HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1916-07-06, Page 7A WOMAN'SHEALTH
NEEDS CONSTANT CARE
When the Blood' Becomes Poor
Disease Speedily Follows
Every woman's health is peculiarly.
dependent upon the condition of her
blood. How -many womea suffer with
headache, pain in_the back, poor appe-
tite, weak digestion, a constant feeling'
of weariness, palpitation of the heart,
shortness of breath, pallor and ner-
vousnes.Of course till these symp-
toms may not be present—the more
there are the 'worse the condition of
the blood, and the more necessity that
you should begin to enrich it without
delay. :Dr. Williams Pink Pills are be
yond doubt the. greatest blood -building
tonic offered to the public today.
Every 'dose helps make new, rich
red blood, which goes to every part of
the body and. brings new health and-
strength
ndstrength to' weak; despondent people.
Dr. Williams Pink Pills are valuable
.to all women, but -they are particularly
usefel to girls. of"school age:who be-
come pale, languid and nervous. Thin
blood during the grin -Wing years of -a
girl's life uscually means a fiat -chested
hollow -checked womanhood. ,There
call be neither health nor beauty With-
:. out red blood, which gives:brightness
to the eyes and color to the cheeks and
lips. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills do all
this, as -is proved in'thousands of
'Cases. Mrs. With Rowe, Carlaw Ave.,
Toronto, says :—'r I have received so
much benefit from Dr, Williams' Pink
Pills that I feel it my duty to reborn-
,.mend them to others. I was about
completely prostrated with anaemia.
I heel no appetite, was terribly' weak
and. subject to fainting spells. I suf-
fered greatly from dizziness, and the
various other symptoms that accomp-
any a bloodless condition. Remedy af-
ter remedy was tried, but to no avail
until a friend advised me to try Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills. Before corn-
pleting the second box, I was again
enjoying splendid health, and have
since remained in that happy condi-
tion."
You can get Dr. Williams' Pink,
Pills through any medicine dealer' or
by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes
for $2.50 from The Dr, Williams Medi.
erne Co., Brockville, Ont.
GRATITUDE OF A HUN.
Prisoner's Testimony of -His Splendid
Treatment in 'England.
No greater contrast to the letters
which come from Germany from our
heroes imprisoned there can be
imagined than the following letter
addressed by a German prisoner in
England to his "Dear M—, my dear
children and my dear mother" in Ger-
many, says the London Sketch,
"I have hitherto not been, treated
as a prisoner," he writes, "but hake
received nothing but love and care
,nen for my wounds.
"Everything is done for me to re-.
Neve my pains; in fact, everything
that can be done for a wounded man.
"Therefore, my dear ones; respect
our enemies, -
"I always had a great dread of.
falling into English hands, but now
that fate has overcome me I have
learned better, aiid I see no trace of
anything but tender love on the part
of my former enemies.
"1 have a splendid dinner every
day, plenty of meat rind potatoes,
beautifully cooked.
"They give one almost too much,
but for the sake of good Manners I
eat till it is all finished,
"Tea does not snit me, so coffee is
specially prepared for me. Could a
wounded prisoner ask for anything
better?
"Do you, therefore show nothing
but kindness towards out wounded
enemies, particularly Englishmen."
Deceiving Them.
A submarine commander, has but
one means of g' judgh the speed of
the vessel to be attacked -by noting
the size of the bow wave thrown up
by the intended victim. The correct-
ness of the estimate means either a
hit or a Mies. To deceive the sub-
marine in this manner ]British ship
owners have devised the clever ruse of
painting' a huge bow wave on the
sides of a ship, renderineeit extreme.
ly difficult for the underwater craft
to judge the speed accurately.
For
Pure\Goodness
.
and delicious, snappy flav-
our no other :food -drink
equals
POSTU
Mali; of wheat and a bit
of wholesome molasses, it
has rich color, aroma and
taste, yet contains - no
harmful elements.
This Ilot, table drink is
ideal for,children and,;parti-
cula.rly satisfying' to all
with. Whom' tea or coffee
disagrees.
Postum comes .in two
forms : The original_,
Postum ' Cereal requires
boiling; Instant Po -stun,
is made in the cup instant -y
l,', by adding boiling water.
