HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1916-9-7, Page 7f
Betty Opens the Door.
The Winn family had been spending
the day at Cousin John's, and it was
latewhen they reached home, Seven-
year-old Betty was so drowsy from
the long drive that she thought she
was dreaming when she heard father
say something about a lost key. But
presently she waked up wide, to find
that they were all balking about the
key and wondering what was to be
done,
"The other doors ,ue all locked on
the inside," said mother. "What shall
we do?"
Father looked very much worried;
he declared thab he ought to have a
good whipping for losing the key.
After a while Aunt Ellen thought
of something. "I don't believe the
little pantry window is fastened)" she
said, "It's so small that we never
bother about it."
• "And so small," added' Henry, Bet-
. ty's older brothel, "that I can't get
in,"
"We must get in somehow," said
mother again. "It is far too late to
think of going back to Cousin John's!'
"Let's have a look at the pantry
window, anyhow," father said gloom-
ily. `Maybe by pushing and shov-
ing we can get ••'aul through."
So they tramped roundto the back
veranda.
There was the little window, loop-
ing like a small wide-open eye; but
everyone had to laugh at the idea of
twelve-ybar-old Paul's getting through
it.
"We shall have to cut him in two."
said father. "There's no other way."
Betby had been growing drowsy
again, but now she straightened up.
"I'm more'n half as ung as Paul," she
cried, "but I b'lieve I can do it! Let
me try!"
Mother and Aunt Ellen looked
doubtful, bub father picked her up,
laughing. "Why, sure enough!". he
said. "Sometimes the smallest arti-
cles are the most useful."
Father held her under one arm
while he lifted the sash. As Betby
peered across the sill her heart sank
a little. It did look pretty dark and
gloomy inside; but she would nob back
down now—and besides, who could
open the doors if she failed?
"One—two—three!" counted father,
swinging her backward and forward.
"Now!"
At the last word he swung her over
the sill, and Betty felt herself dangl-
ing for a_ moment in space. The next
second she gave a quick gasp. A
thick dust was everywhere; her eyes,
nose and . ears were full of it, and
there was a queer, dusty taste in her
mouth. Spluttering, coughing and
sneezing, Betty suddenly realized
what had happened. She had landed
feet foremost in the flour barrel! Of
course she had stirred up atremend-
ous dust, for flour is almost as light
as smoke, and the barrel was half full.
"Father!" she cried, sneezing hard.
"Henry!" But the others had all gone
hurrying roand to the front door, and
no one answered.
She shook the dust out of her eyes
and clambered over the edge of the
barrel, holding by the window sill and
moving carefully. But alas for all
her care! The first foot out mistook
the edge of a keg for the floor, the
barrel tilted, there was a lurch and a
crash, and Betty was sprawling in a
sticky puddle.
She scrambled slowly to her feet.
"I'm gummed from top to toe," she
said. "I'm just a ball of stickness
all over, but it's my own fault. I
forgot to cover up the barrel and the
molasses keg when Aunt Ellen told
me."
She hung her head as the front door
knob turned between her dripping
fingers.
It was now the family's turn to
gasp. "Upon my word!" cried fath-
er. "What's this thing?" He held
her up at arm's length.
They could not help laughing, no
matter how bad Betty felt. "She
looks like a ginger cake," said Paul,
"or else an Indian in war paint."
Mother reached out and took her
little daughter, flour, molasses and all,
She was indeed a funny sight, all
powdery white and sticky brown, with
her face in splotches. Her voice
trembled a little as she bold the story.
"I left off the tope," she finished, put-
ting her queer -looking head down on
mother's shoulder.
"Never mind," two or three voices
said i'ogether. "You opened the door.
If it hadn't been for you we couldn't
have got in,"—Youth's 'Companion.
STUPENDOUS SURNAMES.
