The Clinton News Record, 1915-02-25, Page 6THE ACUTE PAIN
*FlIONI :NEURALGIA
Pennaliently Cured Through tli9
Use of Dr. Williams' , Pink Pills,
Neuraigi a, is, ot a disease -it is,
0111-Y a, seinPtern, but a mostepainful
cue. It is the, serest seen tha-t your
Isloo.c1 is weak, watery mud impure,
and that for this reason youe nerves
are literally starving. Bed bleed is
the sole cause ol the piereieg- pains
neuralgia -goad rich blo,c,d is, the
enlY eurc. In this you have the
reaeon why Dr. NITilliams" Pink
Pills cure ,nouralgia,. They are the
only anedicine that contain in the
coreect Peopogions the elements
needed be -make rich, reel blood.
This itch blood reaches bhe root of
the trouble, soothe e the jangled
nerves,. „drives away the ',nagging,
stabbing pain and braees up your
health in ether WayS we well. Here
is proof -Mr. C. J. Lee; Vatehell,
Ont., says: -"For .severat years I
was troubled et intervals with nee_
ralgia in the head and chest. The
pain I suffered at times was most
intense. •1 was continually doctor-
ing ,for the trouble but found noth-
ing to glee nee perManent relief up -
til I 'began the 11Se of Dr. IVilliams'
Pink Pills. Thanks to this Medicine
111,1T bleed has been !restored to a
healthe.00aditioth and every -symp-
tom of t•Ire trouble hais dieappeared.
can therefore, wieh confidence,
recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
to a•11, Who suffer fromthe fierce
pains of neuralgia." ,
You can get these pills through
any medicine •dealer Or by mail at
60 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50
from The Dr. Williams' Meclicine
Co., Beockville, Ont.
• HEAVY ARTILLERY.
A Howitzer and a Gun Are Very
, Much Different. '
Not every civilian tan tell off-
hand the difference between s gun
and a howitzer. Aceording to the
Army ,ead Navy Journal, the how:.
itzee, in proportion to lbw weight,
inrows a shell very much heavier
than that which a gun .throws, but
gives it much lea muzzle velocity,
anti has acorreepondiegly' shorter
range. Take, for example, a mod-
ern gun that weighs forty tons,
given a muzzle velocity of three
theiteand feet a. ,seeond „and h.as
range stM anything up to fifteen
miles ; a howitzer of the gene cali-
bre would weigh only 6.3 tons, and
would give a muzzle' velocity' of only
.1,100 feet a second. The gun cam
be Jam:tilted only on heard thip or in
permanent fortifications, hut the
howitzer ean be taken into the field.
-It has a spade/ trauspogin,g wa-
gon, from whieh it eau be readily
nhifte.d to its firing carriage. The
foreign 0.3 howitzer is capable of
'being fired up to sixty-five degrees
of .elevaticn, a.nd at forty-three de-
gre,ea has a range ef 10,900 yards-
ite Maximum. The shell weighs 760
pounati, attd carries a,s a burster
114 pounds of 'high explosive. It is
said that the shell contain' no
shrapnel, but that .aseertion is open
to doubt.,
The Finest Army.
In the British Medical Journal
Sir Willia.na Ogee calle.ittention to
the habit of humanity of 'shuddering
at the slanghter of men in battle,
see and reganditig with a eertain mea-
' &tire of equaniniity the equally
needless slaughter that goes on in
our •homes. Tubercielosis alone will
,kili tell limes as many persons this
year in -Great 'Britain as will die
abroad for their country, ' and were
ib not for the forces that are fight-
ing it, the number would be greater
still. Those foreee are the army of
eavitatien, whose general staff and
leaders e.epeese,nt all lands and all
languages, and acknowledge alles
giance bi no authority except that
of humanity and ecientific truth.
That army will save more men from
deal:Mee en be ri c herr this year than
the other armies will destroy with
b nile t, shrapnel, b wallet and
esverd„ HeDeto•fore, na war, the
army of sanitation has seldom
taught winning 'campaigns, but the•
new knowledge that forms its plan
of casepaign and lie tactics is so full
• oE ereiniee that even the vanquished
.rony be victors.
l'SIE DtliC11011'S WIFE
Agrees With Illim'About Food.