For a good time at table
and better health all
'round, 'Pos'tunl tells" its
own,tory.
"There's a reason"
Sold by Grocers everywhere.
Canadian Possum Cereal -Co.; rite,,
Windsor, Ont.
BRITONS • LIVING
• BETTER THAN EVER
THERE IS NO 'SHORTAGE OF
FOOD OR CLOTHING.
Economist Contends Wage Increases
More Than Equal Higher
Costs.
The working population of Great
Britain has not suffered from the high
prices of food, clothing and other ne-
cessities, because in almost all cases
their wages have been increased pro-
pottionately, and even more than pro-
portiohately, to the rise in commodi-
ties, according to Prof. W. J. Ashley,
dean of the faculty of commerce in the
University of Birmingham, in an
article in the London Times,
' Prof. Ashley, who is a prominent
English economist, says that with the
exception of certain persons with fix-
ed incomes such as annuities, pelt-
sions, or soldiers' wives with large
families to care for on Government
allowances, the people of Great Brit-
ain are now able to save money and
to live far more comfortably than in
the days before the war.
Pref. Ashley's article follows:
The cost of living in this country
has gone up ,ity rather More than one-
third since the war began. Yet the
great mass of the people, so far from
suffering from deprivation, has never
been so prosperous, never so well
fed. The rise inaiving expenses has
not been due to restzigtion of supply;
it has been due chiefly to the fact that
the people have been able and willing
to pay high prices.
An important immediate cause has
been the rise of freights, but these
freights could not have gone on being
paid had there not continued to be an
effective demand. The proof of all
this is not difficult.,,,
Food Goes Up One-half.
As to cost of living, the increase in
the retail,cost of food of the working
classes is reckoned by the Board of
Trade as about 50 per cent. Thin is
on the supposition that they made no
change in their marketing.
As a fact they have to some extent
lessened the pressure by resorting to
cheaper but equally wholesome sub-
stitutes. And food is not the only
Rein to be considered. There is cloth-
ing, which has not advanced in price
to anything like the same extent;
there is rent, and here an incipient
rise was checked by legislation, and
there is fuel, Combining all these
elements in their proper proportion,
we reach some 85 per cent, as a reas-
onable estimate of the total increase
living expenses.
There is superabundant evidence
that the money incomes of the people,
speaking broadly, have risen so much
more than the cost of living that they
are not merely able to meet the ad-
ditiouel charges; they have a sub-
stantial margin wherewith to add to
their comfort, to save for the future
or to multiply their pleasures, whe-
ther wise or unwise. It cannot be ne-
cessary to labor the point statistical-
ly and to adduce the easily accessible
figures as to re tee of pay, output and
overtime, or to do more than make
passing reference to the thousands of
women who were not wage earners
before and to the allowances to sol
diers' wives.
The patent results are enough for
our purpose. Here in Birmingham,
for instance, there is less illness, be-
cause people are better fed; homes
are being hhade comfortable, and the
second hand furniture shops are al-
most empty; the pawnbrokers' shelves
are getting bare; the children are bet-
ter cared for; underclothing shops do
a brisk trade; and people are opening
savings bank accounts who never
dreamed of doing so before.
Fifty Per Cent. Business Growth,
Significant is the experience of
the Birmingham Industrial Co-opera-
tive Society, with its well nigh 40,000
members, representing almost as
many separate families. As it does
a ready , money business, a rapid ex-
pansion of membership must mean a
widening circle of improved condi-
tions, Its membership, in fact, has
grown 50 per cent. during the war.
Meanwhile the figures of sales per
member have been mounting up, high-
er considerably than can be accounted
for by prices. And notice particularly
that the weight of bread ptirchtised,
per member, in spite of its abnormal
price, has remained practically un-
altered.
Perhaps Birmingham is rather more
flourishing than some places; but it is
common knowledge that material well
being is pretty generally diffused over
the country. If confirmation, be
sought, it is easy to refer to the stat-
istics of the sales of tine Co-operative
Wholesale, or to those of unemploy-
ment or pauperism.
This is not to say, that nobody is
distressed by the 'prevailing high
poises, Putting on one side middle
class people with fixed incomes, those
who find it bard to manage are such
old age pensioners as have no rela-
tives to help them and soldiers' wives
with large families of small children.
