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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1916-09-07, Page 7Delmaa a. , VIEAK GIRLS: Grow Into Weak, Despondent Women—How to Overcome the Trouble. Healthy Girlhood is the only path to healthy womanhood. The passing frono,. girlhood to womanhood lays a new tax upon the blood. It in' the mania:Nang of the blood that makes growing girls suffer from headaches toad backaches, from palenees and Wbaltnose and weariness, from lan- guor, despondency and conatant ill health. Unhealthy girlhood is bound to lead to enhealtaa womanhood and a life of misery. Nothing but the blood building qualities_ of Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills can save a girl when she undertakes the trials and tasks of womanhood. That is the time when nature makes new demands upon the blood supply. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills actealiy make new, rich blood to meet these demands. In this 'simple, scientific way Dr. Williams' Pink Pills give growing girls new health, and snakes their dawning Iwomanhood bright and attractive. Miss A. Sternberg, Haileybury Road, New Liskeard, Ont., says: "I have much reason to be grateful to Dr. Williams Pink Pills as they restored me to health, if, indeed, they did not saye my life. In 1914 I began to feel run down, and the doctor who was called in said that mine was a bad case of anaemia. I lost flesh, always felt tired, and I got so nervous that I could scarcely hold a cup to take a drink. My heart would flutter alarmingly. The doctor did not seem to be able to helpame at all and my family and friends all thought that I was in a decline and could not re- cover. I was in bed for -some weeks when an aunt came to see me and urged that I try Dr. Williams Pink Pills. My father got a supply, and by the time I had taken three boxes there was a noticeable improvement, and from that on I steadily progress- ed toward recovery. I continued us- ing the pills for some time longer, and they restored me to my old time health and strength. I shall never cease to praise this medicine, and to urge all weak run down girls to give it a fair trial, as I have proved in my own case their great merit." You can get 'these pills from any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. THUNDER V. GUNS. . The Latter Can Be Heard Many Miles Farther Than the Former. During the great: battle of Verdun the roar of artillery was said to be audible in Holland, ' over a hundred miles away, and the guns of Flahclers have often been heard in Kent, Eng- land. But it is a most remarkable fact that, although any great roar is al- ways likened to thunder, yet thunder hits never been heard fourteen miles from the flash, and some of the sever- est thunderstorms of late years 'vera inaudible seven miles away! It is interesting and ofteii comfort- ing during thunder to be able to as- certain the distance of the focus of the storm, which, as far as personal danger is 'concerned, is all that mat- ters. This can be done by remember- ing that sound travels at the rote of about 1,125 feet a second. • If, therefore, the interval between the sight of the flash and the sound of the thunder be one second, the dis- tance of the flash is 1,125 feet; if two seconds, 2.250 feet; if five seconds, about a mile; if ten secqpds, two miles; anctif a minute, thirteen miles --a distance at which thunder is very seldom heard. It may be safely concluded that if 'any appreciable time elapses between flash and wand the danger is not ire- minent. The long rumble of thunder is caused .by the longstrackilelightn- ing takes from cloud to earth or from one cloud to the other. A thunderclap is practically as short-lived as a lighthineaflash, last ,it will be readily seen that if the 'hash traverses a mile there will be a period ab -out five seconds between the first sounds that strike your ears and alie last, Two Fel ows are trying to get ahead It's easy to see who'll win. If you haVe any doubt about tea or coffee holding some people back—in fact many—leave the hesitating class, stop both tea and cof- fee ten days, and use POSTUM This delicious pure food - drink, made of wheat, roasted with a bit of whole- some molasses, has a de- lightful, snappy flavor. It is free from the drugs in tea and coffee and all harm- lul ingredients. Postorn is good for old and young, and makes for health and efficiency. "There's a Reason" .Canadian