• A trained nurse • say's : "In the
ter ace i ce- oi profession I have
found so 'rna,n•y peints in favor of
Grano -Nuts food. that I , unhesitat-
ingly reemniend it to all ray pa-
tients,
"It is .cle I icak and pleasing to the
palate (a ,-: eseential in fo•ad, for the
rick) 'and can he sneered to all
kages, being ,softened with milk or
Peream fur babies or the aged when
deficiency of teeth 'renders mastice,
tion,impeesible. For fever patients
or those on, liquid diet I find Grape -
Nuts tincts, albumen „, water very
nourishing: and refreshing:
''Th ie recipe . is my own idea,
and is, re,a,cle ,as•foll.ows : Soak a tea-
spo.onfel .ot Grape -Nuts in a glass.
of water for an hour, attain and
nerve with th.e .b,eatee white of an
egg a1s;,c1 e epontiful of fruit juice for
flavouring., This, affords.•a great
• deal cif n.euriehment that even the
weakest sin:mach' can •assimilate
without any diet:ens,.
• "My husband is a phyeician and
• he 'sees Grape -Nuts hireself and or -
dere it Many times for Dabs patients.
"persortalay 1 egara a dish, of
Grape -Nuts with fresh ea dewed
fruit atO the ideal breakfast for ways
one -well or emir," •
In 'stomach trouble, eervone pros-
tration, eh., a 10 -clay trial of
Grape-Nute will usetally work- won-
ders towed nourieling and res
building and in thiS eray end the'
•trouble. Name men by, Canadian
• Postum Co., Windsor, Ones
•* Look in pkgs. Inc thefarimus little
book, "The,, Rh _oad
read the above -Jotter, • .& now
one appears from time -to time. They
are genuine, true, and full, of human
interest. '
THE Si!iRIT OF SACRIFICE
l' Cil WOMEN , 1111A. AS
E N iN TR EN C II E S
War Brio gs Out Uususpeeted
'Pratte In the Wives of the
Nation.
The women Fra.nce.
Bub they are breve, these women !
The soldiers in the trencheo , the
'casenen- advaireing under the flam-
ing fire ,el the, enemy, the men who,
fa.cesce,rtain death to gain a coveted!
hillock -not three .alone have eour
age. and elaterminations writes a
Retie e orreepondent. The entire
French nation has developed new
and uneuspeceed tbraits, and these
are paticaree, en•cluDance and ,stoi-
cism. Who:, befo,re this war, would
have thought of applying any of the
three wer,de to the volatile, -guy,
carefree French nation? And no
one who is not .h.ere; who has not
,been with th.ein since the beginning
of 'the war, ean properly appreciate
and understand this change.
• It applie.s to the men at the front
and to the women left belianderprat-
ly. There is in it 'some of the tra-
ditional &Whine of the English,
lightened, however, with the leaven
of spirituality. It is odd how I
come hack again and again to this
word spiritual, which seems .best to
express the 'French temperament.
It has nothing of the religiousin it,
and yet it possese religion's moat
divine quality-faAth. They all.seem
a little like mystics to me, frofn the
aristocratic, slender eountess, down
on her knees ,scrubbing a hospital
corridor,to the .girl of the streets
who has left, probably forever, her
careless life of Mame and who tends
the orphans of French „soldiers., for
whom she !sews .hour in, hoar out,
while eche watches them ,at play.
Even the little taidinettes-work-
ing girls who formerly never had an
ides, in their silly heads bat h read
-the serial in the morning paper -are
training themselves for the front.•
They take lessons three evenings
week and all day Sunday. At the
Hospital Boucicault, under the di-
rection of Professor Letulle, I saw
them engaged in actual hospital
work, cheesed in their neat litige
uniforms, which they made them -
elves. "Ilh,ey are learning to be
nurses with no other object than to
help their country in its hour of
need.
Yon know already the amazing
list of women of noble birth and re-
finement, who ar.e doing the meet
menial 'theirs ,at the various hospi-
tals and refuges, They came offer -
hg eventhing they possessed in the
way of money and clothing, and said
sini.ply and frankly, "We know
nothing, unketunately. We have
never • been taught. We cannot
hope to ao anything responsible,
buts -we insist en baking our places
by the side of our more expeneneed
sisters, and we will do whatever
there is to be done." -
And They Never Complain.
sometimee go to see a friend who•
lives in the Rue Boissonad.e, and I
never forget to stop at the con-
cierge's window to ask if she has
any good news from her husband.
This week I stopped as usual, anti
,she said very quietly, "Yes, I have
made my sacrifice, too. There are
many of us." And when I awk-
wardly -Lied to say eomething con-
eoling, she added, "A year ago I
should have wept ceaselessly, but
now what is my grief ,am•ong no
many?" •
Another woman has •nevee heard
from her son since the third of
August, when he marched away.
And she eta(' to me: "What will
you? Ile has dorie his duty -I so
'Longer ever hope, And he willhave
been glad, for the last thing he said
to me was: '1Vlost people die in
their beds of over -eating or of sit-
ting in a draught, or of some un-
pleasant disease. If I am killed, it
will be ,well. It is SO seldom, theee
days, that ente has a chance to die
kr a eausee "
"Thy Brother Dead."