There are also certain- shalt classes
of day laborers whose wages are said
not yet to have ,)oen'idjustsd to the
changed conditions and whose cases
will doubtless be carhfollq considered
by the Ministry of Munitions. But
ail these instances of hardship put to-
gether are relatively so few that the
attempteiof: a stop the war agitator
hero and there to make capital out Of
them have altogether failed to catch
the ear of the working population,
Supplies \Veli 1rlaintaiued.
elliility to pay high prices will not
enable a nation to be fed if food is not
available, But though, at particular
periods during the war, there have
been difficulties with shipping and at
the ports, on the whole supplies have
been maintained remarkably well.
The total quantity of wheat deliver-
ed by farmers ailcl imported during -
the cereal year September, 1914, to
For. Summer Camp
or Bungalow—the ready-
cooked, ready -to -eat food—
that keeps in any climate,
that supplies the greatest
nutriment in smallest bulk,
is Shredded Wheat Biscuit,
the ideal Summer food,
because it supplies every-
thing the human body needs
in a form that is easily and
quickly digested. Combines
deliciously with fresh fruits.
Always clean, always pure,
always the same price.
Made in Canada
ugust, 1915, was not quote 11/2 per
cent, below that in the preceding sea-
son. During the current cereal year
that deficiency will probably be more
than made up for. Already in its
first thirty-six weeks the supply that
has reached the market has been
more than 7 per cent. greater than at
the corresponding point of last year,
and the experts estimate the quantity
now "on passage," to be substantially
larger than it was then.
As to meat the information is hard-
ly so recent; but it is encouraging to
by told that the supply reaching
Smithfield for civil purposes in 1915
was only 12 per cent. less than the
total supply in 1914. This looks as if
the civil population was quite as well
provided for as in the previous year.
It is stated that "throughout the year
the demand was Beadily met and there
was frequently a surplus at the end
of the week."
" EXHIBIT OF WOOL.
Canadian National Exhibition Will
Feature it.
Through the wool display of the
sominion Live Stock Branch, Ottawa,
which will be presented at the Can-
adian National. Exhibition, farmers will
be given a splendid opportunity for
obtaining a thorough knowledge of
the sheep and wool industry of Can-
ada. The exhibit has been prepared
by T. Reg, Arkell, chief of the Sheep
and Goat Division of the Branch, who
will be in charge with Mr. James A.
Telfer as demonstrator. The object
of the exhibit will be to explain the
various classifications and grades, and
to show: how wool may be handled in
such a way as to secure the best -ad-
vantages to both the producer and
buyer. In order to command the
highest market prices, wools should b,e
presented in a carefully' folded and
packed condition and should contain
as little foreign matter as possible.
Actual demonstrations in grading and
sorting will be given daily by wool ex-
perts. One of the moot interesting
anal instructive features will be sam-
ples of wool in both the greasy and
scoured condition, showing the injuri-
ous effects of using insoluble paints,
which are difficult to remove, rather
than the standard dipping fluids for
marking purposes. Samples of wool
that have been tied with binder twin
will show how the sisal fibre becomes
incorporated into the wool with the
consequent defect in the finished pro-
duct. The injurious effects of shear-
ing wool while damp or permitting it
to become damp while in storage, will
be shown, together with the damage
caused by the incorporation of straw
anal ehaffsinto the fleece. "
RECORD WORK IN SHIPYARDS.
One Has Launched a War Craft a
Month Since War Began.
In the shipyards of Great Britain,
where fleets are born, there has been
tremendous activity since the core
mencement of the war, and the ef-
fort to. provide the navy with all it
requires has been stupendous.
James Bene gives a picturesque ac-
count
scount of the wonderful work that has
been aeco nip] hilt ed.
"When Nee -speak of German's indus-
trial inventiveness and resource," he
says, "we are apt to forget ,that she
neither discovered the application of
steain as a motive force nor did she
invent any of the great devices by
which nations have' been -.brought cies.
er and time end space 'have been teles•
coped. The German navy exists only
as the result of British inventions.