Postern Cereal Co..' Ltd., Windsor. oat. SENT BY, ERROR. TO WAR ASYLUM AMERICAN IN' FOREIGN LEGION CONFINED IN MADHOUSE. Herbert Corey Tells an interesting • StorY of. French Forces. "I had rather go through the battle of Champagne over again," said Den- nis Dowd. Dowd is one of the young Ameri- cans who enlisted in the Foreign Leg- ion sit the beginning of the war. A graduate of Georgetown University and a practising lawyer, he felt very deeply that as a believer in liberty and democracy he should fight for Franco. After the battle of Cham- pagne, in which he was wounded, there was little left of his regiment of the Foreign Legion. Dowd felt he had liad enough of trench fighting. He put in an application for leave to join the aviation arm, writes Herbert Corey, from France. Just as he was about to go back to his regiment he received word that his application for a change of ser- vice had been -acted upon favorably. He had passed the very severe exam- ination to which aviators are sub- jected with flying colors. But red tape unwinds slowly and when the time came for his return to the trench he had not yet received the coveted paper. "My hand is not completely well," he told a sympathetic atmy surgeon. "Give me two weeks in a hospital." To the Madhouse. "There," said he, as he struck it on Dowd's papers, that will give you two weeks at the physiotherapeutical in- stitute at Epinal." It was the psycho -therapeutic stamp he load affixed to Dowd's papers by mistake. An institute of psycho -thera- py is a madhouse. Dowd said good- bye gratefully and took up the route for Epinal. The train guards looked at him oddly on the way, but lie thought nothing of that. At Epinal he 'knocked at the door of the hos. pltal. "Come in," said a guard, .Tho Late. Dennis Dowd. The door locked behind him with a spring. The guard examined his Papers—with a lifting 'of the eye- brows due to his surprise at a Mad.: man coming -In without a keeper—and crooked his finger at Dowd without a word. Afterward he learned that the guard thought he had given his keeper the slip—load perhaps murder- ed him—and by an insanea.freak had come in alone, Another door snapped shut behind the American. He was in a room absolutely bare, save for beeches bolted to the wall. On the benches sat insane soldiers. They were quiet and motionless. Stifi Dowd suspected nothing, His treat- ment was odd, that was all. "'Usually 'Frenchmen are kindly and jovial," said he. "These men did not look up or speak to me. But .I did not know they were mad. That night he was locked in a ward with six insane then. His clothing was taken from loins, with the ex- ception of a brief undershirt and a packet of cigarets which he managed to conceal under his pillow. He asked' permission to keep \his razor, but the, guard refused. "If some of these inen got told of a razor," said he, "ther-would cut their throats or yours," "None of Them Are" Then Dowd awakened to the situa- tion. He told the guard that he was not crazy, and the guard laughed. "None of 'ern are," said the guard, as he locked the door. The six insane men sat on their beds, silent, So did Dowd, The elec- tric light snapped out. From the six beds came animal -like noises. One man talked to his wife, waited for her replies, laeghed, coaxed little ones to come to his knees, Another raved incoherently. He heard their bare feet paddling up and down the board floor in the darkness. Two fought to the accompaniment of the mindless laughter of their mates. Dowd smoked his cigarets and waited for the m orniag. "It win be all right," he assured himself. "I will tell them a mistake has been Icede, I am not mad," ' The doctor in charge made his rounds each morning. Dowd gave up trying to convince him of his sanity., The third morning the doctor shot et question at him suddenly. "What Aid you mess around at when you were at home ?" Is a fairly literal -translation of his question. "I was an advocate,", said Dowd, The absurdity at the answer struck him, Here he was, masquerading be- hind a dense growth of beard, clad only in a. tiny undershirt, sitting up In a bed Ill a ward filled with insane men, and insisting that he was a lawyer. It eeenoe0 to strike the doc- tor in the same way; "Ah, said lie, "a lawyer—in' a var- iety ehow They lyghed together. Dowd had woMMeelarearassennonageele... et :1 " 111i THE NATION'S FUTURE Depends Upon Healthy Babies Properly reared children grow up to be strong, healthy