IVthenever two women meet, after
a moment's evasions the 'sentence
you „always ,herte is : "And you?
Have you head recently?"
The other day I was in the post -
office. A woman without' a hat, a
shawl wrapp,e,d around her this
]ittie bent Moulder's, stood beside
rite at the desk for •Seale 11:1411.1teS
while 3 wrote a "poeumatique."
Fiinaiiy shostaid in a low voice, not
froin e'mba„rrasement, but from sor-
row: "I ,don't know how to write.
Will you send a, telegram for me?"
"Gladly'," 3 answered, and took
down this Soren. • Sire dictated just
thre.e words: ''Thy brother 'dead."
'le it your ,son, madame,'I ask-
ed her, "who has• been killed?''
"Yes, I•wouldn't tell Iii.s• brother
if he were a soldier, too. That
might discourage him. • But nib one
isn't strong in the lungs and has
been reforine,"
And they:bane tech gentle hearts,
her day that the
the e ot
these Frelihit•oft:e_n. A Freedman
said to M
men weren't much better.
. • .,
WOUNDED HEARTS SEWED UP.
Palients Are Saved. By a Delicate
Operation.
A Raglan surgeon named Zeld-
ler reports 31 patienti who recover-
Id- from stab wounds :of thalweg
s the, hospital at Obuchow. Prompt
and, rapid operation is the plXrbable
reaFf011 fOr this geed Showing'.
-The patiente. were "all put under
'the influence of ether very soon af-
tea, the injuiry, pert of the4cheat wauul
wee DemoYed the heart lifted from
its bed, sad 'the etiteliee rtuiekly in -
bindweed: between pulse:goes, The
bony Med waiulover the heart wee
not put hack u placc, thee organ
being coyeredi only by Skin and
fleascle• 'Me Wee done to, give,the•
newt room to Gnarl& and fre pre=
venteadheelans from eanharranling
the heant's action; Several pi the
fah:ink-age at their daily work af-'
es: reveal years sfinee the operatio,n,
He's Back at Work
Strong and Heart,i
ONE MORE SPLENDID CURE
RY noutys RioNkv
PILLS.
Quebec' Man Who Suffered for a
Long Time front :Kidney Disettee
Finds it Complete Cure.
Aleen's Mills Portheuf Co Que
March 1-(Specia1)e-Another eplen-
slid cure by Dodd's Kidney•Pills is
that of Mi•chael Gauthier, •a
known insiclent of this plake. Mr.
Gauthier was for a long time a suf-
ferer with a pain in his head -caused
by kieln.ey disease, and at lengelegot
so bad that he had to quit work.
Dodd's'Xichey Pills eured him. He
is back at work, strong a•nel hearty,
and naturally he feeds. that he Wainb8
all who suffer from kidney disease
to know that they can find actin sp
Dodd's Ki.clney Pills.
For Dodd's Kidney Pills not only
cure the pain or ache'sthat is cane-
ing the mod digress, they put the
kidneys in good working ordee and
all the impurities and poisoue ah
strained out of the blood, 'Pho re-
eult is that new strength is carried
'Ile every part of the body. mat's
why so many 'sufferers mired by
D.odd's Kidney Pills sum up their
condition, "I feel like a new ma.n.
New energy is •new life. You can't
have it with siek Icidneya. With
healthy kidneys, you must have it.
Doda's Kidney Pills make healthy
kidneys. •
11
MYRIADS OF RABBITS.
Farmers of Ni—mitybelle, Australia,
Find source of Wealth. .
The rabbit has made great headway
in the Australian district around Nim-
itybeRe and trapping has become a
profitable industry, so a Sydney news-
paper reports. One •buyer alone, it
seems, sen•t away more than a ton of
skins emit week all, through last sea-
son. It has been decided to start
freezing works at the place -that
means carrying the surplus rabbit
crop over in cold storage. „The ex
portation of rabbit sldns 'from Austra-
lia now exceeds in value $3,000,000 an-
nually, according to the Sydney re-
port.
Now this is astonishing Information.
The antipodes are to be coagulated.
For years we have been hearing about
their pest of rabbits. Australians have
long viewed with gloom the overrun-
ning of their continent
It was sixty years ago, or so, that
an incautious gentleman or New South
Wales obtained from Europe, and
turned loose in the colony, three pans
of rabbits. As the populatlou -and
wealth of Australia increased, the rab-
bits increased, and more than corre-
spondingly. 'Until raently it had
been a tremendous problem how to
check them -to say nothing of exter-
mination. They drove farmers froth
their lands, and have threatened such
devastation as has not been knowa
Since the SUCCeSSI011 of plagues parte
1yzed Egypt. Travellers report that
rabbit proof fences are characteristic
of the Australian landscape. Some
years ago an attempt was made to
spread a parasitic epidemic among
them. But the pensive rabbit multi-
plied faster than the germs.