Those Recorded In Many Old Docu-
ments Are Grotesque,
The hearers of spine of the sur-
names which appear in the mediaeval
documents mast have been glad of eu
extuso to change tltohn, says the Lon-
don Chronicle, Apparently Ibis was
done, for tine more grotesque have
either vanished or been modified out
of recognition, Among the former are
such names as Alice Thsundsrsstep-
doglhtrc, Mazelhta Stahwourchman,
Froth esanceia bel Conntynglhcuse,
Godisman Attcstretesende, and Thom-
as Wrangwishe, willed certainly have
no claimants .nowadays,
Many surnames derived from trade
or service have been contracted, such
as Lo l.iudraper into Draper, Le Cou-
hirdc into Coward, Le Chapelayn into
Chaplin, alhrl Le Gresueneer (grosvo-
000r) into Grosvenor.
Gat a reputation for only rising
end y. es may sleep all day.
AN ANXIOUS TIME
SDR ALL PARENTS
Children Often Seeln to Fine
Away and Ordinary Medicine
Does Not Help Them.
The health of children between the
ages of twelve and eighteen years,
particularly in the case of girls, is a
source of serious worry to nearly
every mother. Tho growth and de-
velopment takes eo much of their
strength that in many eases they
actually seem to be going into a de-
cline. The appetite is fickle, bright-
ness gives way to depression, there
are headaches, fits of dizziness, pal-
pitation of the heart at the least ex-
ertion, and sometimes fainting. The
blood has become thin and watery apd
the sufferer must have something that
will bring back the blood to its normal
condition, At this stage no other medi-
cine can equal Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills. Their whole mission is to make
new, rich blood, which reaches every
part of the body, bringing back
health, strength and energy. Miss
Helena Taylor, West Toronto, says:
"Two years ago I was so badly run
down with anaemia "that some of my
friends did not believe I would ,get
better. I could not go upstairs with-
out stopping to rest, suffered from
headaches,, loss of appetite, and for
two months of the time was confined
to the house. I was under the care
of a doctor, but the medicine I took
did not help me in the least. A friend
advised my mother to give me Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills, and although I
did not expect they would help me
after the doctor'§ piedieine had fail-
ed, I thought they' might be worth
trying. After taking two boxes
there was such a marked change for
the better that people asked me if I
had changed doctors, and I readily
told them the medicine that was help-
ing rap. I continued taking the pills
until I had used eight boxes, when my
health was fully restored, and I have
since enjoyed the best of health. I
hope my experience may be the means
of convincing some sickly person that
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can restore
them to health."
You can get these pills through any
dealer in medicine, or by mail, post
paid, at 50 cents a box or six boxes
for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
KEEP ON THE SUNNY SIDE.
Pick Out a Gleam of Light From the
Dare Paths.
Since we all have more or less mis-
fortune to meet, let us strive to meet
it in the right way. Why sit down
; and bewail the ill luck that is ours?
Why turn our sorrow over and over
in our minds, seeing in it ever new
phases of misfortune? No! Let us
stand up beneath its weight, no mat-
ter how heavy the load may seem,
and, with our eyes fixed on the glim-
mer of light, let us walk swiftly out
of the dark paths into the sunlight.
Once we have learned to walk on
the sunny side of life, darkness will
have no further terrors for us, for we
will carry our sunshine around with
us in the depths of our hearts. The
sunshine of the mind is far warmer
and brighter than the sunshine which
we see and feel with our physical
senses.
Once we have gained the true sense
of real mental sunshine we will have
the means to pull ourselves out of
every slough of despond without any
outside aid. For just as Bunyan's
"Pilgrim's Progress" was mental, so
it is with all of our journeys through
life. What we really accomplish must
first be worked out in mind.
Learning to pick out the gleam of
light from the dark path, learning
how to avoid the sloughs of despond
and how to walk in the sunshine is
not easy, but even the attempt at
learning these lessons brings its re-
ward of happiness and peace. Eery
little effort in the right direction
brings such beautiful returns that
the only wonder is that so few of us
make the effort.
Star of a Feather.
"Some stars are so far away that
the light from them hasn't reached
ug yet. But ib will_arrive eventual -
"Reminds me of my hired man com-
ing from the post office," commented
Farmer Heck.
The Manufacturers' Building at the
Canadian National Exhibition has
72,500 square feet of exhibit space
and the Annex 73,000 square feet.
The man" who always does! his best
at least has the satisfaction of know-
ing that he doesn't owe his failure bo
carelessness. •
Glasgow bread and pastry bakers
have had their wages increased be
$11.56 a week.