citizens Many diseases to which child- ren are susceptible, first indicate their presence in the bowels. ' The careful mother should watch her child's bowel move- ments and use Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup It is a corrective for diarrhoea, colic and other ailments to which children are subject especially ' during the teething period. It is absolutely non-narcotic and contains neither opium, morphine nor any of their de- rivatives. Mrs. Winslow's Soothirig Syrup Makes Cheerful, Chubby Childrea Soothes the fretting child during the trying period of its develop- ment and thus gives rest and relief to both child and mother. Buy a bottle today and keep it handy Sold by all druggist! hr Caaada and throgghoat the 'world tears of real mirth in his eyes when the door closed. He laughs yet when he thinks of it. The humor of it— the American ability to see humor under any conditions—saved him. Next day the doctor's assistant put him through an examination. "This man is not mad," said he. There was still red tape to be un- wound. Days passed before he got out of the madhouse, but be went through them cheerfully. LONG STRUGGLE AHEAD. French Premier Does Not Anticipate an Early Peace. A difficult and prolonged struggle before the war is ended is prophesied by former Premier Viviani, in the French Cabinet. In an address before the general council of the depart - council of the department of Creuse, held at Gueret, he said: "Although victory is certain, it will require hard and prolonged efforts to break Prussian militarism and prevent recurrence of its crimes. There can be no peace before the at- tainment of victory, before adequate reparation is made and before jus- tice triumph's." In an address before the General Council of the Department of Aube 13ienvenu Martin, the former Minis- ter of Justice said; "The French will not submit to the peace of the German Emperor, who boasted he would force his ad- versaries to accept peace on bended knees. They will accept only such a peace as assures them legitimate reparations, as well as their inde- pendence and security, and they will bear patiently all sacrifices in order that, in conjunction with the efforts of their faithful allies, such a peace may be imposed," GERMANS SET MAN TRAPS. Also Distribute "Tortoise Bombs" in Abandoned Trenches. Philip Gibbs, in a despatch from British headquarters in France, writes as follows: "The German is beginning to leave a lot of little things behind him, even if he abandons a trench in a hurry. This is a new dodge. One inven- tion which has come into his fertile im'agi'nation is the mantrap, which he sets outside "his parapet or inside a shell hole on the way to it. As soon as one of the British soldiers sets foot on it it closes about his leg with a terrific bite mid brings him down like a log. "Another little device in deviltry is the `tortoise bomb.' It looks very much like a tortoise if you happen to see it, which you do not in the dark, and it stands on four little legs. They waggle a little, but should it beaunwarily touched it may detonate a bomb and blow a man to bits." The Man who brags about his past career of wickedness is usually a harmless cuss. ARE CLEAN NO STICKINESS ALL DEALERS G,C.Briggs &Sons IlAhniLTON _ lanuaters. Liniment nenoves isteueseaia. B,MBIIIG TRENCHES a— OE BRITISK, FRONT ENGLISH OFFICER DESCRIBES SOME INCIDENTS. Machine Gun Fire Falls to Reach the "Bombers" in Their Shell Hole. One a the most unusual tales of trench warfare is told in a letter of an officer of the new armies serving in France : "It happened like this. I was look- ing out from what was a little shelter- ed spot.nlongside the entrance to what we call Stinking Sap, through a very fine new telescope some one load sent to our C. 0., Suddenly I paled a shovel sticki g up against a little mounclamnd close to it was a gap in the wet grass. "I stared Jolly hard, and presently the whole thing became clear to me. he Boches had run out a new sap fully fifty yards from their fire trench, which at this point is over 250 yards from ours. It was right opposite our Stinking Sep, and not more than 100 yards from the head of it. "I walked around to company head. quarters and informed the C. 0., who swadelfghted. I decided to take Cor- poral Slade with me, because he's euch a fine bomb thrower, besides be- ing as cool as a cucumber. I also agreed to take one other man from my own platoon arid one