The Australians have forind a way
at last. They have solved the exas-
perating riddle by turning the rabbits
to prone A demand Inc rabbit has
been created in ,the world's marts, It
appears, especially for the skins.
What was once a nuisance, and a de.
structive one, is found to be market-
able.
• This is merely another Muskation,
of course, of an industrial miracle
with which we are famillar-the 'util-
ization of what has been thought use-
less, the working up of a by-product
into something of commercial value.
The rabbit resources or Australia
are probably inexhaustible. It will
be some time, at any rate, before the
country will need to take measures to
conserve the supply, even with the
liveliest demand. Meanwhile, the
heppy situation is that the Australians
are able to sell whet they have plenty
01, and do not want to keep -what, in-
deed, they would hitherto have been
glad to pay to get rid of, Such luck
b enough to make the celebrated AO-
tralian bird, the laughing jackass,
split its sides with laughter, and • the
kangaroo leap for ley.
•
SOLDIERS' OFFICIAL RATH.
Had Not Secu Soap or Warm Was
• ter for Flee Weeks.
A desseription of the soldier's
monthly "official bath" is sent from
the fro,nt, by a mem.ber of a London
Scottish regiment:
"Yesterday we had ci novel ex -
experience," he saes. "Ls none of
us had seen soap or warm water Inc
over five weeks, we were ordered to
take an official bath. We were
taken to a town in the rear of our
lines and escorted to a large build-
ing, where, f a„ciliti,es had been a•r-
Danged for the purpose. In the
firet room we were numbered off
into 'squads of emilm.en or so: In a
second room we emptied oun Pock-
ets and laid aside our beets, bon-
nets, putteee, and openers,. In a
third 'MOne we threw the rest of oar
clothes into a heap, and then made
ci double-quicle to the showers.
There were two men to each shower,
and we were allowed ten minutes
under the hot water, with a gener-
ous •supply of laundry soap.
"At the endof our ten minutes,
we hurled on to a drying -rooms
where each man got a huge towel -as,
thick a,nd rough ae a carpet. Then
we rushed off to a dreseingsroom,
where an attendant game Ula any-
thing we sva„ntecl in the any of
brand-new underwear, 'elarts, 'and
sockss. while err hook e •tet one side
were our lolothes, which had been
thoroughly fu,reigalied. "
"After we thael. get b.ack,onr bon-
nets, /sante, fend other property, we
were Mate:end flans a room where a
equedef barbeenaweitiled vs. Wee's,
'0101V Were theougli, we marched,
feaok and open itrgalin into n
reem, foe tea end eigareetes, yenta
anything' he better neeranned
„nee -4.—s •
Sotne ,paratee will withstand
enrolling grain of 40,000 pounds
•the square
senarde. Liniment Cures ca, sot in cows,
NOTES OF SCIENCE I
lam.1.1.•••••=lormayniiMINNO•
An eleetrie transmission line in
Mee:leo nes a single span 1,650 feet
long amens a river.
Chili is „irrigating more than
300,000 ache of land aed has n'ear-
Iv as many more ,available for 2110-
gabion
A new eooking utensil that ean be
used on top of a stove will servo as
roaster, steamer, broiler, or toast-
• le France there lias lbeen invent-
ed a flourless bread minting ma-
chine that trans:Capin& the Wholc
wheat into dough,.
.10ein•ent,mortar mixed with vol-
canic aahe,s has been bound valuable
in Japan tor work that is isenmerg-
ed ie seawater.
Operated by two mere a ;machine
invented (be Chicago hotel stew-
ard, will wesh ancL•clry more than
18;000 eligible an' hone. •
There • is a ,eribe or Indians in
Mexico whose 'language is "limited
to about 300 words and WIh0. eann•ot
count mon; than ten.
Petroleum nas been installed as
fuel in great nitrate Works
at a eaiing of more than 30 per
cent. of 'the ease dfe oal. •
To prevent a wet umbrella drip-
pieg on a floor there hoe be.en in-
vented a, device tobe slipped ort
the _ferrule to catch the water. '
'ISyria, althest the only 'country in
the -world in which pistachio nuts
are matiembed, produeets about 400,-
000 politick of them a year.
