HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1919-5-15, Page 4PAGE 4
Rod and Gun
13oonycastel,e Dale, the well known
naturalist is .the author of a splendid
article entitled "The Dropping Oak
?nice" in Rod and Gun for May, This
wllolesorue cudao.r magazine l isreplete
with stories articles and special de-
n
partments dealing with Canadian wild
^life and natcu'e, "Just Mallards" is the
enticing title of the cover page painting
''y+ F, V, Williams, It depicts a pair of
Mallards winging along to await pro,
/acted cover and should quicken the
pulse of every lover of wild game. Two
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thrilliag naive stories that ApPear in
this issue are,, "01 Bight Sonar" by
Keever 11, Broadus and "An Adven-
ture In The Dark" by A. E. Jay, The
first of an interesting series on con-
servation is contained in all excellent
article by J. A, 13ellei5le, lnspeetor
General of Fisheries And Caine in the
Province of Quebec. The high stand-
ard of the Fishing and Quns and Am-
munition Departments Is fully main-
tained *11 this interesting number
which is 110W 011 sale, Rod an Gun
is published by W. J. 'Paylor, Limited
Woodstock, Ont;
Sere t Get
<40
E wax -wrapped
sealed Pa ge
with WR7GLEY9S
u POD it is a guar-
antee of quality.
The largest chewing-
, gum factories in the
world -the largest
selling gum in the
world: that is what.
WRIGLEY'S means.
SEALED TIGHT
KEPT RIGHTI
Made In
Canada
47
The Flavour Lasts!
IMPROVED UNI1r0%M 1NTRRNATIONAL
1 CII0
r ''11
47
.Y �,j
1. ,�
(By IROV. 14,. t3. I l'1'Zv, ATl:rt, D. D„
Teacher or lengllah sone h1 The moody
Bible Institute cf C0l'ego.)
(0o071'I0t, 1000, lq WI stoouu OrW*Pellei' I`alan,)
LESSON Ftl;fi MAY 13.'
THE GRA(:13 OF GOD.
I.I0680ZV T7 n f9:- 1 pCxalul a 2:4-101
Titus 111-14,
GOLDAIN TEXT -We ' helleve that
ihrothgll the [Jere or the- Lord Jesus
Christ we shall b rare V i c, en as 1(300.
-Acts 1611.
ADDITIONAL 51 vrl r;tar Gonesia
0:
T; 0 Cor- i.:a John L"r 1. 1 Col. 0:10;
,James 4:6; 1 l'etsr 1.11, 2 Peel 5:35,
Greco 11101110 uu,nrri10d 111v0i', Cod's
grace means his nduoss 1"u'nr11 us
trough Jesus '('li'(sI, (l:ph, 2:7.)
Gods mercy dues not go (i nt 10 Wen be.
cause they urs g,:od blit because Ire
is good anti desires to bestow that
goodness upon lust anti ruined 100 11.
meter to midge 111001 good.
The Grace of God in Salvation
(laph. 2 :4-10.)
Grace brings snlvnlinn; it does not
send 1t. Jesus ('twist, who Is the e1u•
bodement of God's love and grace,
cause bringing salvation with hila. In
order to nppl'ehenfl what the grace of
Goll has done, observe:
1. Maiee natural state (Epi. 2:1-3).
In the natural man Is found all that is
opposed to the will and purpose of
God. (1) Dead in trespasses and
sins (v. 1.), The supreme need of the
dead man is life, therefore he must
ha(•e life from without himself. The
characteristic of one who is dead is
that he Is (a) without sensation -
"past feeling," (4:10.) The natural
mall, therefore, can neither love God
nor hate sin until he is made alive.