man from each of the dther three platoons/ Ready to Attack. "The C. 0.'s idea was that we must reach that shell hole close to the new Boohes-sap as soon as poseible after dark and before the Boches • resumed work there. As it turned out, we were all lying in the shell bole for three- quarters of an hour before a single Boche made a move. There was a fine rain all the time and it was pitch dark, We lay perfectly still and flat, hands covered and faces down. "BY and by Slade gave a little tug at my jerkin. I listened hard and just made out footsteps. Two or throe minutes later six or eight Bones came shuffling along the sap, carrying picks and shovels and jabbering away nine- teen to the dozen, I gave the signal with my left hand. There was a. bomb In my right. "I could distinctly hear the safety pins come out of our six bombs and could even hear the breathed murmur of the man fit ray shoulder—a Pug- nacious draper. 'A. hundred an' one, a hundred an 'two, a hundred and three (he was timing the fuse of his bomb, exactly as I'd told them). "And then they all let go. Our six bombs landed, one on the edge and the other five plumb in the sap head be- fore us, right in the middle of the six or eight Boches digging there. Two seconds after they left our hands they did their job. And when the rending row was over we heard only one Boehm moaning, so I knew that at least six or seven 'would 'strafe' 'i.e.-more Eriglieh- men. Bullets Fall to Hit. "We again lay absolutely still while Fritz rained parachute lights, stars, flares and every kind of firework, and, just as I had expected, swept his sap head with a tleast a thousand rounds of machine gun bullets, not one of which so meth as grazed us, where we lay in the mud of that shell hole. "Get your bombs ready,' I told my fellows, A few seconds later we heard the Bodies streaming along their nar- row new sap. They took it for granted we had cleared back to our lines, and they made no attempt to disguise their coming. We waited until the nearend of the sap was full and then we gave 'em our second volley, followed im- mediately by a third, It must have been a regular shambles. "A few seconds later we heard a fresh lot Start on their way down the sap, and the draper and I let 'ens have our last two bombs well to the left and ourselves-- made tracks like greased lightning for Stink Sap. The luck held perfectly, and Slade was hauling the draper over the parapet of Stinking Sap before a sound came from the Boche machine guns. "And then, byjove, they opened on us. They holed my oilskin coat for me as I slid in, and spoiled it. But not one of my crowd got a scratch, and we reckon to have accounted for at the very least twenty Bodies, may 'be twice that number, Altogether a 'splendid Job. "And the best of it is our artillery has registered on that sap this morn- ing, and this afternoon is Just about going to blow it across the Rhine. MEALTIME TALK. An egg becomes a complete food if rice is .added to it. Potato -eaters are restless, humor- ous, vivacious, but unstable. Dried figs are more nourishing than an equal weight of bread.. Half a pint of milk and half a pound of dates form' a perfect meal. Monotony in food is detrimental to the best interests of the body. Porridge -eaters are said to become argumentative and opinionated. Persons apt ,to catch cold in the head, catarrh, etc.,. should not eat' much salt. There is no greater stimulating re- storative than a tumbler of hot milk. - In the process of baking bread three-quarters of. the food value of the flour is wasted. Anaemic persons ehould eat spin- ach, leeks, yolk of egg, beef, and ap- ples, as all of these contain iron. Old age is rarely attained by the excessive feeder. Moderation and mastication are factors in long liv- ing. The value of vegetables lies in their mineral salts. Vegetables should be steamed, not boiled, or the salts are lost. Hall a pound of pea flour taken with a pint and a half of milk would supply all the essential ingredients of a day's food. .. A banana is of food value because of the large amount of sugar it con- tains. The fat in an ordinary banana is only 6 parts; the sugar 89. Tea coffee, and cocoa all owe their stimulating and refreshing effecte to an active principle contained in them dreg 'caffeine, or one of its The energy imed in our bodies for the work of circulation, respiration, digestion, and keeping up the tem- Peratare is equal in one day to rais- ing 