Natives of the Andaman Islands
show nespeee for the memory of de-
ceased relatives by preserving their
itaeceets.
hand wea,ring them . aa neck -
To make men's toSlars wear long-
er an inventor has patentied one
with an extra, 'buttonhole en •thath it
'can be fitted to a shirt without
strain.
' A combination truck and jack has
been patented to enable one man
to lift a heavy barrel arid support it
while its contents are being -with-
dra
Engineers in India are trying the
novel experiment of catching that
country's -heavy rainfall in reser-
voirs and using it to produce .elec-
tric power.
An oil spout can he extended to
any 'length and in any Shape desir-
ed lby iestening a piece of wire to
it and .covering the wire with small
rabber tubing.
According to an East Indian
scientist, plants feel pain when in-
jured arid he 'has invented a ma-
chine whir:it he claims measures
their nerve shucks and reaction.
For restherant nee there has been
invented a, spoon with a, (1,etachruhle
bowl of paper or fibre, to be thrown
away after use, the handle being
fibbed to another 'bawl,
Of French invention is a sm.oke
eons timing de vice Tor kitchen
ranges thab achnies.fresh .air, euper-
heats it and combining it with bhe
coal gas and dust, 'causes them to
burn.
Drill quickly Cure
• •Any Som. Stomach
Reileves Fullness After Meals.
"When I was working around the
farm last winter, I had an attack of
inflammations" writes Mr. E. P. Daw-
kins, of Port Richmond. "I was weak
for a long time, but wen enough to
•work mini spring. • But something
went wrong with my bowels for I had
to use salts or physic all the time. My
stomach kept sour, and always after
eating there was pale and fulness, and
all the symptoms of intestinal indi-
gestion. Notting helped me until I
Used Dr. Hamilton's Pills. Instead of
hurting, likeother pills, they acted
very mildly, aizci seemed to heal the
bowels. I did not requIre large doses
to get results with Dr. Hamilton's
Pills, and foel so glad that I have
round a mild yet certain remedy, To-
day I am welt -no pain, no sour stone
a good appetite, able to digest
anything. This is a whole lot of good
Inc one mediioine to do, and I can say
Dr. tiamilten's nine are the best pills,
and my letter, I am sure, proves it,
Refuse a substitute for Dr, Hamil-
ton's P1I1e of Mandrakinanci Butter -
net, sold in yellow boxes, 25c. All
clea.lers, or The Catarrhozone Co.,
Kingeton, Ont. ,
HAS 4F00 MANY COOKS.
King George Economizes by a (int
in Salary of His Chef.
King George is setting sun exam-
ple of economy in war Lime to his
sebjecte, much as Emperor William
is doing in Germany. M. Ceclard,
the head chef .an, Buckingham Pal-
ace, has agreed to accept a 50' per
cent, reduction in his salary during
the war. His salary was $12,500
per annum so the reduetion, will
sav.ethe King's private purse *6,250
a year.
The cooking at the palace is now
of the plaineet character and of a
kind that might be found in any
fairly well-to-do hoese. It could be
performed quite efficiently by one
of the assistant cooks,
The average ci,aily post of the Roy-
al dinner prior to the war was esti-
mated at $4.66. The number of pee-
-ions, excluding -the King ;and Queen
enecinenembers of the Royal family
who dine at, the Royal table is
usually three.
There were twelve assistant male
eooks at the palace before the wee.
Of these', seven enlisted, but the
present etc& is stillefer larger than
is required,
It was an Irishman wine objected
t 0, taking an eateeie, as he IIT'as•saire
Ale eouldn't 'keep ib down,'
MInaCd'i Liniment cures Colds4 Eta
Stock Definition.
• Little joanny, osellseing asked by
his school -teacher if he ljrnew 'what
Wall meant by "at Par," replied
that "Me,' wee alWaye aft pa,lwhee he
eanne heme late,"
SCialiell Vanishes Instantly
" Aerviline is Used
- -
AN YOU BEAT THIS CASE?
No .ordinary liniment will even re-
.
ileve Sciatica, . Netting but the most
powerful kind 'of a remedy can mince
trate through the' tissues and finally
reach the Sciatic Nerre. Yon can an
ways depend on sthe "Nervi -
line." Nothing made to -day le as good
for sciatica as Nerviiine was when
first proneced, about forty years age.