(b) Without motion, Activity is the
demonstration of llfe.e,So far as God
and holiness are concerned they are
motionless, They are as helpless as
Lazarus was In the grave. (2) Under
the control of fleshly and worldly lusts
(v, 2). The carnal nature Bolds sway
over their Jives, (3) Under the.domi-
nation of Satan (v. 2),,.All. unregen-
erate men and women are_,ruled by Sa-
tan. Since he Is the god of. this 'age
(2 Cor, 4:4), the prince of this world
(Joke 12:31), all who have not been
freed by Christ are under thee.rule of
Satan, (4) Under the condemnation
and wrath' of God (v11 3). Over: all
these -death, worldliness, dlsobedl-
once, lest of the flesh -hangs, the
wrath and condemnation of God.
2. Man's -state by ;grace (2:4-10).
(1) He is alive In Christ (v.,5). The
Holy Spirit lays hold. upon men dead
In sin :and quickensthem' into life,
(2) Raised up with Christ (v.' 6).
God's'grace not only makes lost men
alive but,raises them up 'with Christ.
(3) Association with Christ in glory
(v. 6).. Christ's incarnations has so
Identified himself with the raoe that
those who are saved are raised up to
be -with Christ and shall ultimately
share,his glory. The nctnating prin-
ciple of God which moved him to thus
THE CLINTON NEW ERA
THURSDAY, MAY 45th
01)' Sold upon los( men le Ms rove
Man's tori due en ro
lar h s salvo 1 1 » tl 1
(y, 4).A y
to 00'8 greet). Net only the snlvatien
•1
has been provided In grace bar t the
faith which appropriates it le Gad'$
'gift (v. 8). Works as grounds of Sal-
vation are absolutely excluded,
(4) The purpose 0f 00d in the Salva-
mo10),t i. to
tion of n (vv. 7, (a) l s .
display his g'rnco in the coming ages.
The demonstration to the inhabitants
of the spheres In which sin has not
entered, In the ages to come, will be
the tvans1ormntlon of dead and lost
men and their exaltation with Christ.
(h) To glortfy God through their good
works ''(v 10: cf. Matt. 6;10). While
good Works have absolutely no part in
the salvation islet
+ i n of Gotlspurpose in
]
saving .them •was that they might do
good works,
Ii. The Grace of God in Right Lly-
ing (Titus 2;1144)..
Banca Is not only 7Y essential to sal
ration but essential to right living, It
teaches saved men (1) to deny ungod-
liness (v. 12). The saved man bas
the divine nature. The grace which
has saved him teaches him the neees-
'4, of a dental or everytlline that is
opposed to God, 1 (2) .Worldly lusts
(v. 12). The redeemed man Is sur-
rounded .with the things of the world
which have a downward pull upon
11101. The grace of God teaches him
to renounce them. (3) Sober living
(v. 1.2), The grace of 000 teaches
the saved men self-control; to have
the reins of Ills nature well in com-
mand and to rule with a strong hand.
(4) Rigbteous living (v. 12), The
grace of God teaches the saved man
to live uprightly with reference to
those about hila, (5) Godly living
(v. 12). It teaches hhn to so live in
this present world es to enable him
to meet Cod nud abide in his fellow-
ship. (0) rt teaches the right mo-
tive in living (vv. 13, 14). The blessed
hope of the glorious return of the
Lord Jesus Christ is the grand Incen-
tive to holy living -in Itis present
world, Ile that has it will keep him-
self pure. (I John 3:3.)
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"I Am So Afraid it is My Heart
ERY many people live in constant
dread of heart trouble when the
heart is in no way diseased.
There is perhaps no organ in the hu-
man system. which is worked so hard and
yet the heart seldom goes wrong so long
as it is supplied with plenty of rich, red
blood.
In fad the heart repairs its own waste
and plods on, lifting tons of blood each
year and pumping it through the body.
But the heart's action is the result of
' the contraction and expansion of muscles
and these muscles are operated by the
nervous system. When the blood gets
thin and watery and the nervous system
of the heart, just like
action
ry
ed
the
1d
starved
that of the stomach) bowels and other
organs, is slowed down.
r
Asa result you are easily tired out,
experience shortness of breath, palpita-
tion tion of the heart and general, bodily weak
ness.
