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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1920-5-13, Page 7MADE STRONG T QN Rich,.Red Wood Needed to Kovp -Up Their Vitality. T! growing girls are to bating well , d'Oveleped, healthy women their blood su'Tf11Y must be ogrefa1ly lemoned, "ti.liltltixers should not ignore their unset. tled moods or the verleue troubles' that tell of approaching woananhood. I1 thouid •be' emeetnutiy- borate in mind that pale, bloodiese girls need, plenty of no.ur!s1ua ant, Plenty of steam and re- gttlar p{feu=air exerekse, But it hok of appetite,, and tired, aching lhnbe "tend to Linder progress. To save the weak, itlliablooded sui'ferer she must have new, rich,., red blood and nothing moats a .case of this kind so well as DrWil- liams' Pink Pins', These pins not only enrich and increase the blood supply, they help the appetite and aid •.digestion, relieve the weary back and limbs, ,than promptly restoring health and. strength and ti'ansfortning anae- mic girls end women into cheerful, happy People, Among tho thousands who have obtained' new health and strength through the use of Dr. Wil. Barts' Pine Pills le Miss Viplet Beeth, Oleuorm, Out, Who says;—'!For a long time I was in a badly rum down condi- dem ;I was pale, breathless at the least exertion, and could hard']., do_ any homework . withoutstopPiug -to rest. I 'often had severe headaches., and my appetite Was poor and fickle, and I would get un in the fiiorning without feeling the least bit rested. I had tried several medicines,: but did not get• benefit from anything until 1 began the use of Dr. Williams'' Pink Pills. When I had taken two boxes I tpuld see ori iniprovernent, and after `'resitlg six boxes' , I.. found my health fully restored: I feel altogether dif- ferent i> ince I used the pills that I strongly ad5'ise them for all weak, run down people." If roil are weak oi' ailing to any"way, avail yourself at once of .the spindid hone .treatment • which, Dr. -Williams' Pink Pills so easily afford,. and you. will be, aiiiong those ivho rejoice in regained health. "These pills are sold by ali'dealers in medicine, or may be had by mail at 10 Mots a box or six • boxes fol' -$2:50 by writing The Dr, �tillliarns' Medicine Co„ Brockville. A Modem .loan of Arc, The Girl Scents of Roumania are nroud of sixteen -year-old Ecaternia Tecdorntu, one of their number who was killed in action "during the war. i4rltea the tear began, there were fifty thottg'aud Boy and Girl Smits in Ron - mania. At the time. the Roumanian Army was mobilized, Ecaternia put on boys' : clothes and enlisted, After go- ing through many battles else was badly'wounded. Whoa it came to the ears of the Ring that a young girl was fighting in the ranks he made her au honorary lieutenant in the Fifty -Third lath -neat. As scan as she was able • Ecaternia begged to go back to the *`-"—eesstravitsee irfew day's later she was killed in battle. "Discouraging thoughts will come. you are, not bound to retain thein. Force thein outwith a larger and bet- te1 thought. Make this declaration (and mean ;t): 'I will not yield to diseourtgoincnt.'. ' —• John Darnell White. htinird's Liniment for sate everywhere • Tbo'-orthodox Mennonites in Mani- toba end Saskatchewan plan to leave Canada -this sununer and establish a colony in the Mississippi Valley. Buy Thrift Stamps. Bailtlling illy-11>iva Shondd be'" Enforced. in molt ot our cities and towns .a building Bode exists. 