All thisqlme the 8a,Me •old "Nervinne',
has been curing Sciatica., Lionbago,
neeernatism, and 18 considered to be
without• an equal in relieving pain or
s'csrrldluesq adaninTwe:sro
hek*• rige;' 'oNrb
e'rvelgetne.:
oou
writes' Tames B. 13k1Avards. "The way
it 'cures Sciatica is to me simply a
miracle. For years. I suffered fright -
Mt,. I ruined MY shOntuCh With in-
ternee dosing. I rubbed in ganon.s of
ails and liniments-,,rnone were strong
&Innen. One good rubbing 'with Nem -
viable relieved. I „kept en robbing and
„sbortly was cured, My .father cured
rheumatism in his right ,arm and
mother curedherself of chronic, lum-
bago with NervIline. Our family sira-
ply swears by Neeviline and we are
never Without a 30o. family size bot-
tle in, our home. We find that for ex
ternal pain, for coughs, colds, earache,
such miaor ille it lea veritable, family
Phisidam"
-
Ile Was Observant.
"Be oleservaat, my eon," • canal
Willie's fearer. "Cultivate the
habit of seeing antlyou will be a
suocessful man." "Yes," added
his uncle, "don't go through the
world blindly. Learn to use your
eyes." "Litele boys who are .ob-
serving know a great deal more
than those who are not," his aunt
put in. Willie'took this advice to
'heart. Nex,t day .he intfor.med his
mother that he had been observing
things. '`I.Lnele's gob a gun hidden
in his teunk," ite said, "Aunt
J'ane' e got an extra, set of teeth in
her drawer, and father's •got a
peck of cards behind the books in
his desk."
Given Away.
Young Van Winkle waited lierV-
011Sly in the drawing -room for Julia
to appear. He had been sitting
there twiddling his thine:be for half
an hour. Finally a •step was heard
in the hall, and he rose to his feet
eeTeeterttly. But it ,was nob Julia.
31 WaS her maid. "Marie," said
She impenept young man, "what
keeps your mistress so Vong7 Is she
making up her mind whether eke
twill ,see me or not?" "No, sir,"
answered the maid, with •a wise,
smirk, "It isn't her mind she's
making up."
%47
•4`k0r116 Applied in
;
, '5 SeeondS
Cuired Sore, blistering feet
f r om corn-pinch.ed
tees can be cured
0•ick btryactoPrutinna n2148 hettErsx'.
ea "Putnam's" enothe.s
laway that drawing pain, eases in•stant-
hr, makes the feet feel good at once.
Get a 26c. bottle of "Pentanes to -day.
1. Mod:1.---bt Nero.
Count Karrolyi, on returning to
his eagle in Htmgary, met, accor-
ding to the Vossisehe Zeitung, one
of his old !servants who had just
been sent back wounded from the
War.
"My. good, .erien, I hear you
fought valiantly at the front," paid
the Count. "I should like to give
you some reward. What shall it,
beI" .
, The old .servant replied:
"Well, if you insist upon it, sir,
just 'give me enough kronen ' to
reach froin one eat to the other."
"That see•ms to be a, 'very small
reward," replied the count, smil-
ing at the odd request. ,
"Ib'. enough for me, sir," an-
swered the' servant, mode.stly.
• As elre count was about to oom-
P,In With the ettange request, he no-
tmed that the seevant had „only oite
ear, and remarked upon the fact.
• "Yes, sir; I left the other ear
on the battle field at Shabatz !" an-
swered the modest nian.
Frenehman-"You are funny peo-
ple, you Englee.sh. Yon bake strong
whiskey; yeti put water in it to
make it weak; you put sugar in it
to make it „sweet; you ,ptit lemon in
it' to 'neeke it sour; then you eay
'here's to you,' and drink it your-
self."
YOUR OW,N DRUGGIST WILL TELL Y011i
Try Marine Eye Remedy fer Red', Week, Watery
Eyes and Granulated Eyelids; No Smarting--
igt Ilye Zln:ggeRt:tnert7o°,f0thi0"
"Niew " said the Principal, to
one of -the pupil.s at, the dose of
bhe lesson in Which he bad bouche,d
on the horrors of war, '`elo you ob-
ject to war, me boy?" "Yes, sir,
was the fervent answer."
"Now tell us why." "Because,"
said „the. youth, "wars make history
an' I hate hisbor,v.''
Mansonville, June 27, '13.
Minard's Itinime.nt co., Limited.
Varmeatii,
flentleinen,-Mt, affords me great pleasure
,and Must be .grattlying to sten to know
WItlt after using 36 bottles of your Idni.
[melt on a case cd tparalviis ,whieh
Tether was alilLieted ovit,13. I was able to ro.
store hint Ito norMal condition. Jloping
other sneffirom nine be benefilted by the
nee of Your Liniment, I In%
Sincerely yours,
61E0. H. HOLMES,
Demestlo •Strategn.
Ilre. Esse-Thee last Cook I ,bacl
was awful;- 1?0, glad .she's gone.