'he gtalekest and maatl rational way to
99
A
overcome this condition is by the use of
Dr. Chase's Nerve Food to enrich the blood
and build up the exhausted nerves.
With the nerves in a run-down condi-
tion you are sure to get downhearted and
discouraged and to imagine that all sorts
of dreadful things ire likely to happen to
you.
But when you have been using the
Nerve Food for a week or two you will be-
gin to see the silver lining to the cloud
and to realize that you are on the way to
health, courage and happiness.
Mrs. Nellie Aertinger, Slmcoe, Ont,, writes: "I
was a great sufferer with my nerves and with
pains -about the heart, I could not sleep at
nights and though t tried several doctors Could
not get much relief, A friend advised the use of
Dr, (ItoN
st a Nerve Mood and 1 am happy to
say
1• Mhealth has
the,:wait@ �,Ve been a surprise, 3,:[
boon bunt up wonderfully. I have 0more volae
about the heart, my nerves are steady and I sleep
and rest wei1."
Dr. Chase's Nerve Food, 50e a box, 6
for $2.75, all dealers or Bdmanson, Bates
& Co., Ltd., Toronto. The portrait and..
signature of A W. Chase, liLD., the fain -
ons Receipt Book author', are en every box.
1
Greatest of All Heroes.
The greatest of all heroes- is One-
,vhomwe do not name here! Let sa-
cred silence meditate flint sacred mat-
ter; you will find it the ultimate per-
fection of a p;•blciple extant through-
out marl's whole history on earth.-
€arlylo.
Christian :Life.
The problem of the Christian life
fluidly is simplified to this -man has
but to preserve •the right attitude:
To abide In' Christ, to be In poslHon,
that ie a11. -Henry Drummond.'
THE BEST MEDICINE
FOR LITTLE ONES
Thousands of mothers state posi-
tively that Baby's Own Tablets Fare
the best medicine they know of for
little ones, Their expediences has
taught tical that the Tablets always
'do just what is claimed for them and
that they can be given with perfect
safety to children of all ages• Con-
cerning them Mrs. 'Joseph Therrien,
St. Gabriel de Brandon. Que., t0rftes:
"Baby's Own Tablets are the best
medicine I know of for little ones. I
thought 1 would lose my baby before
trying the 'Tablets, but they soon
made him healthy and happy and
now 1 would not be without them•"
The Tablets are .sold by medtchne
c
dealers or byz
moil at 25cents a box
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co', Brockville, Ont,
a•
* 41 * it a * :r % i4 ,)
OF INTEREST TO WOMEN
and Za'm•Buk will soon talco the
pain out of a scald or burn,
,Mrs. Albert Smart 01 219 Nor -
bison Aye„ Winnipeg, writes;
" 1 upset a pan of 'boiling water
over my aria and foot, As I was
wearing slipper's lay toot was badly
tic -aided, The immediately ain shugetse and
blister
almost,
.
formed, coveringtLe top of my
foot,
sly husband got some pp Sam -
lo
once. T1
applied
it at e
and a d
]auk
:'.]sof was really Wonderful, Very
noon. the buratug''pain was ended
rvlrl the inflammation drawn out,
and continued applleatiens
cora-
p•e,clYhealed scald,"
7.,um-73uk i; also best for eczema,
ulcers, bad legs, blood -poisoning and
stiles. All dealers, 60o, box,
A course in patriotic training work
for teachers is to be given atthe
summer school session of the Penn-
sylvannla School of Industrial. Art in
doI•operaition wltfb the National Se-(
curity League.
A Victory Committee of the Emer-
gency Aid has just been formed. Mrs.
Walter Thompson, chairman, with the
object of combating German propag-
anda. Each member will be prepared
with •facts and statistics to refute Hut
falsehoods.