"Now, in the great world -struggle
all our shipbuilding resources of peace
have been tremendously expanded for
war One yard alone has launcheela
battleship, cruiser, torpedo boat' -des-
troyer, or submarine every month
since the war began. One famous
marine engine shop has produced
1,000 horsepower of machinery every
clay since the beginning of last year.
"Wonderful engine shops, up to a
thousand yards in length, of cathe-
dral height and spaciousness, splen-
didly lit, with railways linking up
every part of the organization, have -
sprung up in many parts
It's easier for trouble to find your
address than it is ,for good hick.
ED. 2.
ISSUE 28-16,
From the _Middle West
BETWEEN ONTARIO AND BRI.
TISH COLUMBIA.
Items Prom Provinces Where Many
Ontario Boys and Girls Are
Living.
Regina observed "Care for the Ani-
mals" Day in all the schools.
The' entire village of Steelman,
Sask., was wiped out by fire.
The Saskatchewan Legislature has
made it lawful to kill cow moose.
Two women were' appointed, to sit
with the. Manitoba. University Council,
A Bantam Battalion' for Alberta's
short mon is now recruiting in Cal-
g'ary,
The citizens of Unity, Sask., pre
-
talion. field kitchen to the 65th Bat-
talion.
Property amounting to $300,000.
will be sold for taxes in the city 'of
Winnipeg.
Calgary was one of the first cities
to adopt the weekly half -holiday dur-
ing summer months.
Joe Bernie and A. McDermid, of
Moose Jaw, were drowned while out
canoeing on the river.
George W. Young, grocer ,of Cal
gary, was fined $100 for giving voice
to seditious sentiments.
Wheat acreage in Manitoba is much
smaller. The high winds have played
havoc with the seeding.
A. Gussek, of Edmonton, a Russian
soldier, committed suicide by hanging
himself in a police cell.
Fire destroyed the North Star Ele-
vator Co.'s elevator at Kelsey, on the
C.N.R., 17 miles east of Camrose,
3; C. Williams, Edmonton, who
stabbed a conductor on a C.N.R. train,
was sentenced to -5 years in the peni-
tentiary.
Mayor Weaver and Lieut. Drabble,
both of Edmonton, are in a London
hospital, after being wounded in the
trenches.
The wives of Winnipeg soldiers are
indignant over the action of Dominion
Government in retaining part of pay
allowance.
Sir Rider Haggard, thefamous no-
velist, paid a visit to Regina. He is
on a tour of the Dominion on behalf
of the British Government.
Terry Carroll, of Lethbridge, is dead
as the result of striking his head on
the pavement when thrown from the
Dallas Hotel, by an Austrian porter.
Netrilina St, Laurent, Winnipeg,
was accidentally shot by her sweet-
heart, Herbert Manning. He was
showing her a revolver at the time.
Calgary is proud of a talented son,
R. H. MacLachlan, who made a clean
sweep of all the prizes in the third
year medicine class of McGill Uni-
versity.
The body of Miss Mabel Booth,
Brandon, has been found in the As-
siniboine river, two miles from the
spot where her father's body was
found 24 hours previously.
George L. Roberts, of Winnipeg,
claims to have discovered that creo-
sote oil, can be used in an ordinary
automobile with 50 per cent. greater
efficiency than gasoline.
Harvey M. Elliott, physician, at
Swaiwell, Alta., is being sued by Wal-
ter Parge for $9,000, alleging that his
son was subjected to unnecessary pain
through ineffective methods.
Dr. A. O. MacRae, when speaking
to the Women's Canadian Club of
Calgary recently, said that Calgary
women were indifferent to the war,
their extravagant clothing being but
one evidence.
Hudson's Bay Co. refused to close
liquor store in Manitoba. The Gov-
ernment has accepted the challenge.
The company will set up test case in-
volving the question of their privi-
leges
rivileges to trade without interference
'since the year 1870.
HEALTHY BABIES
SLEEP WELL AT NIGHT
A well child sleeps well and during
its waking hourt is never cross, but
always happy and laughing. It is only
the sickly child that is cross and peev-
ish. Mothers, if your children do not
sleep well ; if theiare cross and cry
a great deal, give them Baby's Own
Tablets and they will soon be well and
happy again. Concerning the Tablets
Mrs. Chas. Diotte, North Temascam-
ing, Que.,'writes —" My baby was
greatly troubled with constipation and
cried night -and day. I began giving
her Baby's Own Tablets and now she
is fat and healthy and sleeps well at
night." The Tablets are sold by medi-
cine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a
box, from The Dr. Williams Medicine
Co., Brockville, Ont.