Mee. Wye -Did you ' diseharge
her? •
6112. B.)e-11.10.1 X 'Wished ±0 avoid
a scene, IV.halt I did waa to flatter
:her so Moue her cookingthat she
'tbougli•t elle was nnelernsid and
lefe,
MIntircre Liniment Cures tiletember.
En. 5.
ISSUE. 9.-15.
Mountaineering Soldlerin
France hag a ,special body of
mbutaineering soldiers called the
Oliasseurs Alpine'who „tree wholly
aft home among the enow-eapped
orage and fastnesses of 'fetch is re-,
gien as the: Vosgs,s. They aMe 1./1 -
lined to the eta of hig91 altitudee,
pritctiaed in the use of akin and ean
move fres:rept:int to, point with, ser-
iPiortAfilligeirr:oPtediet'•Yel'ian'Ten,4floir Itala-trncY8liaaer:
sae light, effective ,astillery 01:spe-
cial design ands cossetrugion, .easily
talpen down and quickly aseem,ble•d,
which they tranapoet on the backs
of mules .anc1 which they can take to
oseredirtililnEgylytroionpasecceoetsbillid‘lelvaxpdaiyeitclacnrisssr.
out each opmatiene in the ere:miter-
o ns, snow -blocked, wind-swept
MO u•nbain passe,s.
2.
British as Toy Makers.
. .
Brinell toy making, .a.s. 00 indus-
tey, was fent started in Lieer.po.o.1
in October, an,cl three distinct
branches of this work have now
been established. The women's war-
earvice bureau, which was osiginal-
ly founded by Mrit. Herbert. 11,
Ilathbone as the lady maysiness' bu
ream openedtheir workroome isa
October with 10 girls, and the
scheme has, developed to bhe extent
'that they are now • employing be-
tween 40 Eldlia) 50 girls.
:NOTHING CAN EQUAL
BABY'S° WN TAI3LETS
• Mrs, Alex. Bukhara, Oonn, Ont.,
writes :--"My daughter has used
Baby's Own Tablets for her baby
and thinks there is nothing to equal
them for little ones. All mothers,
who have esed the Tablets, say the,
same thing. They break up colds,
regulate the bowels and• stomach
and keep the little ones healthy and
happy. They are sold by medicine
dealer.s or by mail at 25 cents is ben
,fr.can The Dr, Williams' Mediaine
GO., BPOOkIrlik, Ont.
•"'
Some people talk so much they
never remember anything 'they say.
Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
lust Now IL's Looking for, Tips.
Eph-What is Mose doin' in de
city?
113en---He is a hank director.
"What's his auties?"
"He atan's in de door an' tells
people where to go."
LOW FARES TO THE CHICAGO
EXPOSITIONS.
Via chicaeo & North western inf.
Pour splendid daily troans from the Now
Passenger Terminal, Chicago to San
Francisco, Los Angeles toil San Diego.
aM:ibleittel:eu;s34710..enniacMtir trip and garnish fold.
track. Automatic eleetrle safety signals
anti direct routes. Double
ens lesd full particulars.
IL II. Bennett, Clem Agt , 46 rouge St,
Toronto, one
Teacher--“Ja—ne, can you tell me
who succ,eeded Edward VL ?" ;farm
-"Mary." Teacher -"Now, Lacy,
who followed Many?" Lucy -"Her
little lamlb."
IEWGINEI
MR SALE
flew Wheelock 18 x 42
1 S. FRANK WILSON & SONS
,and all parts. Can be shown.
erunning at present time.
Weil sell at less than half
cost price.
flywheel, frame, ben, cylinders
Complete operating condition1,0
-
Automatic vaive
73 Adelaide St West, Toronto
111422EMESZE&E.
The
delight.
The
picnicker's, -
choice.
Everybody's
favorite.
POTTED
MEATS—
rull flavored and
perfectly cooked
make delicious
sandwiches.
.FIVRIVIS FOR SALE.
11. W, DAWSON, Hamar •Colborne Street,
Toronto,
IP YOU WANT 0000 BUY OIL 82114.Fruit, Stook, Grain or Dairy Farm.
i 4
Write 11 tv. Damien. Brarripton. or 90 Col.
borne St. Termite. .
14. W. DAWSON, Colborne St., Toronto.
• NURSERY 070041.
QTRAWBEttaille, RASPBERRIES, PO,'
i•O TATOES. Catalogue free. McConnell
as son, Port Burwell, Ont.
. ilaiants.tARE001,
CI &Nogg, TUMORS. LUMPS, 070..
Internal and external, cured with.
eut Pain b1 inn holes treatment. Writ*
II before too Its Dr. nellmea Mediae&
Ce., Limited, Collingwood, Ont.