ECZEMA SPREAD
OVER ENTIRE BODY.
thoroughly, dr'ain, t1100 'sty on Ice to
crisp. Put into ,t salad howl, cb
est
with salt, pepper, 011 and 10100)
juice
or vinegar and garnish with a..eouple
of hard-bolle(t eggs cut i11 quarters,
Dandelion and Sorrel Greens,
Wash thoroughly, but keep sepa-
rate, as the dandelions need longer
er
cooking Mian the sorrel. Put the
dandelion first into the saucepan of
boiling water, stew until tender, add
the sorrel and simmer until .the liquor
disappears and the leaves are tender.
Drain, pressing out all moisture Beat
with a wooden spoon, season liberally
with butter, salt 10(1 pepper awl serve
hot with a garnish of hard-boiled egg
or frbecl bread points.
e
Dandelion and nd Cr ss Salad. l
Take equal parts of young dande-
lion leaves and watercress, wash, chill
and serve with French dressing.
No rest night or'day forthose afflicted
with that terrible skin disease, eczema,
or, as it is often called, salt rheum. With
its unbearable burning, itching, tortur-
e ing day and night, relief is gladly wel-
comed. •
It is a blessing that there is such -a
reliable remedy as Burdock Blood Bitters
to relieve the sufferer from the continual
tort= and who can get no relief from
their misery.
Apply it externally and it takes out
the fire and itch and aids in the healing
process. Take it internally and ft puri-
fies•the blood of all those poisons whr'oh
Jiro the source of skin eruptions.
Mr, Andrew Bowen, highland Grove,
Ont., writes: -"I must say 'that BSrrdook
Bloed Bitters is a wonderful preparation.
I had a very bad ease of eczema which
spread almost over my entire body: I
tried doctors, home treatments and many
other patent medicines, but with .no
results. A friend advised me to try
B.B.B., and after taking five•bottles,:I
am thankful to say they cured me core
letel
p B.B is manufactured only by The
T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
• • r * * * * * * * *
i of the
er StarCommittee
The Service e Comn
Emergency Aid has Just supplied
nearly five hundred comfort kits at
less than 24 hours' notice, to the men
Who were burned at the naval base at
Sewell's Point, N. J•
Ward has come from abroad that
hospital pajamas made by AYnerican
women have been of the utmost ser-
vice in replacing gas -infected cloth-
ing at the 97 Red Cross bath stations
already established in France.-
-- oil--
manu-
facturing
One of the g st
facturing companies in the U. S. em-
ploys girls in computing and making
g
electrical measurements and transmis-
sion tests, drafting and on follow-up
work on jobs placed in the Model Shop.
Great success is attending the open-
ing of sewing rooms or ouvroirs, for
Italian women refugees and the poor
women of soldier& families that are
conducted by American Red Cross units
in Rome,
The spacious lawns of England's
great country estates are being al-
lowed
llowed to go to hay and the grass crop
surrounding the American Red Cross
hospital in Devonshire is harvested by
the resident nurses, supervised by Miss
Drummond, the matron. '
--MO--
The thousand of women and girls
employed in the War . Department,
Washington, are to be instructed in
military and "setting -up" drills for
stealth •couservatiorl by Miss Susanna
Cocroft, of Chicago.
Because of the steady increase in
the price of women's ready-made, gar -
Meths there has been a corresponding
increas, ai the number of women wino
are taking ,the dressmaking courses
provided by some of the retail depart-
ment stores,
--Os---
The army nurses who travel with
the mobile hospitals near the fring
line are each provided with a kit of
a field officer and camp where night
happens to find their.
The Woinau's Service League of
Philadelphia will Conduct classes in oc•
cupational therapeutics in which about
40 women will be inst10810d iii handl-
Crafts, so that. they may teach con-
valescent soldiers in the government
hospitals,
--•t- -
The "first American woman soldier"
is said to 11e Sergeant Ruth Fertfattt, of
the Royal Serbian Ar[tiy, She 1s nota+'
lit this country on a lecture tour,
DANDELIONS ARE A
SPRING DAINTY
They are Truly a Dish fora Connoig.