CANCER DUE TO MEAT.
London Physician Advises Fruit Diet
to Kill Disease.
"Every death from cancer is a
dear" from suicide, because' cancer is
a self-imposed disease due to ,a per-
sistent defiance of dietetic and hy-
genic laws," is the ' opinion of Dr.
Robert Bell, president of the British
Medical Association for the Reduction
and Prevention of Cancer.
After a close study of the disease
for nearlyorty years, Dr. Bell is
convinced that cancer is curable with-
out operation. .
"I have not operated upon a can-
cer patient since 1894," he stated,
"and since that time, have had some
remarkable cures."
Dr. Bell maintains that .the alarm-
ing growth of the disease has cor-
responded- with the great increase
in the consumption of meat, and
that a fruitarian diet will maintain
the purity of the blood and blood
cells and make it impossible for
cancer to develops
Ideal Combination
Miss G'otr'ox—"Ono can be very
happy in this world with health and
money"
Dedbrolce—" Then let's be made one.
I have the health and you have the
money."
5aluara's Liniment-Zemnberluan's Friend
g&OQ {t yoor protoets your new
Ford Touring Car from loss by
are to the extent of $600, inolu&
Ing loss from explosion and eel•f-
ignitlon.'
Covera are loss white car to --In
any building—or on the road—
lower rates and more liberal toms
than any other policy you' can
'Write for rates on Ford care up
to' three year. old...
Similar,. satesand nondl11°nd
are grantedto owners of Cllev"
role', cars,
F. D.W IL LI A143. nsnmNo ,macron
crAs-OwFICt• 333' S co', ST TORONTO.
THE LATEST
PHONOGRAPH.
(Stewart's)
$7 .50
Mils -1s the meet wonderful Phonogra
,Thph
.vetue In Canada, It In neat, eentpaot,
tend finished in beautiful black and nickel.
will harmonise with the Ny1110lth10 of
the best homes.
Inexpensive, durable and attractive. ,Just
the phonograph for the rural hone. Wilt
play discs h2 Inch or smaller.
Sent in neat wooden beg with 100 needles
on receipt of .price.
'Weight, 10 the, packed,
HENDERSON & RICHARDSON,
Distributors, Dept. 4
Beard of 'trade Building,
Montreal, QUO.
From the Ocean Shore
BITS OF NEWS FROM THE
MARITIME PROVINCES.
items of Interest From Places
Lapped By Waves of the
Atlantic.
A census of school children is plan-
ned for Fredericton, N.B.
The next convention of fire chiefs
is to be held at Truro, N.S.
Fredericton soldiers have been quar-
antined on account of measles.
Mrs. Hayes, widow of James Hayes,
Dorchester, was found dead in bed.
A dog saved the life of a little St.
John girl when she fell off a small
boat,
Henry Whittle, a young English-
man, of Sydney Mines, committed
suicide; cause unknown.
After twenty years' service as yard-
master of the I,C.R. at St. John, N.B.,
T. L. Irvine retired.
Conductor James M. Lewis, of the
C.P.R., died at Fredericton, N.B., as.
a result of blood poisoning.
Fred Woodard, a South African
veteran, fell and broke his leg in the,
Saint Andrew's, N.B., soap factory.
Joseph O. Gallant, editor of the
Acadian Evangeline, died in Moncton,
N.B,, last week after a long illness.
Frank La Montague, watchman of
the Quebec Bridge Works, was killed
by a huge piece of steel falling on his
head.
Mrs. Julia Angers, Quebec, dropped
dead just after church service.- This
is the fourth tragic death in the
Angers family.
The schooner Nellie Dickson, under
Capt. Cook, arrived at Beaver Harbor
from the Magdalen Islands with 1,000
barrels, of herring.
Timthy Sullivan, Sr., of Oromocto
N.B., died last week at the age of 103,
2'Ie was born in Cork, Ireland, and
came to ND, in 1845
A. L. Kerr, manager of the Bank
of Nova Scotia at Sydney Mines, was
presented with a chest of silver last
week, as he has been transferred to
Newcastle, N.B.
d,si: for Mivard's and telt, no other
Preserve the Equilibrium.