2,800 tons one foot high. Get the "Peaches" that are coming to you in the peach season—but be sure to eat them on Shredded Wheat- Eiscuil with cream, a 'combination that ensures good digestion, health and strength for the day's work. Cut out meat and kitchen worry and serve this ready - cooked, whole wheat food with the.)choicest fruit that grows—a dish for the up- and-coming man who wishes to -keep at top-notch efficiency for work or play. Serve it for breakfast or any meal with milk or cream, with sliced peaches or other fruits. Made in Canada JUTLAND FIGHT MEDAL. Will Be Sold and Proceeds Given to Naval Orphanages. Admiral Prince Louis of Batten - burg has designed a medal to com- memorate the recent battle off the Jutland Bank. It will be the first of a series connected with naval events in the present war which Prince Louis intends to bring out at short intervals and the entire profit's of the sale of the medals will go to the naval or- phanages. Commemorative medals for naval achievements were struck in England in Elizabethan times. After the de- feat of the Armada, in 1688, Queen Elizabeth ordered some to be made in gold and silver, of which a speci- men may be seen in the British Mu- seum. These may have been bestow- ed upon the principal officers—of that there is no definite information —but nothing like a general distribu- tion of medals to the officers and men of the fleet engaged in action was us- ual until a much later date. During the Commonwealth it was decided to issue medals to the officers and men who had "done good service at sea," but after that the medals struck were commemorative rather than decora- tive, until Jame 1, 1794. For the victory of the Nile in 1798 Alexander Davison, Nelson's prize agent,' presented a medal as' "a tri- bute of regard" to every officer and man in Nelson's fleet—gold to cap- tains, silver to lieutenants and war- rant officers, bronze gilt to petty of- ficers and bronze to seamen and ma- rines. No authority was ever given for these medals to be worn, and they were not so intended, but some of the sail ors fixed a ring through a hole and wore them on their jackets at home. Similarly, after Trafalgar, Matthew Boulton, the partner of James Watt, presented a medal to each officer and man who had taken part; silver for the senior officers and pewter for the junior officers and seamen. Although the naval gold medal in- stituted by George III. at the time of the glorious June 1, 1704, was after- wards awarded for all the great naval victories, it was only given to post captains and flag officers, and it was not until 1847 that Queen Victoria commanded an official medal to be struck for every officer and man en- gaged in the battle, and to recognize the services rendered by the • fleet from 1798 to 1840. The admitted claims for this naval general service medal, as it is known, totaled 20,900, and no fewer than 230 bars were is- sued to it. There are two sizes in which these medals are being struck, one having a diameter of 1% inches, in white metal at is., in solid silver at 15s., and in 18 -carat gold at 111 10s. The smaller size is seven -eighths of an inch in diameter, and this is made with loop and ring, in solid silver. No "Same Place" Then. "Herbert," said a school teacher, turning to a bright youngster, "can you. tell me what lightning is?" "Yes, ma'am," was the ready reply of the boy. "Lightning is streaks of elect- eicity." "Well, that may pass," said the teacher; encouragingly. "Now tell me why it is that lightning never strikes twice in the same place." "Be- cause," answered Herbert, "after it hits once the same place ain't there any more." This is Awful, "I see one lady missing from this war who has figured prominently in warfare." "Who is that?" "Minnie Ball." "Well, there's Sheep Nell," Kinard's Liniment Drums Burns, Etc. Talking 'Em Over. "My husband is a regular rainbow chaser," said one woman. "Mine ain't," replied the other. "Even if loe knew there was 'a pot of gold at the end of the rainbow, he'd sit still arid expect the rainbow to come to him." ED. 4. ISSUE WHAT Aut-rmoTs MUST KNOW. /In Means of a Chart DanflC4 May . lie Avoided. To the otdinary observer the elf may seem quite guiltless of dangers; but, in reality, this is by no means the case. Aviators rarely make a flight without encountering some invisible, and therefore all the more dangerous, peril., During the earlier days of aviation these dangers