OLEOMARGARINE
A NEW PRODUCT
WOrr
NERVES
ADE STROM
Not Discovered Until 1870 -Its Use
Grown by Leaps and Bounds.
While olenhargarbne is comparatively
a new food product, not having been
discovered until 9870, its use has
grown by leaps and bounds until it is
estimated at the present'- time the
world'•s annual consumption amounts t0
from 9,500,000,000 to 2,000,000,000
pounds.
Ever since its introduction its
manufacture and sale has been seai-
nusly hampered on the western hem-
isphere by legislative restrictions, de-
signed ostensibly to protect the pub-
lic against fraud because the pro-
duct was made so good it could not
be told from butter in some cases, but
in reality ,to give the butter industry
the monopoly on the busien55 of fur-
nishing a spread for bread. The very
fact the sale of eleomargarine has
increased in the face of these diffi-
culties is proof of its merit and the
fact that it is an economic necessity.
seur - Here are some good ways of
Preparing Them,
We used to think that only the
foreigners who took walks into the
suburban sections on Sunday after-
noons appreciated the delicacies of
dandelions. Nowa win first
Nowadays, owing,
to the efforts of a f w connoisseurs iii
salads and greens and, second, to last
year's government campaign in food
thrift a good many more of us know
the dandelion than used io.
It is still usually necessary to gather
wild dandelions when we want them,
for only a few market gardeners culti-
vate vote then). But the dandelion i s 1
not
shy and illusive like some other wild
dainties. Anybody can get dandelions
for dinner from his own front lawn -
r, t least, almost anybody. . And,0f
course, if you dig up the dandelions
from the lawn you have done just that
much to improve your grass. Re-
member when pulling dandelions that
only the dandelion root should be pu•11-
ed, not the grass around it. Moreover
the root should all be pulled up, if you
are thinking of the results to .the lawn
as well as trying to get enough of the
greens.youp
if simply I break off tate
r
o4s several crowns !nay take the
place of one. • Dandelions should be
gathered
when they are very Yoma
S
,
before the first blossoms have appear-
ed, if possible.
Dandelion greens, even more than
spinach, should be very carefully wash-
ed. They grow so near the ground that
they are almost sure to be full of grit
and earth, 'rhey should be put through
several pans of water, lifted out of each
one so that the dirt which has settled
in 1110 bottom, of the pan will not get
back on the leaves. 041 no account
should the water be poured off the
greens. For the same reason the greens
when cooked should be lifted out of the
water and not poured out through a
strainer. Of course, none of the grit
should remain in the greens by the
time they go in the pot, but, never-
the less, some sometimes aoes,
The most common way of using dan-
delions is as a potherb or greens. As
with most green vegetables, It is a
mistake to cook them more than is
needed to make them tender. If they
are boiled with one-eighth teaspoon
(level) of cooking soda to each quart
of greens used, they *III keep their
color better. Young dandelions may
also be used uncooked as salad, a cgs-
tom less common in this country than
in Europe, where the tender plants
are sometimes blanched like aspara-
gus. If more dandelions are available
than can be used while they ere fresh
they may be preserved for future use.
They may •be canned by the method
used by the Canning clubs for spinach
or they may be put down la salt ac-
cording to a household Method. In
litany homes it is a 00111111ott practice
t
oreserve- dandelion p d on greens with salt
fit stone crocks, putting !n first a layer
of greets, then a layer of salt, then
more greeds and so on until the crock
is filled. The dandelions are then
covered with a Close -fitting plate or
board, on which a Weight (a clean
plead of Marbie or a stone) is placed
to keep tate greens packed solid
I3y Lydia E. PPnkhaIrres
Vegetable Compound.