Native—There are the Oldboy
twins. They are 98 years old,"
Stranger—" To what do they credit
their long lives ?"
Native—" One 'cause he -used ter-
backer, and one 'cause he never used
Granulated IEyelid5;
Eyes inflamed by caps -
sure to Sun, gust and Valid
quickly relieved by Marine
'�V p Eye !Remedy. No Smarting,
4A' just Eye Comfort. At
Your Druggist's Sec per Bottle. Hulse Ey
$elveinTubes2Sc.For80ekoflhcEyelree -"
Druggists or hdurinekyellelnedy Co., table -i
The 7;ady—"Why, that doesn't cook
like my husband; he never smiles,"
Artist—"Then -let this go as a pictures
of him before he married"
Mtnerd?e Liniment rood by khy,tolans.
No Drill Needed.
Dentist -Excuse me a moment
please.
Patient—Where are you going?
Dentist -Before beginning work on
you I must have my skill.
Patient ---Great Scott,' man, can't
you pull a tooth without a rehearsal?
I ARE CLEAN
ilIQ9STICKINESS
ALL 'DEALERS
L'r.C.Rriggs &Sails
HAMILTON
{ V711._wi'Jn
1,400 NURSED BY,SWISS5
French and German Prisoners on
Neutral Ground.
The work: of bringing back' to health
and activity the hundreds of sick and
wounl;led war prisoners who are not so
hopelessly wounded as to be eligible
for repatriation is described in des-
patches from Switzerland.
Tt is in this healthy country, among
the kindly people of the various health
resorts, that many of these prisoners
who have been transferred from he
crowded prisons of Germany and
France are being nursed back to
health.
They are otili prisoners, of course,
and will remain se until the end of the
war, but their chances for recovery in
Switzerland are far. greater than in
the necessarily uncomfortable tweet-
ers in France and Germany,
The arrangements for the sending
of wounded prisoners of war to Swit-
zerland were originally nhade'between
Germany and France. and Germany
and Belgium, but negotiations for a
similar agreement between England
and Germany have been nearly com-
pleted. About 1,400 sick and wound-
ed prisoners have already been sent
the health resorts of Switzerland, 500
Germans and 900 French. The
French contingent, which includes 100
officers, ha been quarter1.Si at Mon-
tana, Montreux, Interlaken, Wilders-
will, Meiringen' and Beim, and the
Germans are near Lucerne and Davos.
The guarding of the prisoners is
simplified by an agreement with the
Governments of the soldiers that all
who manage to reach home will be re-
turned to Switzerland. The camps
are under the supervision of sanitary
officers of the Swiss army medical
department, Non-commissioned of-
ficers chosen from among the prison-
ers are entrusted with the mainten-
ance of discipline among the men. It
is probable that, so successful has
been the experiment, the number of
prisoners in Switzefland will be great-
ly incrased.
The sick and woundecl men are se-
lected at the various prison camps in
Germany and France as cases suffi-
ciently serious for transportation to
Switzerland by medical commissions
composed of two Swiss medical of-
ficers and a physician of the country
in which the soldier is held. These
commissions, of which there are
twenty, move front camp to camp se-
lecting the worst eases. Supervision
over their work is exercised by a sup-
erior commission of three French an'
two Swiss physicians at Lyons, or
three German and two Swiss at Con-
stance. The judgment of the inferior
commissions is very rarely challenged,
however.
Sometimes a man does a sensible
thing by mistake.'
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gents,—I cured a valuable hunting
dog of mange with MINARD'S LINI-
MENT, after several veterinaries had
treated him without doing him any
permanent good.
Yours, Ac.,
WILFRID GAGNE.
Prop. of Grand Central Hotel
Drummondville,- Aug. 8, '04
hli^•. Daughter—"Papa, diel you know
mamma long before you married
her?" Iler Father—"Just between
you and me, my dear, I don't know
her yet."