&To `" AGE BATTERIES
Magnetos
Starters Generator
REPAIRS "
made promptly
Canadian Storage k3attery
Co,, Limited.
Willard Apnea,
1.17.119 S1dil00E 9T„ TORONTO
e4.
THE CULTURED
ARE THE BRAVEST
YEARS OF REFINEMENT BRING
COURAGE.
Abbe Moreaux' Believes War De-
veloped All Latent Fortitude
of Race.
The discussion of courage as de-
veloped by the war and as manifest -
ea by individual soldiers under fire
has drawn some interesting contribu-
tions from Dr. Charles Richet of the
French Institute and the Abbe . Mo-
reaux, director of the Bourges Ob-
servatory,
Dr. Richet is of the opinion that
fear and courage must be considered
separately; that the former exists in
certain temperaments .alongside the
latter; that a man may be unable to
control the terrifying effect of a dan-
gerous situation upon his physical
faculties and yet stand his ground in
the face of almost certain death
through the exercise of his will.
These men he considers the bravest
of all.
Among the soldiers who hold their
ground under murderous fire there
are always some who are afraid and
others who are not, says Dr. Richet,
but all prove their bravery by still
being there; the cowards have fled.
Considering the whole war, taking
into account the atrocious features
that have developed here and there
with all allowance made for occasion-
al weaknesses, Dr. Richet considers
that the soldiers have shown heroism
that justifies a great deal of pride on
the part of the present generation, in
spite of the belief that seemed to
prevail before the great conflict that
intellectual development, with pro-
gress in science, letters and arts,
while ennobling the mind, had dimin-
ished personal courage.
Most Refined Are Bravest.
The question was frequently dis-
cussed as to whether the delicate and
subtle culture of later years was not
going to produce a tame spirited and
effeminate generation, preferring well
being to arduous effort and incapable
of comprehending the beauty of sacri-
fice. It is exactly the contrary that
has been demonstrated, according to
Dr. Richet; the most cultivated and
refined of the young men of France
and Great Britain having been those
who have shown the greatest brav-
ery. Students of the Sorbonne and
other French universities, students of
Eton, Oxford and Cambridge set the
example.
These are the men, Dr. Richet says,
who have shown most courage in its
simplest form; that is to say, by su-
preme contempt for death, and that
contempt, he concludes, is not the re-
sult of philosophical reflection, but
is simply the spontaneous manifesta-
tions of inherent bravery.
Never, even among the heroes of
antiquity, in the times of Leonidas,
Spartacus, or Hannibal, according to
Dr. Richet, was there shown so much
of this kind of abnegation and so
much tranquil self-sacrifice—supreme
courage—as in the present conflict.
As to the men who are naturally
brave and take supreme risks with-
out requiring -an effort of the will to
overcome fear, Dr. Richet gives dif-
ferent reasons, the first of which is
that some of them do not believe in
danger; they imagine that they are
invulnerable—that they have a lucky
star; they are surrounded by a sort of
optimistic fatality that gives them a
feeling of security. In others cases
these naturally brave men, even when
they believe in danger, ar not intimi-
dated by it because they have in their
own minds already made the sacri-
fice of their life; once that conclusion
reached—to die or to be wounded is
something that does not torment
them.
Other Impelling Influences.
Others, and perhaps the great ma-
jority, are neither those that are in-
different to death nor those who be-
lieve in their lucky star; they are
men who see before them other more
powerful images than that of death,
such as the fatherland, sense of duty,
of honor, renown of the regiment, am-
bition to earn praise or promotion,
pride at being admired by one's Com-
rades, and shame at being taken for
a coward.
In nearly all these cases the idea of
death and danger disappear and the
soldier is brave without effort. He
forgets every frisk that he is taking
in the presence of the image that he
has in his mind.
The number of these naturally
brave men is notably larger in day-
light and in the presence of com-
manding officers and comrades than
at night on sentry duty or on solitary
mission that no witness will be able
to recount. Men who acquit them-
selves on such missions without
flinehing Dr. Richet considers the
bravest of all.
Habit Overcomes Fear.