Winona, Minn.-"MI sutered for more
than ayear from nervousness, and was
so bad 1 could not
rest at night--
would lie awake and
got so nervous )
would have to get
up and walk around
morning
andthe mo m
ing
would be a11 tired
out. I read about
Lydia B, Pinkham's
Vegetable Com-
pound and•thoughtT would try f k
y My
nervousness poo n
left me. I sleep
well and feel fine in the moryning and
m -
mend Lydia to do ywork. IE. Pinkham's
a Vegetable
Compound to make weak nerves
strop ."--Mrs. ALnnItT SOOLTZl7, 608
Olmstead St. Winona, Minn.
How often do we hear the expression
among women, "I am so nervous, I can-
not sleep, ' or "it seems as though I
should fly." Such women should profit
by Mrs. Sultze's experience and give
this famous root and herb remedy, .
Lydia L. Pinkham's Vegetable Com-
pound, a trial.
For forty years it has been overcom-
ing such serious conditions as displace -
?tents, inflammation, ulceration, irreg-
ularities, periodic pains, backache, diz-
ziness, and nervous prostration of
women, and is now considered the stan-
dard remedy for such ailments,
its inenl!es no longer raise any ques-
tion as to its purity and wholesome-
ness. The factories in which it is pro-
duced 'are models of cleanliness and
sanitation, :and the manufacturing
process is handled under the super-
vision of government inspectors are churned together to form en -
government
whose business it is to see the factory 1011111510❑ which ]s crystal4ized by con -
premises and utensils are kept clean tact with ice ulster -then salted and
and the processes of Nlaunfacture aro worked the saute way as butter is salt -
sanitary and that only wholesome and rad and worked.
suitable materials are used.
The materials are eleo•oil ( an oil
pressed from choice beef fats), neu-
tral (a somewhat similar product
made from the leaf fat of the pig,)
vegetable oil (either cotton seed or
peanut oil relined to a salad quality),
and milk products (comprising milk,
cream and sometimes butter aeecrd-
ing to the grade of eleomargarine
produced.) Each of these materials in
some form or other is in use in every
household every day, and no question
is raised regarding it wholesolne-
ness or food value. Surely they are
as wholesome and as good food when
combined as when separate, They
ST E GT
THE
9
R
W RK
DEPENDS U'PON GOOD BLOOD TQ NOURISH THE BODY
Weak People Need a Tonle, One Which Acts Directly
Upon the Blood and that does not Weaken
The Body by Useless Purging
There are thousands of people
throughout Canada who are without
ambition or strength to do their days's
work, and who are always tired out,
have but- little appetite and a poor
digestion. They cannot get a re-
freshing night's sleep and are sub-
ject to headaches, backaches and ner-
vousness, because their blood is im-
pure. To men and woolen in this
condition Dr, Williams' Pink Pills
give quick relief and permanent cure
because of their direct action on the
blood, which they build up to its nor-
ntai strength. As the blood becomes
rich and red it strengthens the mus-
cles, tones ap the nerves, makes the
stomach capable of digesting food,
and repairs the wastes caused by
ate caused ate intense pain and some
days 1 did not touch a thing bet a
cup of cold water, and even that dis-
tressed me. As a result f was very
!
much run down, and slept so poorly
Y
that ! dreaded night coshing on, I
was continually taking medicine, but
was actuality growing woase instead
of better, Having often read the
cures made by Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills 1 finally decided to give them a
trial. 1 have had great cause to bless
this decision, for by the time I had
used a couple of boxes there was no
doubt the pills were helping mels and
inless time than 1 had anticipated
ated
the pills had cured me, and 1 was a-
gain enjoying not only good digestion,
but better heath in every way than be -
worry or work. in a word, the use of fore•" ALWAYS FEELS FIT.
Dr• Williams' Pink Pills means res-
toration to perfect health.The wonderful success of Dr. Will -
BLOOD TURNED TO WATER !lams' Pink Pills is due to the fact
that they go right to the root of the
Miss Jessie McLean, Trenton, N. S., disease in the blood and by making
says "l was a5 weak as it w'as pas- the vital (laid rich and red strength
sibie for any one to be and •yet be oat every organ and every nerve, thus
able to go about. My blood seemed driving out disease and pain, and
to have turned almost to water,
would
was pate the !east exertion itoar
leave Inc breathless, and when 1
went up stairs to stop
p
I wool
and rest on the way 1 often had
severe headaches, and at times IT '
heart would palpitate alarmingly
making
weak
despondent
peoplele
bright, -tthe and strong. Mr. W.