Beep Minard's Liniment In the bonze
The hope of somehow getting some-
thing which we have not earned,
whether in power or privilege or our
joyment, is the chief source of human
misery.
tit, a,wb jAI
.-w`?�c. sad
WO144 toy Ctl£rt'y'MEtoIlet4 CC 4NE. FAIELY
SOLD SY ALL Eczoq rum, oeAtCISinuaorsm-muSa.
'DS3.,t" 3h yup
SEED POTAEOne
L,1 b7L"U POTATO.TES, 1eistS COS -
SJ °biers, Delmore, Carman Or-
der at ouzo. Sappy 1lrniterl, ww'nit-i roe.
quptettens. Si', W. Dawson. Brampton.
ZSELH WANTED,
BOX NAILERS, SAWYERS,
LABORERS, good wages. Apply
or write Firstbrooli Eros. Limit-
ed, Toronto.
N 'IY 'or
N'r Jf. , NOR mid'
chbtu nnhes of Flttluhtng trade, u-
Cainchiding Rubbing nett Pn ars, h` ileo
Carmel Makers and Trimmers, t n.ty
work and goad lenges Ton conIttetent
men, When ;tpnlying sente r.lpertenon
and whether married or sin.,te ',silly
The Geo. liicr"ogtto Furniture Co.. Limit-
ed,
it -
ed, Stratford, Ont.
WEwePAPEAvr roe sans.
1 ROFIT-MAICI:cci NISWS AND ,103
3 Offices for sate in good Ontario
towns. The most useful and totereeiln*
of all busOlesses. Full infoimatlpn on
application to Wilson PublIsiiin4 "nm -
pony, 71 west Adelaide Street, ':'pronto.
el [stn.: miaOOS,
('1 AncnR, TUMORS, LUMPS, -MTC,
t1J internal and external. aired with-
out pain by our hems treatment. twctta
us before too late. Dr. Reitman \irvliva.l
Co., Limited, Coning eoed, Ont.
For i=rree Ice Ce-aii rm
you act bent repro is WWI
OR'J::t-h,. O.
A 'novo teslas Smoother Ire
Cream 'ices t n thea 1 , aall owl
keeps Oren nl hard tt\tee atm 101. W'; 't.
TOrt.,OrfTlh EAST
ee-ee darn's cit., Toronto, Out.
DEAFNESS IS MIS] ty
Iknew because l twee boat 0nd it5d Stead
Nelsen ter ever 30 yearse Ivly,nvieibie
Anti -septic P,sn Duma restored my hear-
ing and storm! Bead Noises. and wil)do
it for you. limy aro Tiny Megaphones.
Cannot home whan wee. easy tc put
tn, newto takeout. Are Unseen Ccm-
fotte,' Inespen the Writtfor5ooitet and
my ewornatntea to t otIewt rrcesoccd
iuybenrbbt. A. O. LEON -mina
Szlte225 i,,ebttt Ave.. -• - •••••
I :j, � r 9',i, � n ,� Y,, k,
if hi f`�. a
i r
Wheelock Engine, 150
H,P,, 18 x42, with double
main driving belt 24 ills.
wide, and Dynamo 39K W.
i f l
b.i t driven. A,11 in [IIsi
class conilitiou. Would be
sold together or seii,ratc.
ly; also a lot of shafting
at a very great bargain as
room is required immedi-
tf
ately.
8. Frank Wilson & Sons
78 Adelaide Street Welt,
Toronto.
Bombay averages more than. sev-
enty-two inches of rain a year and
gets most of it within four or five
menthe.
ttsu+inesen
-ea_ri �1 x..
Is but another word for "insured" when it
refers to jams and preserves. .Molding and
fermentation are impossible when the jars are
securely sealed with,
ii'4r3
Point Rile"WOOD P,iRAe+ToNP
Par
owax keeps 'the container air -tight, When
you have the- jars s'ecur'ely parowaxed your
preserves will be the same when you open them.
as they were the day you put them up.
Best of all, Penowar is most convenient to use. .Pour
melted Parowax over the tops of jelly tumblers and they
are nmede airtight, dust end germ proof.
FOIR TEll LAUNDRY—See directions on ?ermine.
labels for its use in valuable service in washing.
At grocery, department and general stores everycsllere.
THE IMPERIAL OIL COMPANY
Limited
B1dANOIiaS IN ALL CITIES
r>=_r
Vt.'s
RiR
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