In the constant habit of it all no-
tion of danger filially disappears, as
in the case of aviators, most of whom
the first time they are up in the air
have a sensation of fear in epite of
all reasoning. Aftei a certain num-
ber o .ascensions the Ordeal mani-
estatrons of apprehension disappear;
to be supported In the air by the
speed oe the motor seems to them to
be the sine lest thing possible, and
certain plilote have declared that they
felt themselves in greater safety
seated in their agroplanos in the air
thea when riding in an automobile.
M E .CILEAN
NO STICKINESS
ALL D£ALCRS
G.C.Briggs & Sons
HAMILTON
The hardened warriors of African
campaigns, habituated to all the risk§
of war, were naturally more stolid
under fire than young recruits who
had seen nothing of military life but
the barracks and the manoeuvres, and
yet according tb' the Abbe &Iorreaux
even those seasoned men in presence
of the new and formidable dangers
of scientific warfare showed no more
fortitude than the young recruits who
had had only a few months of prepar-
ation before facing the enemy,
Abbe Moreaux is of the opinion
that the war itself has developed all
the latent fortitude of the race, and
he expects that the generation that
has suffered this war will find itself
with new resources created by it.
The sentiment of union of common in-
terest and patriotism will have been
reawakened, he thinks, and many a
pusillanimous creature both in the
army and out of it will have a new'
courage born of the virtue that makes'
heroes. The entire nation, he thinks,
will participate in this reawakening
of latent forces.
BRITAIN'S ENEMY ALIENS.
How the Government Handles the
Many Gases.
Whipping the enemy in the field of,,
battle and sinking his Ships on the sea
constitute, of course, the main problem
of a war ; but there is another part
about going to war that is almost as
intricate and vexatious and as hard'
in its own way to deal with. It con-
cerns spies and aliens—the capture
of the spy and the control of the aliens.
For a considerable period thousands
had full liberty, except reporting now
and then at police stations. The Bri-
tish Government now interns, unless
some very good reason for not doing
so is shown, all enemy aliens of mili-
tary age, and some others.
Every German in Great Britain was
considered a spy until proved other-
wise. And probably every German
was a spy, in the sense that if he had
the opportunity of obtaining and then
transmitting information to his Gov-
ernment, he would do so. Those who
were spies were arrested and tried ;
a dozen or so have been shot in the
Tower. of London. Those who have
been suspected but not proved to have
been spies have usually been sent into
Internment camps, out of harm's way,
and where their spying propensities
have no outlet. The task of combing
out the "bad 'uns" has been enormous.
There is no telling how many inves-
tigetions the pollee have had to make
—it runs into the hundreds of thous-
ands.
Not a rumor goes unheeded by Scot-
land Yard. Every report against any
person, whether It comes from a news-
boy, maid servant or householder, is
Investigated. It is astonishing how
many people have been accused of es-
pionage in this view. Conversations
in the privacy -of homes have been re-
peated by patriotic servants. A Scot-
land Yard man furnishes the next
chapter.
Foreigners have learned to be very
careful in what they say and where
they say it. Every Britisher enjoys
the privilege of roasting his own gov-
erninent ; but let a foreigner do it
and if any ons overhears there is like-
ly to follow a denouncement at Scot-
land Yard.
"The Yard" never overlooks a thing.
Every report thus received, whither it
seems important or not, is investiga-
ted.
Of the Large number of people placed
under arrest on suspicion probably one
per cent., according to information an
expert has given, are found guilty.
Many of these have done nothing seri-
ous that can be proved against them,
and are chucked into internment
camps. A very small number oom-1
pared to the total of arrests have been
found guilty after 'trial.
Under the defense of the realm act
Everybody needs it --
stored for emergency in a
well-developed, . well - pre-
served, well-nourished body
and brain.
Grape -Nuts food stands
preeminent as a builder of
this kind of energy. It is
made of the entire nutri-
ment of whole wheat and
barley, two of the richest
sources of food strength,
Grape -Nuts .also includes the
vital mineral elements of the
grasp, so much emphasized in
these days of investigation of
real food values,
Crisp, ready to eat, easy to
digest, wonderfully nourishing
and deliefous.
"There's a Reason"
for 0ilrape= Nuts
Canadian Partum Cereal Co„ Ltd..