T
Johnson, one of the best known and
most highly
esteemed ment l
Lunen -
burg County, N. S•, says: -"1 am a
Provincial Land Surveyor, and am
exposed the greater part of the year
ood friend urged me to try Dr. Wil- to very hard work travelling through
lams' Pink Pills and 1 have reason
to be grateful that 1 took the advice,
Soon after beginning the use of the
Pills I began to get stronger, and by
the time 1 had taken seven boxes I
felt that i was again enloying good
health, I think Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills are a blessing to weak girls and
1 shall 'always, warmly recommend
them,"
RHEUMATIC PAINS
The sufferer from rheumatism who
experiments with outward appltCa-
tions is only wasting valuable time
and good money in depending upon
such treatment the trouble still re-
mains, and is all the time beconTtng
more firmly rooted -harder to cure
Mien the proper treatment is appli-
ed. ed• Treat this disease through
blood and you will soon get 00 of the
pains and tortures. As :t care for
rheumatism Dr, Williams' Plnk Pills
are unequalled, They act directly 011
the impure, weak blood; they purify
and strengthen it, and so root out the
cause of rheumatism. Mr. D. Lewis
postmaster a1 Escuutinac, N. 13•, says
"1 was attacked with rheumatism,
which settled in my elbow, shotilder
and knee joints, and 01)inles caused
ale great suffesing. 'i'ihe trouble was
particularly severe last spring, and I
decided to try Dr, Williams Pink
Pills- After taking the Pills for some
therheumatic pains d stiff
the forests by day and camping out
by night and I find the only thing
that will keep me up to the mark 15
Dr, Williams' Pink Pills, When 1
leave home for a trip In the woods I
ant as interested in having my supply
of pills as provisions, and on such oc-
casions 1 take them regularly, The
result is 1 ant always lit. I never
take cold, and can digest all kinds of
food such ars we have to put up with
hastily cooked in the woods. Having
proved the value of Dr, Williams'
Pink Pills as a tonic and healdh
builder 1 ant never without* thein and
I lose no opportunity in recommend.
Ing them to weak people 1 meet•"
SKIN TROUBLE CURED
Mrs. W Ritchie, Parkbeg, Sask.,
says: -"Two years 'ago 1 was attack-
ed with eczema on my hands. I tried
almost everything that was advised,
but as the trouble was growing worse
1 consulted a doctor and took his
treatment for some time with too bet-
ter results By this time my hands
were a mass of sores and 1 began to
despair of finding a euro. A friend
strongly advised 01e to try Dr. Wft-
]iams Pink Pills, and 1 decided to do
so. After using two boxes I could
see an improvement and 1 got a fur.
Hier supply. 1 used altogether eight
boxes, by which time every trace of
the amnia had disappeared and. there
m O nt of the
has been not a stogie sy pto
time r canto 1¢ a ns au
cess in 5118 joints disappeared and 1 1 trouble since that time. 1 gladly re-'
commend Dr. Witlialtns Pink Pills for
not to
have t ,) d
irottbles 0f this kind."
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills should be
kept In every home and their occa.
sional use will keep the blood pure
and ward of illness. Yost can get
these pills through - any inedleine
t any return of the (rota.
bee."
A GOOD DIGESTION
Mrs- Witham Dale, Midland, Oal•,
says: -"I suffered for a long time
from a severe form of indigestion
Dandelion Salad, and had doctored so touch wfthoit deafer or by nail at 50e a box or stili
,tees . benefit that I lead, all but given up boxes for ,62,50 from The Dr -Wil,
Select the tenderest leaves, wash benefit
of getting better, Everything 1 Hams' Medicine Co, Brockville, Ont,
0