancellor of the Exchequer has tried to raise money from bhe tax- ation of matches. The proposal was put forward by Robert Lowe (after- ward Lord Sherbrooke) in 1871. He suggested a halfpenny stamp on boxes of 100 wooden matches or less_ and a penny on boxes of 100 wax matches, or fuses, because they were "more aristocratic." He estimated that the tax would yield for the first year` 2550,000 ($2,750,000). The idea was borrowed from Ameri- ca, which at that time made £400,000 , $2000,000) a year from the tax. Mr. Lowe's reason for suggesting it was that the "costs of snatches was so inappreciable that they were wasted in a most reckless and dangerous way." He suggested as the motto for the new stamp "`Ex lute lucellum" (out of light a little profit), and he thought this more appropriate than the usual rather watery device of a "Noah's Ark." The match tax was regarded in 1871. as a frivolous measure, although it was at first favored by Parliament. A procession of tattered matchmakers to Westminster to protest against it gave the coup de grace to the meas- ure, but not before trial proofs of the duty stamp printed in a pale blue, and now become very rare, had been prepared. The stamps were to be so pasted on as to be broken by the opening of bhe match box. , INDIANS LIKE FRANCE. Many of British Expeditionary Force Will Settle There. The contact which the Indian troops have with western life, religion and customs during their stay with the British expeditionary force in France may have a far ° reaching effect on the religion and habits of the people of India. A. correspondent of the Associated Press was informed by British officers that the Indian troops were so im- pressed with the superiority of the customs observed in France that many of them were preparing to re- turn and settle there after the war. It will be comparatively few of the Indian soldiers, of course, who will come back and it is from those who remain in India that the influence on their own people is expected to eman- ate. How great a change the per- suasion of these soldiers with ad- vanced ideas will work on the people as a whole remains to be seen. .5 MEAL -TIME CONSCIENCE. What Do the Children Drink? There are times when mother or father feeds the youngsters something that they know the children should not have. Perhaps it is some rich dessert but more often it is tea or coffee. It is butter to have some delicious, hot food -drink that you can take your- self and feed to your children, con- scious that.it will help and strength- en, but never hurt them. An Eastern lady says: "F used coffee many years in spite of the con- viction that it injured my nervous sys- tem and produced my nervous head- aches." (Both tea and coffee are in- jurious to many persons, especially children, because they contain the subtle, poisonous drug, caffeine,) "While visiting a friend I was serv- ed with Postum and I determined to get a package and try it myself. The 1 result was all that could be desired— a delicious, finely flavored, richly colored beverage. Since I quit coffee, Postum has worked wonders for me. "My husband, who had suffered from kidney trouble when drinking coffee, quit the coffee and took up Postum with me and since drinking Postum he has felt stronger and bet- ter, with no indication of kidney trouble." "You may be sure I find it a great comfort to have a warm drink at meals that I can give my children, with a clear conscience that it will help and tot hurt them as tea or coffee would," Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Postum comes in two forms: • Postum Cereal—the 'original form— must be Well boiled. 150 and 25c Akita. a Inatant Postum--a soluble powder—,dissolves quickly in a cup of hot water, and, with cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage instantly. 800 and 50c tins. Both forms ure equally deliciouq and cost about the same pet cup, "There's a Reason" for Postum. --sold liy Grocers, AT FRONT, GET`] 5400000. ' Better Muscle, Betts r French Count, Serving ne Private, llaa Good News From Home. Thele !a jn France a nobleman o: strident lineage, a scholar, well vers- ed in the law, who at one time was it the French diplomatic service as an attache. I3e left the service, and living a, leisurely life in Paris and at his magnificent chateau in Brittany, exercised his knowledge of the law -- he had passed the examinations as en avocat—by assisting poorer people L . knotty law cases, When the ws' broke out he war called up as a prix ate, and was a great favorite in th ranks. Then, still holding a priv-' ate's rank, he became an interpreter with the British army. While engaged.in that work he at- tended by correspondence to the af- fairs of his estate and to the details of a long inheritance dispute in thea American courts, his wife being an