Windsor, Ont.
eeterieeiesv
FOR
EDWlu'O
AND
RECiEATIGI
"SOLD BY ALL GOOD 51102 DEAISRS
WORN BY f"/v.Ry mascara of nit sAf71cY
�eH+n-.®i{hY-l�Cr..NAY.'J'!:':vrPnlN`u :6jYL.ie-���
-Ontario •V lorillary CollgE
Under the Control of the Depart-
ment of Agrioulturo of Ontario
ESTABLISHED 19132
Affiliated with the Univer-
sity of Toronto.
College will re -open on Monday,
the 2nd of October, 1910.
110 Uaiveroity Ave., Toronto, Can.
CALENDAR 010 APPLICATION
E. A. A. Rage, L$., ?Ls., Pgacipal
the authorities can deport any alien,.
and are not obliged to give any reason
for it. Take vessels en route from
New York to Holland, for instance.
They touch at Falmouth, and are
boarded by British examining officers.
They are in British territorial waters,
and thus under British jurisdiction.
The ship is gone over in most
thorough fashion. Sometimes it takes
several days. Eveey passenger is in-
vestigated. The ship is searched for
spies and for contraband. Little of
value goes by.
It was one of these investigations
that led to the capture of Franz von
Rintelin, one of the most famous of
German agents.
Itainerd'a Liniment Lumberman's Priond
Making Sure Of It.
Towne—My wife used to get ner-
vous every time she heard a noise
downstairs, but I assured her that
it couldn't be burglars, because they're
always careful not to make any noise.
Browne—So that calmed herr ,eh?
Towne=Not much. Now she gets
nervous every time she doesn't hear
any noise,
SOreGranulated Eyelids,
Eyes inflamed by ex p
ti -
sure to Sun; Dust and Wind i
��quicklyrelievedbyMurIne
�% Eye Remedy. No Smarting,
Y lust Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggist's 50cper Bottle. MurineEys
Salve inTubes25c. ForBook CIlheEyCFreeask
Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co„Cblca;i
Didn't Have To.
"Web, thank Heaven,” he said, ap-
proaching a sad -looking man who sat
back in a corner, "that's over with."
"What is?"
"I've danced with the hostess. Have
you gone through with it yet?"
"No; I don't need to. I'm the
host."
Lek for Mieard'e and take no other
It All Depends.
"Say, paw, whab's a 'captain of in-
dustry'?"
"It is a term that the head of a
grinding monopoly applies to himself,
my son."
"It's a term the dear public applies
bo the same man."
Lachute, Que., 25th Sept., 1908.
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen,, — Ever since coming
home from the Boer war I have been
bothered with running fever sores on
my legs. I tried many salves and
liniments; also doctored continuously
for the blood, but got no permanent
relief, till last winter when my mo-
ther got me to try MINARD'S LINI-
MENT. The effect of which was al-
most magical. Two bottles com-
pletely cured me and I have worked
every working day since.
Yours gratefully,
JOHN WALSH.
Prepared For It.
Belle—Marie married a genius.
Millie—You don't mean it?
Belle—Yes, buts she has talent and
can support him.
The Canadian National Exhibition
pays an annual surplus to the City of
Toronto of $25,000 to $60,000. Last
year the dividend was $45,000.
WHITE OAK VALUABLE.
Used for Many Purposes, and Valu-
able as Mahogany.
The white oak has served for more
useful purposes that perhaps any
other tree, and its wood to -day is
worth as mach as mahogany, Says
"Outing." Furniture of "solid oak" is
now a rarity, for the wond nos become
so expensive that it is used in the
form of a veneer over baser woods.
So used it loses none of its beauty,
and even the thtu veneer resists wear
for an incredibly long tirno,
This wood was a useful one to. the
early agriculturalists as well as to
those of tihe present day. It was
durable when exposed to the ole.
monis, and was also durable in con-
tact with the soil. It was and Is still
used in retiring, and 100111 of the sec-
ond growth white Dalt timber in Amyl -
ea is being rut for railroad cross
lies., Ties of this timber bring the
highest price, and some of the larger
roads will accept nothing else.
KAMLOOPS AND IRRIGATION.``.