1'he ostensible' 01'1 so is. the regulation of, building, prevention of fire danger to life and property, and the conservatiolz et health, it is interesting to note, from the report of the last annual meeting; 01 the Dominion Association of , T'il'e Chefs, the efforts which owe trade to evade the provision of the 'building bode and the success which attends these efforts. Many of these fire chiefs, experts in fire Prevrtion, gave their expeelences, One fire chief said: "Your muni. offal: council will sit for hours and draw up building by -lawny and, in the next 24 horn's., when they meet again the by+kaws are all cast aside. that some building may be erectedinn con- travention of the by-laws. , , , There are tote of eldormen who do not want to break those by-laws; but simply because, Mr. Smith or Mr. Jones is Ir friend .of theirs, they do it." An- other ox•chlef sails, "There was a rooming house that I did' not approve of. The aldermen even said they would not sleep In the building, but, before my time, a license had been granted, and -they said if I did net approve of it, it would bankrupt the man who built it. I pointed out that they were put- ting dollars ahead -of lives. I was then dismissed from the city for not approving of that," In interpreting the amendment to the Criminal Code passed at the laet session of Parliament, Mr. G. D. Find - *Team 'Superintendent of Insurance, speaking at the meeting of the Do- minion Fire Prevention Committee, said: "Under the first clause, any per- son upon whose premises• fire occurs is deemed to have caused the fire by negligence if he has failed to comply with any regulations' designed to pre- vent fire. Non-compliance is the proof of negligence. and this is .a question of fact to be determined by a jury. Notifloation of a breach of the law is not provided for, as every person is presumed to be familiar with the law." In view of. the experience of the fire chiefs ,above , noted, well may it be said, as expressed by Mr. W. I3. Shap - ley, Cheirman.of .the Fire -Prevention Committee, that "the change that has been . made sin the . Criminal . Code should have a good, effect if we can find ,altyoue loyal enough• to the in. terests of the Dominion to enforce the law." • A STh11E }1V EVER ' DOSE OF BABY'S OWN i ABI ETS Baby's Own Tablets are a regular joy giver to the little ones ---they never fail to matte the cross' baby happy. When baby is cross and fretful the Mother may be sure something is the matter for it is not baby's nature to be cress unless he is ailing. Mothers, if yolu' baby is cross; if he cries a Bleat deal and needs your collstant•at- tentlon day and night, give hint a dose of Baby's Own Tablets. They are a mild but thorough laxative which will quickly regdlate the bowels and stom- ach and thus relieve constipation and indigestion, colds and simple fevers and make babyhappy—there surety is a 810110 in every dose of the Tablets. Baby's Own Tablets are sold by sled!. eine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box -from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. • Expected a Denial. "So yoit broke the engagement.` What's up?" She's too conceited, I remarked one evening that she was too good for me,antl she -did pot deny it." Helps for the Mime Dressmaker 9483 , 0488 9483—LadiesSuit Dress (two styles of sleeve' slip-on blouse and two-piece skirt' with or without straps; 37 -inch or 35 -Inch length from, waistline, Price, 30 dents. In 8 sizes, 34 to. 48 ins. bust ineasure, { S£se 36 requires 4% yds, 36 or 40 ins. wide. Width around the bottom, 13's yds, A well - cut tnodel, particularly desirable for afternoon wear. 9434—Girl's Dress (with bloomers butteiied to underbody): Price, 25 cts. In 5 ;sizes, 6 to 14 yoars. Size 10 re- quires 3% yds. 36 ins. wide; contrast- ing, 0ti yd. 86 inc, wide, 9488—.Ladies' Princess: Dress (two styles of sleeve and front panel; 37 or 35 -inch length from waistline). Price, 25 cents. I 7 sizes, 84 to 46 ins, bust, Size 36 requires 3% yds, 36 ins.; con- trasting, I% yds. 36 ins: Width, 1% yds. These patterns may, 11.8 obtained from your local McCall dealer, or frond the McCall Co., 70 Bond Street, Toronto, Dept. W. .,h d Thai- a Builds/ nfi✓ star nc}j. food made GC wheat lsTsct '-sainted barley; ready -to ea*.eaaxly digested, and full of sciund nourishment ror.those who work with brain or btatwn axe is no . better brt akfaa•t �' �.utaicix Than G s ••pp6�a, r r ts r ypy ® a Sold by Grocers Mtiade by nedihtlPtotona. dlreal G y p , v n��f,, i[xIIOQYr O1tt',. • ADT•n $PA•gs P'AItTO for ,nest mom and tnedel5 of ease,0 /e4r' old, breYen' or worn-out Pols rep aped. W 4110. or• wire ub dgaes 4*, ing• •w at ell want, We carry tht larges ,'500 most 0001 1818 pt..ogk 1p Canal o.er'slt ht1Y nae. 0r new n p r and-aut4ino44l,e equ}pl opt, WO sj p 00 n It1, er a r . art N i O l Nh t grad * p a t�' ,Egoist+y or i°atuiid in rust' our tactic N1u4MY Yuto tla1vqp ♦ Pi )rl Dpyt1��r�'r 928.9a1 �rwirw3n ■b., 14:4 'to,' QE . SHAKESPEARE'S S GARDEN:REPLANTED GIFTS OF PLANTS FROM ROYAL FAMILY.