American. In consequence of : strong German attack the battalion t•. which he was attached was driven from its billets and got"quarters" for some days in a field. There the Count lived in the shelter of a hedge, sleeping under a cart sheet tied to posts, While he was occupying that simple residence he received the new - that the American action was at an end and he was the richer by be- tween etween 2,000,000 and 3,000,000 francs ($400,000 or $500,000). His fortune brought oiily one little break in his life as a private. He re- ceived twenty-four hours leave at a time when leave was generolly sus- pended in older to see his wife at Calais and to sign certain important documents. Grippe Left Her Seriously Ill BUT DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS CUR- ED HER COMPLETELY. Mrs. Halquist Tells Just Why She is the Firm Friend of the Grand Cana- dian Kidney Remedy, Dodd's Kidney Pills. Bangsund, Sask., May 15th (Spe- cial).—Mrs, Pete Halquist, a well- known resident here, is a firm be- liever in Dodd's Kidney Pills, and is always ready to tell the reason why. "About a year ago," Mrs. Halquist says, "my little girl was taken ill with the grippe. She was sick in bed for three weeks with pains in the joints. They were swollen and stiff. "She had cramps in her muscles, so it was awful.hard for her to get around for the longest time. After she was able to be around her akin became harsh and came off in scales. "After using two boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills she was as well as ever she was in her life. Site has been strong and healthy ever since." The after-effects of grippe are more to be dreaded than the disease itself. That is because they generally not on weak kidneys and put then' out of working order. Sick kidneys are the cause of rheumatism, backache, dropsy and numerous other diseases. The one sure way to avoid them is to keep the kidneys toned up and able to do their work. The best way to keep the kidneys healthy is to use Dodd's Kidney Pills. WHEN TIBETAN BATHES. Soaks Himself for Hours, Removing Several Layers of Dirt. Near the ancient wall across the road at Yatung, Tibet, there are some remarkable hot springs, the water in some cases registering boiling point. Many Tibetans congregate around these springs bo bathe, and the water, which is highly charged with sulphur, is considered specially efficacious in cases of skin disease. Bathing is a simple proceeding on the part of the Tibetan. All that is considered necessary is to scoop out a depression in the deposit round any' spring, and this, filled with water, makes the bath. A tent is sometimes thrown over it, and the whole family —men, women and children sit for hours in the steaming water, and they look a different color after a prolonged immersion, the process re- moving several layers of dirt. CAPTURE WIVES IN FRANCE. British Soldiers Make Marital Alli- ances in France. Army officers along the British front say that many hundreds of Brit- ish soldiers have married French girls since the expeditionary force landed in France, and hundreds of others have become engaged, a fact not gen- erally known even in London, Somo l of the Tommies plan to take their i wives back to England, but the ma- jority have declared their intention of settling in France when the war is over. The love affairs of Tommy cause his superiors considerable arnusemeet for he knows no French, excepting the lit- tle that he has picked up since he came to France, and itis sweetheart knows no English, save what Tommy has taught her. Two hundred penitentiary prison- ers at Lansing, Kan,, attetnpted to mob "Fred" Bissell, of Topeka, sus- pected of murdering ten -year-old Edna Dinsmore, Work—the power to do things comes from food that supplies the greatest amount of strength -giving nutriment wltn L'ne least tax upon the digestive organs. Shredded Wheat Biscuit contains all the muscle -making material in the whole wheat gram— the most perfect food given to man—made digestible by steam -cooking, shredding and baking. Contains more real nutriment than meat or eggs and costs much less. Being. ready -cooked and ready -to -serve, it is the ideal Summer food. Delicious for breakfast, for luncheon or any meal with milk or cream, or with fresh fruits. Made in Canada. ACROSS THE BORDER WHAT 15 GOING ON OYER IN THE STATES... Latest happenings In Big Reliubite Condensed for Busy Readers, Boston children are to have 118 burros from Mexico to Tide in the parks. • Chicago announces that it San ac- commodate 50;000 at its bathing beaches this summer. For driving his horse while drunk, a wealthy Atlantic City man was sent to jail for thirty days. To take care of an old horse for the, rest of his life, a $14 -a -week Hoboken barber is left $62,000 by his aunt, The City Commissioners of