The Leading In/and City of British
Columbia.'
The Western Canada irrigation As-
sociation held its Tenth Annual Con-
vention at the City of Kamloops the
last weak in July, The picturesque
little city takes its name from the
Indian equivalent "Meeting of the
Waters," where the sun Shines every
day and good fellowship, health and
happiness radiate from all, and opens
wide in hospitality its doors to you;
Away back over a hundred years ago
the North West Fur Trading Co.,
with keen appreciation of the advant-
ages of the location, established a
post on the present site of Kamloops
—the junction of the now called
North and South Thompson Rivera.
Its excellent water communications;
its central position in a wide open
stretch of splendid grazing country
and its healthy, growing climate, at-
tracted Indians and traders from all
parts, and soon the little trading -
post grew in importance and popula-
tion. Seventy-five years afterwards
the Canadian Pacific Railway thrust
its steel rails through the main street
of the aspiring little community, and
it was but an endorsement of the
opinion of the old trading company,
that Kamloops was indeed, "The
Place in the Sun."
There are irrefutable reasons why
Kamloops claims the distinction of
being the leading inland city of the
Province of British Columbia. Its
geographical position marks it as
serving a very large area; 250 miles
from Vancouver, 890 miles from Cal-
gary and 540 from Edmonton, it sees
no possible rival. With a population
of some 5,000, it points with pardon-
able pride to its splendid streets and
pavements, to its modern electric
lights, power, water and telephone
systems, and to its uninterrupted
steady progress. With abundance of
water, continuous bright sunshine and
undisputed soil -fertility, it contains
all the attributes necessary to future
commercial and agricultural develop-
ments.
YOUR BLOOD CAN'T RUN COLD.
Will Not Do So as Long as You Are
Alive and Well.
"My blood runs cold at the very
thought" is not a novel expression.
You often either hear some one else
say it or aver it yourself.
Your blood cannot "run cold" as long
as you are alive and well. If the blood
really becomes cooler than "blood
heat" something serious happens to
your health.
When you feel cold it is a sensation,
not necessarily the temperature of the
tissues. Often with the blood feverish,
or way above its normal warmth you 1
feel chilly. So much of the super-
heated blood is then at the surface of;
the skin that an extra normal amount
of heat leaves too quickly.
On the other band, men and women
who drink beer, gin, whisky, and
similar alcoholic beverages "feel the
glow of warmth" and believe they are
hot when as a matter of course their
blood is a trifle below blood -heat tem-
perature—at tinges manifestly a dan-
gerous thing.
True enough the blood has a lot to
do with how you feel. This, however,
is not because "it blows hot or blows
cold," but because that part of it in
the skin where the sensations of heat
and cold are located reflects the out-
side surroundings according to the pre-
vious experience and habits of each
individual's skin.
If a stoker and an employee of a re-
frigerator plant are put in a cold
draught or before an open grate fire
each will feel chilly or hot according
to his previous experience and habits.
The stoker will "catch cold" in the
"draught" which will have no effect
whatsoever upon the man used to cold
storage temperatures.
Seep Lilnerd'a Liniment 111 the house
NEW MODEL SALOON.
British . Government Opens One at
Carlisle, Eng.
Carlisle, Eng., is very proud of be-
ing the city selected to pioneer this
movement, and already the Gretna
is drawing a large clientele. Six pub-
lic houses here were closed in conse-
quence of the war and the necessity
arose to find a suitable substitute.
The new saloon is more than a
mere bar and lounge. The building
is a fine stone structure in a promi-
nent thoroughfare, and resembles
neither the German beer hall nor the
British public house,
The invasion of the neighborhood
by the creation of a colossal muni-
tions factory in the neighborhood of
Carlisle was the origin of the idea of
a kind of workman's club saloon. The
rural beer lixuses were too small and
too local for the class of people who
had come into the locality. So the
Control Board took over several of
these rural inns, and have made a
single building of them, with kitchens,
dining -rooms, library and cinema
shows.
Forests cover one-sixth of the en-
tire surface of Switzerland.
Your "Get -Away"
.Power 11 Summer is low.