- Gardeners AMILY.- Gardeners Are on Lookout For Relies of Elizabethan Period. in the trenching operations neees- sary to the laying out. of an. 010 - fashioned Elizabethan "Knott -Garden!' at, New Place, Stratford-onAvon, the walks of a .chamber or receptacle, 10 feet long by slit feet broad, have late. ly been discovered about two and one- half feet below the present level or the g'ound. That the walls are, part- ly at any slate, of Shakespeare's time seems evident from the lower part of the brickwork exhibiting the charac- teristics of Tudor times; than is, bricks, of the size, shape and quality of those days, laid in the old lfnglieh bond of alternate lines of "headers And "stretchers," with wide mortar joints, declares a writer in Theisen- don he I:on-don Times, But dividing the chamber into two is a more, modern wall, pos- sdb]y as recant as the end of the eigh- teenth century. Shakespeare's Irrigation Plant. As to what purpose this receptacle served It is difficult to arrive at •any certain conclusion, though it was probe ably originally connected; with the work of the garden. --perhaps, a gar- demnidden. Not far off is a brick well, twenty -Pour feet deep and about two ,and a half feet across', le:which fresh spring .water rises to a height of eight feet, . This, which .was discover= ed•eome few years ago, is eet•tainly of Shakespeare's time and doubtless served ,for watering . his garden, To this purpose it is now to be devoted Duce more, Apart from this receptacle, not so much of interest as might have been expected: has been brought to light by the excavations -*probably owing to the fact that the soil, for a depth of two or three feet, is all made ground, dating from a not very remote period. Neither the oyster shells nor the chicken bones which have been me earthed can reasonably be ascribed to the retired dramatist's table, not the curiously shaped clay tobacco pipes. Indeed, Shakespeare never mentions tobacco, and was probably not a smoker of it. There was discovered, however, a few days ago, the complete skeleton of . a- medium-sized animal, which some imaginative Shakespearean, when it was first uncovered, was lis posed to identify as that of the deer said to have beau poached by Shake- speare, when a youth, from the neigh- boring park of Sir Thomas Lucy of Obarlecote. The skeleton, however, when brought forth and .carefully ec c amili ed turned out to be nothing more romantic or interesting than the banes of a pig, and a ]ate eighteenth century pig at that! Archaeologists, however, are on the alert, and strict orders have beth ;given to the gar- deners carefully to examine emery bit o•f soil turned up for the smallest fragments of anything unusual. Shake- speare, we know from many allusions in his plays, _ had a thorough know- ledge end experience of the practical side of gardening—of pruning especial- ly. Should, therefore, any old prun- ing knife or other gardening tool of the Elizabethan period be unearthed we may rest assured it will be trea- sured. Contributions From Many Sources. In the wean while the stocking of the garden with oltl English piants and Rowers proceeds apace. Besides, the ,gifts from the Ring, Queen Mary, Queen Alexandraand the Prince of Wales, consignments from every part 0f the country have been and are be- ing received from the owners of every sort of garden, historic and modern, great and small. From New Gardens, also, where Shakespeare's garden is regarded as a matter of national con- cern, both valuable counsel and large