Pas- saic, N.J.,..have passed an ordinance prohibiting bhe serving of free lunch in a saloon. The Treasury Department at Wash- ington ashington announces a $5,000 cheque from a New York resident to con- science fund. A Minneapolis hotel guest took off his hat when a lady entered the ele- vator and was savagely abused by a jealous husband. Governor McCall, of Massachusetts, vetoed the bill allowing "Billy" Sun- day unday to erect a wooden tabernacle, in violation of fire laws. Senator Knox and other prominent Republicans assailed President Wil- son at the Grant day dinner of the Americus Club in Pittsburg. Edward Dolphini, of New York, was fined $1 for "blocking traffic" while arguing about "neutrality" with a Frenchman, who disappeared. One woman was killed and 38 other passengers injured when a street car in Cincinnati, 0., jumped the track and crashed into a telegraph pole. Charles H. Mansfield, engineer of a New Haven train which killed five passengers at Bradford, was indicted at Providence, R.I., for manslaughter. After vainly calling twenty pas- tors to a Paterson pulpit, vacant two years, the congregation has succeed-) ed in getting a preacher from Iowa. Mrs. Henry James Lamar Wash- , ington, of New York, is plaintiff and defendant in a double divorce case. Her husband is a direct descendant of John Washington, brother of Am- erica's first president. Huard', Liniment O'eel by Physicians. Welcome Intruder. The man in the next flat was pound- ing on the wall. "Look here!" he cried. "I can't sleep with that kid yelling like that If you don't make him stop I will." "Come right in," said the baby's father. "You'll be as welcome as the flowers in spring." Had ship's anchor fall on my knee and leg, and knee swelled up and for six days I could not hove it or get help. I then started to use MIN ARD'S LINIMENT and two bottles cured me. PROSPER FERGUSON. Resemblance. Wife—Are my doughnuts like those your mother used to make? Hub (sampling them) ---Well the holes are just the same. Sore Granulated. Eyelids Encs inflamed by expo- Eysuieto Sun, Dust and Mid Ey relieved by Murine Yef Eye tcmedy.NoSinai sing, just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle, Murine Eye SalveiliTubes25c.FollookalIheEyerreeask Druggists orMurlac(yeRemedyes.,Chicapo A 's den. "It is called theKidsitarIbeoause that's where a girl alters her name when she gets married." explained one youngster to another, Ass for Mtnae6'd and tike no other CARRY THEIR OWN PATHS. Ingenious Devices for Soldiers pier played at Red gross Sale, • An active service exliibitioit is being held at Knightsbridge, In London, at which are displayed hundreds of in. genious-devices for the comfort, health and safety of officers and men at the front.. The money raised by the sale of these articles goes to Lunda of the Britiali l?.ed Maas and the Order of SL John of Jerusalem. Among the devices on sale Is a small safety razor that will fit easily into a waistcoat pocket, a compact hot bath cubes of "condensed heat," which will raise the temperalure of water to the proper degree, it shower bath outfit and other toilet articles. In order to enable the soldiers to write In the dark a combination pencil case and electric 'torch, to throw 11g11t ori the paper, has been invented The "nutshell canteen;' as one little case is called, contains thirtytliree assorted. drink tablets, lea, coffee, beef tea and' cordial ginger, six shields for corns, and a checkerboard. A steel body shield, light but effec- tive, also is for sale. Cases of bath � salts for disinfecting purposes are 1 displayed. A trenching tool with nu- merous uses attracts much attention. It is shorter than a man's arm, weighs less than four pounds, and will cut i wire and dig up a macadamized road. CHILDHOOD AILMENTS. The ailments of childhood are many but most of them are caused by some derangement of the stomach and bow- els. Therefore to banish these trou- bles the stomach must be kept sweet and the bowels regular. To do this nothing can equal Baby's Own Tab- lets. Thousands of mothers have proved this. Among them is Mrs Thomas Holmes, Blissfield, N.B., who writes: "Every= mother in this locality uses Baby's Own Tablets as we all consider them the very best medicine for childhood ailments." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. e. Curious Effect of Shell Fire. Shell fire produces curious effects at times, and not the least remarkable is the cross made by enemy fire over the graves of soldiers in France. It occurred between Barcy and Var- redes, where, according to the Illus- trated London News, the top of a tree was cut off by a shell. In falling the severed part of the tree was caught on a projecting branch and hung bal- anced in a horizontal position at right angles to the trunk, thus form- ing the transom of a cross. Near by are the graves of thirty soldiers• who were killed there in September, 1914. Minard's Liniment Lnmbern:an's Friend quite Different. "I thought I told you to quit using tobacco!" exclaimed the specialist. "I have quit it," replied the patient. "Then what is it that I smell on your breath?" demanded the special- ist. "Cigarettes," replied the patient. STOPS LA MEN ESe, from aBone Spavin, Ring Bone, Splint, Curb, Side Bone, or similar trouble and gets horse going sound. It acts mildly but quickly and good re- sults are lasting. Does not blister or remove the hair and horse can be worked. Page 17 in pamphlet with each bottle tells how. $2.00 a bottle delivered, Horse Book 9M free. ABSORBINE, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind reduces Painful Swellings, En- larged Glant�s,Wens, Bmuises,VaricoseVeins; heals Sores. Allays Pain. W01 tell you more if you write. $i and $2 a bottle at deafen or delivered. Liberal trlai bottle far 1oe amass. W, F. YOUNG, P.:O. F•, 516 Lymans Bldg., Montreal, Con. bbsorbloe and A1sorblee, Jr.. are mado In Canada., QUEEN'S :, f� ONIV6RSITY ill tri KINGSTON ONTARIO ARTS EDUCATION APPLIED SCIENCE Including Mining Chemical, Civil, Meeh. anion] and Electrical Engiueering. MEDICINE Danns the Wer there will be continuous sessions in Medicine. HOME STUDY The Arts Course maybe token by corre- spondence, but students desirtug to grad*. me must attend one session. SUMMER SCHOOL GEO. Y.cHoWN JULYANOAUGUST REGISTRAR Machinery For Solo Wheelock Engine, 150 H.P., 18 x42, with double main driving belt 24 ins: wide and Dynamo 30K.W. belt driven. All in first class condition, Would be sold together or separate- ly 9 a also a lot of shafting at a very great bargain as room is required irmedi.- ately. 5. Frank Wilson & Sons r73 Adelaide. Street `V t, Not That Kind. Captain—What! You want anoth- er furlough, two inside of n year?' Why, I haven't been home once in a year and a half. Tommy Atkins—That's ail right for you, sir; but me and my missus ain't that kind. Beep alinard'e Liniment in tie house No man with a poor memory has any business to become a Liar. Howell—"Do you believe in here- dity?" Powell—"I should say I did. I married the daughter of a judge, and site is alway laying clown the law to me." SEED POTATO3IS 3 EEO POTATOES, IRISH COB - biers. Deleware. Carman. Or- der at an_e. Sappy limited, Write toe quotations. H. W. Dawson. Brampton. FOA.. BAT£. ArifMIOBILE BUSINESS AND NEW Garage for sale: overland agency: lots or repairing. 1V. E. Hawes, Otter - vine, 001, 13 ECI I SrE RED HOLSTEINS, ALL ego.. Some very fine bulls. Quebec prices, it. A. Gillespie, Abbotsford, Quo. Qt EWING MACHINE SUPPLIES -16 4� Superior Needles 26e, Shuttles 75c, Bobbins 5e, Belts 200, for any Machine. Superior Supplies Co., Hamilton. Ont. HELP WANTED. B�)) \.KERS AND BAWER'S HELPER. 13 wanted, at once. Apply Canada Bread Co„ 160 Avenue Rd., Toronto. ri ADZES WANTED TO DO PLAIN 1..4 and light sewing at home. whole or spare time, good pay; n'orit sent any dis- tance, Charges paid. Send stamp .for particulars. National Manufacturing VIALE ATTENDANTS, NURSES FOR 1.71. Training School, Dining -room and Kltchen Maids *anted for Sanitarium. Apply to Superintendent - Homewood. Guelph, Ontario. NEWSPAPEES POE SALE. T>tROFIT-MAILING NEWS AND JOB 11 Offices for sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and interesting of all businesses. Full Information on application to Wilson Publishing Com- pany, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. sissetLaMCOUI. CANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC.. internal and external, cured with- out pain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co.. Limited. Oolllngwood, Ont. America's Pioneer Dog Remedies BOOK ON DOG DISEASES And How to Feed hSailed free to any address by the Anther H. CLAY GLOVER, U.S. 118 West Slst Street, Now York 1-14rrep Ft'ock Bait Est for Cattle. ,af s 4 49,,k ppi..to for TORONTO SALT WOPICS, 60 -aa Sarvis St., Toronto, Oat. DEAFNESS IS MISERY ]know beeause.I was Ooof and had Hood ' Noises for over 30 years. Afyiavisibic Anti -septic rear Drums rostered my hear- ing and stopped Head Noises, and wilido it for you. They are Tiny Iblcgaphones. f Cannot be sten when worn. Easy to put in, easy to take out. Are "Unseen Com - forte.' Inexpensive. Writofor Booklet and " any sworn statement of hots 1 rocovered mybeorinO. A. O. LEONARD Solter2S 15551h150. - - N .Y .CIW Wobevoowornslala' mems from patients cured of PIIa.Eolleir- ay, Falling Slekneos or Convulsions by a iron sompio of Dr. bora remadt, We PAY EXPRESSAGE on PHEG 1110150TTLE If you CUT OUT and HETURN THIS AO In your letter. Hun- dreds of tostimonlas on file, Sile aro and full partiaulsrs, Dr. F. HARVEY ROOF CO.Dent.A it O Sta. N, Newyork HOW I CURED V Toronto. 'Lits 7.