Summer brings mental and
physical , lassitude. The
spirit is languid, the liver is
lazy. Nature is trying to
unload the toxins that come
from heavy foods and lack
of outdoor exercise. Help
Nature to restore natural
vigor and vizn. Get an eight-
cylinder stamina by eating
Shredded Wheat Biscuit
with fresh fruits and green
vegetables. Cut out meat
and potatoes -- eat these
delicious, nourishing little
loaves of baked whole wheat
and be cool, contented and
happy. For breakfast with
milli or cream; for luncheon
with berries or other fruits.
Made in Canada
Perfectly Calm.
Angler (in deep water)—"Help i.
Help! I can't swim!"
Country gentleman (on shore)—"I•
can't neither, but I ain't hollerin'
about ib,"
Canadian National Exhibition at-
tendance record: 1909, 752,000; 1910,
837,000; 1911, 926,000; 1912, 962,000;
1913, 1,009,000; 1914, 762,000, 1915,
864,000.
rd.nard'a Liniment 0790 be Physician*
Height of Heels.
"I'm afraid those Louis XV. heels
are much too high fur me. Perhaps
you have some lower ones—say about
Louis X. would do, I think."
SEED.POTATOES
6�! EED POTATOES, IRISH COB -
biers, Deleware. Carman, Order
et once, Supply limited. Write for quo-
tations. H. W. Dawson, Brampton.
ARTICLES FOR SALE.
misRLSIiERAoEN'S SUCTION HOSE,
Canvas Covered. 21" at 45 gents.
Endless Stitched Canvas Belting,7", 4
Ply, at 24 cents. N. Smith, 13York
St.,, Toronto.
FOR SALT,.
et 00D 100 -ACRE FARM. HURON
1.71- County. Morris Township. Must
sell. For particulars write
F. S. SCOTT, Brussels Ont.
NEWSPAPERS roc. SALE
J)ROFIT-AIAICING NEWS _ AND SOB
Offices for sale in good Ontario
towns. The moat oeefur and interesting
of all busineoses. Full information on
application to wllson Pnbltehing Com-
pany, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto.
MISCELLANEOUS
+NCER. TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC.
Internal and external. cured with.
out ,,ppain by our .home treatment Wrtb
05 851015 too later Dr, Bauman MedloaS
Co., Limited, Collingwood, Out
America's
Pioneer H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc.
Bog Remedies 11S West 31st Street, New York
KOOK ON
DOG DISEASES
And How to Feed
Sculled 5000 toAuth0117or address by
10 15 20
Years from now the Bissell
Silo will be giving gond
service. It is built of sel-
ected timber, treated with
wood preserratives, that
prevent decay. It has
Strong. rigid walls, air-
tight doors, and hoops of
]heavy steel.
Therefore it lasts, simp-
ly because it can't very
Well do anything else. Our
folder explains mare fully
write ilipt. U. i,�;h;
T. E. BISSELL CO., LTD..�.�
mom, Ontario.
will reduce inflamed, swollen
Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft
Bunches; Heels Boils, Poll
Evil, Quittor, Fistula and
infected sores quickly
RS it is a positive antiseptic
and germicide. Pleasant to
vac- does not blister or remove
the halt, and you can work the Some.
$2.00 per bottle, delivered
Book 7 Al free.
ABSORBINIt, JR., the antiseptic liniment for mankind.
reduces Painful. Swollen Veins, Wens. Stralno, aruhett
clops pain aid Inflammation. Price 81.00 per bottle at
dealers or delivered. 'Mu tell yon more If you write.
Moat Trial name for ter In stamps.
5.
F. 80558, P. 0,1„ 510 Lyme Bldg,, Montreal, Can.
Moraine and Absorblot, Jr.. are made la Canada,''
m
k C r Far Sa'
Wheelock Engine, 150
11.P., 18 x42, with double
main driving belt 24 ins.
wide,'and 'Dynamo 30 K. W.
blit driven. All In first
class conlltion. Would be
sold together orscp Irate.
ly; also a lot of shafting
at a very great bargain as
room is required i.rnznedi•
ately.
t e' Frank VJUso D & 8ons
73 Adelaide Street West,
'rarer to.
1'.1 4. ISSUE 35—'1G.