contributions of plants have been re- ceived, .There have also been sub• scriptions In moue.,, Miss' Marie Corelli heading the list with a gift of £'S0, Kopp Ninard's.Lin!ment in the bode. How Maoris' Greeted the • Prince. The picturesque celebration ar- alleged by the Maori tribesmen, bee - antes of the British in. the Maori war, in honor of the Prince of Wales on the ,shores of the Rotuma lake on April 20, furnished one of the g,triking features of the prince's tour, A. thou. sand native warriors, clad only in loin clothes and armed with spears, per- formed war dances while a thousand graceful maidens in beilliant costumes did langearous dances to the accom• pairilnent of start native music, The address of welcome to the prince in the 01)01111 Mairo labguage began:' • Ye who lie in 'the dnl't.cbalnbers ot death, mine forth and hearken; .ye who- sleet) the long, last sleep, arise and stand forth to give welcome.; for 10, the first-born eon of the royal line draws near, The 51001of our lord Is welcome." Elcports of butter from the ,Com- monWea'1'bh of Australia during De- eember amounted to 3,827,800 pounds, being 81;204,264 pounds shipped from Victoria, and 128,536 pounds from South Australia. The quantity of Bed exported arnotlnted 1b 1.1,542,589 pounds, Iamb 17,01008 panicle, and tnatteti 26,708,709 pounds. buy, Thrift Stott*. �urioujl.Pottery. Tit;e use of dried fruits of trees, each „ati the gourd and, the epoot4nut, fol' Belding • water end Ifeiu£d- epb- stanoes, is familiar; but it le •not eo generally known that .cups, saucers and jars to take the place of ordinary earthenware are made In the Orient of a glutinous and plastic material en - tinny of vegetable origin, which is easily moulded and dried. There Is more tl1ala one blatant* le history blmbncony- fused withof earthvegetaande eiayfatter The'eigpulp parva of vai'loue Astringent fruits have the peculiar plastlo`•propertyof clay, and by hardening in the air,, after be. !ng moulded Into cols";, they are Pervious to water, and have tiae'ad- ditional advantage that they can fall to the ground *lteout being broken, There is a peculiar ware: • that is made by the Banjarae in the Central P'r'ovinces of Inidia from the fruit of the aoule,. Tho fruit is collected and ejrled. It is .thea boiled in water un- til quite soft and 'pounded, the stones' removed and tine pulp beaten •up and worked with the hands into a thick,, brown, sticky mass, When this Is quite reedy- the manufacturer takes an earthen • vessel—any shape that Pleases lids—and covers It all over with a thick layer or coat -of the pulp. This is thee put seine to set a bit, and when hard rude devices are stamped round the neck and shoulders, of the article, iviiIch is then, set aside to dry. When entirely hard, the gbarra inside is broken and the pieces+ removed. These vegetable pots are Bold accord- ing to size from fourto eight annas' each, and are mach sought after by the People, The maga tree is abundant through- out the forests of tropical India and Burma, and the fruits era frequently empioyed'in medicine and for tanning. Anobheit material used in making jai's fs tine root of the great asphodel. The fleshy roi7b of this, plant, by dry- ing in a sand oven and grinding, is prepared " into a flour, which. when mixed with water, yields a most tena- cious vegetable glue with srltle i the Persians' make great vessels for hold- ing o11 and clarified butter, The na- tive cobblers employ It in preference to animal glue in their work, Spanish Flu Claims Many Victims in Canada and should be guarded against.' Mar's Liniment Is a Great Preventative, being one of the oldest remedies used, Mlnard's Lini- ment has cured thousands of eases of Grippe, Bronchitis, Sore Throat, Asthma and similar diseases, It Is an Enemy to Germs. Thousands of bottles being used ,every day, for sale by art druggists apd • general dealers, MI.NARD'S LINIMENT CO., I:IMITED, Yarmouth, N.S. When 1 Have Time. When 01ye time, and all my little ones Are groins, and no