HAWK BICYCLES
AEnL-to- taeeHighGR1ccleitietrt1 orC,
N,za,trlc,E
cd Irib , ;ela.cke4le 2T.5i
rie0$,
highgratie eoutpsneft,inetud-
1
i:gm:atd.
"Ficoil
FREE 115Catalogie
'1 igep8Bcr,sSr,ire!,
andRetatrilfceerml. You can
buy your supplies from as at
Wholesale Pneue,
T. W. BOYD & SON.
27NotrebameSLIVe31.MontreaL
The First of ALL
"Home Remedies"
"VASELINE," in its many
V forms tvith their innumer-
able uses, is the foundation of the
family medicine chest,
seine
Trademark
•
It keeps the skin smooth and
sound, Invaluable in the nursery
for burns, cuts, insect bites, ete.
Absolutely pure and safe.
AVOID SUBSTITUTES. Insist
on "Vaseline' in original pack-
ages bearing the name, CHESEs
BRO UGH M A.NUFACTU R-
ING Co., Consolklated. inc sale
at al I. Chemists and General Stores,
Illustrated booklet free on remit
CHESEBROUGH DWG CO.
(Consolidated)
1880 CliA130T AVE., MONTREAL
The source of true living is not
in possessions, but in clieleurse-
meets. The anould •of a manes for- •
tune is in this own hands.
.
•
•
.......,_,......
.,,,„.;..
BRUCE'S
. . .
SEEDS,:: fai_
• SPECIAL COLLECTIONS . •,
(Prices Prepaid) , • 08.4
Brumes Collection Floral Gents, 1 pkt.
each 6 varieties, Pine Animals, each separate, *f. 'L.
neatly colors, for :sac.•es
Drnee's Peerless Collection Tall Nasturti, I,
ums.
1 pkt. each of 6 finest varieties, separate colors, for Ofic, ' .3e3
Bruce's Bova Nosegay Collection Svrect Peas. e
1 pkt. each 13 superb sorts, separate colors, for 25e. . .
Drawee Peerless Collection Dwarf Nasturtiums, 1 Pkteach of 6 fiueSt
sorts, separate colors, Inc 25e.
Brines liimpiro Collection Asters,1 pit. each of 4 magnificent varieties,
separate, n11 colors, fqr 26e„
Bruce's "A" Vegetable Collection, 6 Wets. different varieties, our coke
Eon, for 25c.
Brucete "B" Vegetable Collection, 12 pkty, different varieties, our selec-
tion, for 50c.
Broceht "C" V eget able Collection, 31 pktsdifferent rnrielior ttud N.S.).
each, Beaus, Corn and Pens, our selection, for 78o, ,
FREE ---FgrATZTAT4t1,4,1ittv'etzi°.V,V,',1,t 1VATT, FroZiTM
Hamilton, Ontario
John A. Bruce & Co., Ltd. r,..,4,Ais,,ccl sixty-five years.
4
't
',lh!
'4
-
,
1
$500 FOR A NAIVE
This is the beautiful now perfume, made ra
Canada, endorsed mid used exoluelvely be tide.
Pauline Donalda, the famous Canadian Prilm4
Donna.
We want a suitable rIBM10 for 12. and un 5511
give,
$600 IN CASH PRIZES
as follows: -
5400.00 for the best name.
60,00 for the best deSeriptiotr of the Peril:ono.
26.00 for the ,eecond beat name.
10.00 for the second beet description.
8,00 for Elio third beet deeeription.
and ten 81.00 mixes for the next best descriP
korai,
The winner of 46to contest Avill bo decided be
committee of Montreara leading advertising 103"
and their decision will bo anal, Should two or
mote eouteetente send in the winning !mum the
er,tse wili be equally divided, and an additiOnal
urea to the ',matte M15,00 'will bo given each sue,
cesetuti ooutostent. No' employee or member et
this limn 'shall enter, he,,,eoptest, ogg-
teat AlOtlf.9 olre pat, seirn
to %IT 3t) 110W perfume before- sn'bvnitiling taunt.
AbVr?-151r. TBIt'" .y oontestant
euggest on, for 0 nnane, iya Innate the fellowing
Stleolill °Vert -Tor ono Alma ton .cente, wo will
61ee9110 05 Sreial StiliPettir Bottles of tIliaear un-regune 6 cents siso-togother With
Pont ()anted SaLyi and (Me Premium COuPoll.
m101, 11 001180. necesonry to este the Fres
et lie Ito ejl
rite to -day. You will 13o delighted with the
Pcaftireo, and Mame, a chance to 10.11 the big,Prixo.
'RODGERS, C1RAY & STEWART, PERFUMERS
Dept. W.I. 332 eteuriv 57,, MONTREAL.