often proved fatal, but nqwadaye an airman, by means of his chart, can avoal, or at lease be preparele for, them. A considerable amount of time and money have been expended on these charts, which are of incalculable ,ad- vantage 'to airmen. , From towers in various parts of Europe lcites; bearing with them ap- paratus which records fluctuations in the steength of winds, are constantly sent aloft, sometimes to astounding heights. On these towers, also, are placed special instruments which re- cord the force of the wind nearer the earth, From the data thus collected experts are constantly, prepaeing new air charts. These charts show where the die- tarbed areas exist, at what heights they are encouateredi and what is the maximum force of gusts over local- ities known to be dangerous during various strengths of wind. Aviators themselves play a big part in the making of air charts. At the Front, for instance, OUT air- men are constantly coming in with news of fresh dangers they have dis- covered. The air -pockets, eddy, or whatever the newly -discovered peril may be, is promptly marked down on the chart of that region for the guid- ance of other aviators flying over that part of the country. THE POPULAR LAURENTIANS. A Holiday Resort of Unsurpassing Beauty. Lovers of beautiful mountain and valley scenery, towering rocks, thick forests, pleasant glades, flower -clad vales and plains, rushing and placid rivers, roaring waterfalls and bab- bling streams could not do better than to select the Laurentian Moun- tains,reached by the Canadian Pa- cific, as their holiday resort. So pret- tily situated are all the spots where the holiday-makers make their head- quarters that it is embarrassing to choose the one that might be best suited to the taste of the individual. But all are enchanting, from Shaw- bridge—the first of them—to Mount Laurier—the last. Within easy reach of any of the resorts there is excel- lent trout and bast fishing to be had. The rivers and lakes are clear and sand -bottomed generally, and are well suited to the requirements of the swimmer and bather. Row boat- ing, motor boating, and canoeing are favorite pastimes, and on a fine calm evening it is exhilarating to sit by the waters and listen to the laughter and merry chat ot the parties who are on the waters. Golfing can be had at Stea Agatha, Ste. Margaret and Val Morin, Tennis courts are attached to some of the better class hotels. Those who love mountain climbing can have a variety of spheres for this' form of activity to select from and the expense of a holiday in the Lau- rentians is comparatively small. ' Mary's Jam. Mary had a little jam Upon a piece of bread, And everywhere that Mary went She left.pome, be it said. They found it on the parlor rug, And later irate dad On his dress suit found traces of The jam that Mary had. Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Dear Sirs,—I had a Bleeding Tumor on my face for a long time and tried a number of remedies without any good results. I was advised to try 1VIFNARD'S LINIMENT, and after us- ing several bottles it made a com- plete cure, and it healed all up and disappeared altogether. DAVID HENDERSON. 13elleisle Station, Kings Co., N.B., Sept. 17, 1904. WANT A LASTING PEACE. But German Savants Insist on In- crease cr Empire's Donations. Headed by Professor von Wilamo- witz-lVicsilendoeff, present rector of the University of Berlin, a group of Ger- man savants, including Professors von Gierke, Kahl, Eduard Meyer,, Schae- fer and Adolf Wagner, issued a mani- festo On the second anniversary of the beginning of the war, reading, in part, as follows: We did not take the sword in OUT hounds for purposes of conquest. Now that we have had to draw it, we will not, cannot, and must not, put it back ' in the scabbard without having ob- tained a peace which OUT enemies also will be compelled to keep. But this peace cannot be won without the in- crease of our power and without the extension of the area in which our will will decide over war and peace. For this we must have secure pledges and real guarantees." Commenting on the manifesto, the Vienna Arbeiter-Zeitung, a Socialist organ, remarks: "All these professors may be quite capable persons in their own special subjects, but this talk of theirs is injurious and foolish talk," She Could Make More. It was at the piano. Mother's darling firmly refused to do her Prac- (ice. "What a naughty little girl you are!" chided the mother. "Dost't care grumbled the youngster, as she gave the plena a kick. "Now, treasure,. you shall have a cent if you'll do your exercises, nicely," urged mamma, "Shan't," retorded treasure, getting off the piano -stool. "I can make more than that taking castor-oil." The worst man is sometimes cap- able to giving the best islvice. 