longer need my care, When crowded hours no longer pass me by, And childish voices cease to thrill the. air, What bdoks I'll ,read—coy garden -plot I'll teed, What works of charity and love be mime I'll do tits things I've always toalged to do— Whem I have time. With you, my life -companion, ever dear, We will forget the turmoil and the strife. We will renew Our love, our hope; our youth, in the blest peacefulness of middle rife, And side. by side through other lands we'll stray— Will see the vision that we dreamed before, We'll wend our way to long -thought distant lands And stand upon'some far-off foreign shore, Thus shall we gather flowers for memory, Old age and loneliness need have no reads, , When all the fragrance of past thought' and deed Makes beautiful the passing of the years. Quite Necessary. "We inti% have the wedding lir '2, not 4, dearest." "But, Fred, 'i wished it at 4. Why. not?" "Your father is going to give us a check for a wedding present, isn't he?" "'Tes—but what has that to do with It?" "Why, darling, don't you know that the banks close at 3?" 11DANDERINE" PUTS .41 BEAU `Y IN HAIR, Girls! mass of long .thick, gleamy, tresses tet "Danderlile" save your hair and double its. beauty, Yore call have lotti of hong, thick, strong, lustrous hair; Don't lot it stay lifeless, thin, solttg, gly or fading, Bring back its color, vigor and vitality, Get a 15 -cant bottle of delightful "Dauderiuo" at• any drug or toilet 'mutter to treeless your scalp; oheclt (1011611W :and falling hair, Four hair reeds this stimulating 101111; thou its life, color, briglititese and'ttbundaitte Will retUra--xlurr'i. ,_: HAVE 'YOU I. AS�(/� R A/� Ito�• etl!endure'the eep1erll, oP; s rr a A a it �p w !? e1Pe least entt3 ,"dtte eo breat�ow- evembp a'strength? U1O1C xo11of 10 yonr oae9 4uteic o gaargnteoti by Cha '11180s '1"EMPLETON'S RAZ�MAR GAPSU 4Es This p restera'tionistilere. ltit0 'yyPR a0 Ingtjncietud . 'J ouma 4s n e nda have dertvedv gli I�e Oeeii pLeiaolit through Its Ilett. TeWrite ror ireo spaIng 1, Toronto. 142 Mug St. W., Toronto. Sold by reliable drug68lsta everyWborodorsl,03 g 14 0u TEM PLETON'S PNEUMATIC' CAPSULES per fifteen years the standard epeoiac 101' Obeumatlem, NeµrltIe, Gout' . Solation, Lumbago, Neuralgia amensbilany dtprs prescribe them. WHso to yon, Itote„s, 142 King 51• W., Toronto,.gr nos ample, Hold byrollnblo draljglot60Voryw0et'. for 41.21 aur rex. Raising Mink. ''Rf`the recent Pur auctions, in Mout- real, the price of mink skins. averaged $20. The better skills sold for $30 up- wards, to 375 for one very choice lot. Mink is a handsome, durable fur. It iras beets, demonstrated that minks can be kept in captivity, ,They require little space and pan be cheaply fed, provrded one erns obtain fresh fish or fresh 'neat practically aIi the time. Persons who live near the ma -coast would appear to 'be in a advantageous position for the rearing of this mal, Onoe the'difileulty of obtaining stools, which, -for purposes of domes- tication; must be taken young, has been overcome, the prospective raiser of mliiks ought to be in a fair way to success. The principal diet of minks should always be meat or fish. English spar - roe's, mice, frogs, Abbite, scraps• of butcher's meat, 8011111 or coarse fish and fish heads, maybe mentioned as examples. ofrthe sort of feed for minks. They will- also learn to eat cereals readily and they 1na.y be given well - cooked graham' •mush with mills, to- gether with ground meat or meat broth. In feeding cereals, hoefever, carne should be taken, not to cause diarrhoea. In -winter the food is best served ,warm. As to, quantity, about. 4 ounces of meat daily is sufficient for an adult. Cages may be about 4 feet by 8 feet and 16 inches ]sigh. They can be made of 1 -inch mesh, No. 16 gauge, poultry netting. These cages are to serve 'as a runway. The dens should be quite warm. A good den can be made by putbing. a box about 12 in. x 12 in:. x 12 in. inside a similar, but larger box, and packing the intervening space, with straw. The entrance should be in the form of a passage sloping down- wards towards the outside. Fine hay should be provided for the nests. The mating season is iu February and March, The young are, born in. April and May, about 4 to 6 in a lit- ter. The females, while with young should always be kept separate from the males, ` q.'SYRUP ,OF FIGS" CHILD'S LAXATIVE Look at tongues Remove poi- sons from little stomach,. liver and bowels q _cirfrev Accept "California. Syne: of Figs ouly—look. for the name Califorula ou the package, then you are sure your eulld is having the best and most harmless laxative or physio for the iittle atomach,`liver and bowels. Child. ren love its, delicious fruity taste. Full directions f r clilid's dose on each bot. lie, Give it without fear, Mother! Yon must say "Caiilorn!a," Let's Make a Song of Happiitiess. Let's maks a sopg of happiness, A simple little thing, With words that artlessly confess • The love tom which they spring. Let's slake a song of happiness And sing it on our way, Each weird a lingering caress e(nd kind as' flowers in May. There are so many in distress, With hearts. cast clown and sail; Let's sing a song of happiness And make them wen and glad. Ernest I3. A, home: Mleerd's Liniment used by Physicians, Trials of the Aspieta. Mrs. Stuart Menzie tells a. story of a cleric, famed alike as a hard rider to hounds and a profotmil scholar, who Was arranging to perform a christen.• Ing ceremo. • Owing to nytate ..mother's faulty pro- nuticlatien of the aspirate he could,not y slake eat whether the name was to be Anna or Barnett, so he asked bier. quietly: "Slow do yon spelt it?!' To this tate mother, ' in au entbar- rassed 004 confidential whisper, re- plied: "Well, I ain't no scholar neither, sit," She was evidently Surprised at his "ignorance," ravel Ills asking her how to spoils ISSUE NO, 20 '200y J.n the Spring.,, I'd lap to know what gets inotda a feller in the spring! `!'here's spnietllinr breaks away in flim lin' digs Like everything 'Woes hint i sated the crocuses a' stru3Glln' toward the light, l'1he way bunt scaled ia' pushed 'em • up 7einitl5bed lne a dight Of Uioss .41119al' 'Minn inside o' me a•trjt'in',to get out; It hinder fools ljlee gladness, an' you thinkyou want t0 Slrout, Butyou when i think it over, it's sad things you're glad about! It's great todee the ilowere bud, an' leaves come en the trees, But you know you can't ctfve' be nor , do such things as these! , it's lots' of fun to count the robins oomin' one by one,.. An' watch the time grow l'on'ger for the,sett]n' oaf the sun; But it sorter manes you stoicism when you wonder 'bout it all, The tiowevs:that died and bloom again, alta die again next font. An' to know you're most important, tblottgh you're weak, an' poor an' small, MONEY ORDERS. A Dominion Express Money Order for five dollars casts three conte, A Real Surprise, Where are you gobs', ma?" asked the youngest of five children, going to a surprise party, my dear," answered the mother. "Are we all gain', too?" "No, dear, you weren't Invited." After a few moments' deep thought: "Say, 1051, then don't you think they'd be Iets more aurprised if you did take us all?„ Ask for Minard's and take no other. Birds of Passage. Mistress: "flow do you do? So good of you to conte!" The New Cook: "Don't mintion it. Sure, I'm its fond ay a wake-ind fu the counthry as tinny one," Do not think to inherit ease with money; ha who keeps money earns it, COARSE: SALT LAND SALT Bulk Carlots TORONTO SALT WORKS 0, J. CLiFF TORONTO esaseanitzeserrareawensatecuse f.� Ten 'ear 5'- b s 't H H a 1'+'s If deposited at3%a willamountto 3607.781; If invested at 4%, interest com- pounded quarterly, will amount to 3744,28 But if invested in our 5%a% Debentures will amount to3860,20 Write for Booklet• The Great West Permanent Loan Company.i' Toronto Office 20 King St. Wesal attgisi mfli ® A Dyspepsia Cure 0. o M. D. advises : "Persons who m9 e suffer from severe indigestion � a and constipation can cure thetas. t?? w selves by taking fifteen to thirtydrops of Extract of Roots e pa o after each meal and at bedtime. m, ® This remedy is known as Mother 9 5 5e"18c1's Curative Syrup ie the drug e 4) trade." Get the genubas. 50c.13 o) and $1.00 Bottles. r e (o p1 aro^a.%atm 0.r, a WO ..C. tw,ar<oh or Classified Advertisal'nentlr, �r A-4818� 1vAN'nth(1 0O ''AO' r5r.m. t #a of light sen'fng at home, whole oe epin'e,tlyy5P; good pay, Worst gent any dis- tance, charges ,vajd,' 'destd stamp for paritoulars, National .lyinnufa,8tyrti;a S o•, 3f'114tteat. 1'1i1r'latLrarltiti,... , , 5-. 1- 7.'ID f I1NS' GONIPI,F.,c;!.I9 inASli.l'7,J.,I'/,NIi W 1 pay iron. QeorICP StevPnu Peterhprough, Ontario, Von 54Lis ELL 1C • Y, ` 7G21rtn RED tot W$1'APorij i Y and .tab p110o of plant ,G lla Wienys .sO'etarlo, ' Irtqurange carried i1,s00, Wlu[ W tion1'4611011M0 '(Co., •Ltd, Toro'Donto. `I, ... SOPp EZS4. W6NTED, O15T ELM 'WANTED, a IN. AIM ttelol5ier, until'you oaordee. eato w1115 us, Iceenan •Ursa, LiolIb'e[i, o:so ort, Tltr0.0ELL6N4opO... ' ... Wi'1-Nersit, TUMORS, LUMMPS, - MX. 1pternal and eacternal, oared wlthou� Win b'y our home treatment. Write us Wore too. late DA Belimese VodkaCa.. limited, 0ollinprwood, Ont WANTED Bright girl for general. hottso work. Good home. Goo¢ wages, MRS. ANDREWS, 118 Wehner Rd., Toronto ,Amtrtea'u Moneta. Deg Eon:males • Boort 021 DOG DISEASES and sSow to• cad Mailed ]tree to, any Ad- dress by the Author, ar: play Glover Ca., laic, 118 West 31st Street New York, 1.1.8,A. SINCE 1610 %'r' 11 3601481ACOU87117,9 The Beauty „rl of The Lily can be yours. its wonderfully pure, soft, pearly white ap• pearance,free from an blemishes, will be coin- , parable to the perfect beauty of your skin and complextonif you will use Wash Out Your Pores With Caa1acura Soap And have a clear, sweet, healthy skin with little trouble and trifling expense. Con. tr t this nimble wholesome treatment with tiresome inassaging and other fads. On retiring smear the face with Caticura Ointment on the enol of the finger, wash off in five minutes with Cutictera Soap and hot water, using plenty of soap, best av- ailed with the Hands which at softens, andcontinuebnthingafewmoments. Rinse With tepid water and dry gently. Soap 25a, Ointment 211 anti tide. Soil throughouttheDominion. C nndianDepoh L enana, Limited, St. Paul St., Montreal. • Catletvo 5oep ehevoa withouts,ug. , a e .eat Hauling Safte .easy o Imperial Eureka Harness 011 , penetrates the pores of the leather --- snakes it weather proof. Unlike vegetable oils, it will not become rancid. Is prevents drying and cracking .and keeps , straps and traces pliable and strong. Imparts a rich, black, lasting finish and. makes harness look like new. 'Imperial licit Axle Grease —is the most widely used axle lub- ricant on the market. Its mica flakes work their way into the pores of the axle, making it smooth and frictionless. Imperial Mica Axle Grease lubricates thoroughly under thMak. emtadssteareniueoutso cadl.ic- duces the strain on harness and horses IMPERIIAL" MADE IN CANADA" PRODUCTS ONLY TABLETS MARK -3 "BAYER" NI ASPRIN Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross" 1. 'alto 'mune "]layer" identifies the eonettind preper directions for Cip1de+i only gonntno Acprin,—the Aspirin t readaolto, Toothache; 7 araelio, Nen. prescribedbyphysielane for overniuo. rates, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Neurl- teoh yoars and now made hi Canada, tie, Joint Pains, and Pain generally. Always buy an unbroken package Tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but of "Bayer Tabiets,ef Aspirin" which a feW cents, Larger "Bayer" packages. 116are is only 621e Asp1et*—.1$ayeaP"'•'-''roat angst aas' "ltioyox" .Aspirin is the trade merit roais'ored In Canada) of ltay0r Manufacture of Mese.aoatloaolaoator of snlioyliesei . Whilo it is aOil known that Aspirin Mains150805 lnanutaethro, to 000141 the $0 nirOknat !foliations, the Ta111o05 of, sayer 00501103 *III Ni stamped wtih Allow densrall treats mark, the �' 8Ytr 0(418" !