37---'I6- , anneram Liniment Cures Eandx 2. Storage Batteries Generators Magnetos Starters Cend thorn for prompt Repairs to OANAELS.11 STORAGE EATTIIIIIr CO.. AZILITTED 117 SI/aloof) St., Termite. Willard Agents. SHEEP DOGS IN AUSTRALIA. Dog Trials a Fesatoivs. ureof Agricultural h In no place in the world` are sheep and cattle dogs more in use than in Australia. The grazing estates are so enormous that it would be—finpos- sible to handle the great flocks with- out clogs. The Australian pastoralist could not possibly exist without his dogs and that is the reason that sheep dog trials are looked upon as some- thing amounting to national conspes tition. Every town has its agricul- tural show and at all of these sheep clogs' trials are one of the most de- served attractions and the training that the Australian sheep dog gets is nothing short of miraculous. Australians are among the chief buyers of English dogs, with tile re- sult that excellent specimens can be found there. They boast that there has never been a case of rabies among the dogs. &misled Eyolizil, rq0' Eyes inflamed by expo- sure to Sue, Dust ancl Mad Eye% gzazrg‘,)1',Y4Irving° just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's Ste per Bottle. Hilda Eye fielveinTubes2Se._ForDesk al Mayer reeask Druggists ortaurineifyeRemedyCe..Shiceefa It pays 'to be polite, but anything that pays seems too ninth like work for some folks. liginard,s Liniment for cols everywhere. If girls went on parade in break- fast attire there would be fewer hesty marriages. SEED POTATOES . BED POTATOES, infsn COB- I.Z) biers, Deleware, Carman. Order at once. SuPPlY limited. Write Tor n110. tattoos. E. W; Dawson. 13111.1nritorl. FOR SALE ACRES, FOUR MILES FROM 150 Peterbcro t pop. 22,000). Choice situation and superb building% Robt. Graham, R.R. 4, Peterbow. NEWSPAPERS POR SALE PITKAKIND NEW'S AND JOB Offices for sale in good Ontario tewns. The most useful and interesting of all businesses, Pullinformation on, application to Wilson Febushing Com - Penn 73 West Adelaide Street. Toronto. LAMES WANTED TO DO PLAIN I-0 and light sewing at honoe, whole or spare time ; good pay ; work sent any distance, charges paid ; send stamp ror particulars. National Manufacturing Company, Montreal. litISCELLAI7EOUS A.NCER. TUMORS, LUMPS. ETO-, V internal and external, cured with. out pain by our home treatment. Writs as before too late. Dr. Hellman 1136111cal Co., Limited Collingweed. Ont. `ZLAtt, Amsilta'S Pioneer Dos Rundle SOW ON DOG DISEASES And How to Feed Ehiled free to any address by the Author H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, New York When buying your Piano insist on havtnq an 4 TNc MGM: Piano Action ONICIMeleniseln.....r.rdareraa.S.Aner....W=1.1 .0-15-20 Years from DOW the Bissell Silo will he giving good service. 'ills built of sel- ected timber, treated with wood preservatives, that prevent decay, It has strong, rigid walls, air- tight doors, and hoops of heavy steel. a. Therefore it lasts, simp- ly because it can't very well do anything; else. Our folder explains more fully —Write Dept. U. T. E. 13ISSELL CO., =nate Mora, Ontario. SELO M SEE o big knee like this, but your horse may have a bunch or bruise on his ankle, hock, stifle, knee or throat. "if.hia3Pf.N ' will clean it off, without laying up the horse. No blister, no bate gone. Concentrated—only a few drops required at an application. $2 per hosts d,llveaci.ari.'grebeilligeg,11i!"21= septic liniment for mankind, reduces Pamitti "Swellings. Enlarged Gland,, Wens, Prnisen. Varicose Vault allays Pain and Inflammation. Price SI and sin battle at dnugists or deliver. Made In te U. S. A. by W. F. YOUNG, Da P. . , 18 Lallans 814, Montreal, Gas. Zabsortiss and Absorbine, Jr.. a made is Canada, arryFr S8113 Wheelock Engin; 150 HP., 18 x42, with double main driving belt 24 ins. w iae,aucl Dynamo 30 K. W bcit driven. All, in first class condition.' sold together or seimate. ly ; also a int outlaying at a vcrysgreAt bargain as acoory.ls ret giired-iin ett t, S. Frank Wilson & Song 73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto.