HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1915-05-13, Page 6L..
BANISH PIMPLES
AND ERUP
In the Spring Most Peop
a Tonic Medicin
One of the surest signs.
blood is out of corder is
pies, unsightly eruptions
zema that come frequently
change from winter to aspaing.
These prove that the long indoor
life of winter has had its effect upon
the' blood, and that a tonic medi-
cine is seeded to -put it, right, In-
deed tihere are few people who do
not need a tonic at :this id'eason.
Bad blood does not merely show
itself in disfiguring eruption's. To
this same condition is dueattacks
of nhoumatis;m and lumbago; the
sharp stabbing pains 'of sciatica
and n ur .l poor appetite' and
a ages; P o pp a G
a desire toaye id exertion. You
cannot cure these troubles by the
use of purgativo medicines ;you
need a tonic, and a toric only, and
among all medicines there is none
can equal Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
for their .tonic, life-giwing, . nerve-
restor•ing powers. Every dose of
�this
medicine makes new,rich
blood which drives out impurities,
stimulates every organ and brings
a.;feeling of new health and energy
to weak, tired; ,ailing men, women
and rehildren. If you are out of
sorts, give this medicine a trial and
see how quickly it will restore the
appetite, .revive drooping spirits,
and fill your veins with new,
health -giving blood.
You cnn 'get these Pills from any
needici,ne dealer or by snail at 50
cents a box or six boaee for $2.50
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine
Co., Breckville, Ont.
"SINK EVEIIYTHING." •
Wilhelm IL
N'S WHELP
/ 14'
•i
To his dark minions undersea
Flashed the Imperial decree:
Sink Everything!
Spare naught! Sink everything
that floats
Merchantmen, liners, fishing boats;
Sinkships on Mereys' errand -sped,
Dye Christ's red cross a deeper
red :
Sink Everything!
Sink honor, faith, forbearance,
pith
Sink virtue, chivalry, and truth,
s
Sink Everything ,
Sink everything that men hold
dear,
That devils hate, that cowards fear,
All that lifts Man albovB the ape,
,
That marks him east in God's own
,
shape
Sink Everything;
I
Extractedl ulr Owner.
tis 0 5 firer.
The question regarding the own-
ership of an extracted bullet at pre-
sent is being debated with consider-
able vehemence in German news-
, papers, and in some law periodi-
cals as well. As a rule, a patient
likes to retain the bullet extracted
from his body as a •curiosity, On
the other hand, the surgeon likes to
keep it as, an illustration of his sue-.
cessful operation, especially in lec-
turing before medical students or
writing to his medical journal on
the subject.
A judge in Berlin has decided 'that
a wounded. soldier hive a ;perfect
right to the ;bullet that lodged in,
hie body, because, when it reached
him, it' was legally suibject to no-
body's ownership. The enemy re-
linquished its ownership in sending
the bullet forth. This question of
no ownership does not give the sur-
geon who extracts the bullet any
right to it, even if the wounded sol-
dier at the time should be uncon-
scious and unable to assert his
claim. Should 'the surgeon, never-
theless retain the bullet extracted
by him the soldier has a good cause
for damage against him.
Other Jurists, 'however, assert
that the enemy does not lose its
ownership after the firing' of a bul-
let ; that ammunition belongs to
the State and not to individual col-
chars. Whoever comes out victor-
ious in a battle has a right to all
the ammunition. that has been fired
and which can be recovered from
the wounded or dead. At any rate,
no matter whether the'bullet can be
considered ownerless or State pro-
perty no individual has any right
to lay claim 'to it.
The debate is 'being carried on
with the greatest amount of seri-
ousness by medical and legal a'u='
thou•ities, who have even gone to
the trouble of looking up interna
tional law on the suibjeot.
FIND OUT
The Kind of food That Will Keep
gee Well.
The true way is 'to find out what
is best to eat and drink, end then
cultivate a taste for those things
instead of poisoning ourselves with
improper, end teetib le food, etc.
A con-ervative Eastern woman
writes: '
"I have used Grape -Nuts 5 years
for the young and for the aged; in
sickn es and in hearth ; at fleet fol-
lowing directions carefully, later in
a variety of ways as my taste and
jai -dement suggested.
"But its most special, personae
benefit -has been es w substitute for
meat, end served dry with oream
when rheumatic troubles made it'
important foresee to change 'diet,
"Served in this way with the
addition of..a cup of hot Piistium
and a little fruit it has been used
at my moaning meal for six months, -
during which time cly,heeltth has
;much anprovedy nerves have grown
steadier, and a gradual decrease in
cry exceissivie weight adds greatly
to my comfort,"
Name given by Canadian Positron
Co., Wencher, Gob, Read,; "The
Road to Wellvillle," in pkgs.
•'There's a Rem,son.il
]aver road the aboveietter? A new
oar, appears. from timeto time. They
ire genuine, true, and fun of human
`e't- leaaa
/
.r., rr
rle
a
,4%
'tern
' s
f,^`
`/�%j ret', f� ��- i • .�-
eA�.1�X.+r�
.. a
CRIMES OF CLEVER, FIENDS
CUNNINGLY .CONCEIVED DE
VICES OF CRIMINALS.
Murder by Post a Favored Method
of Executing Seine of Their
Diabolical Schemes,
A diabolical German plot to de-
stroy passenger ships in mid -ocean
was recently revealed by the arrest
of 'three HUM living in New York.
An infernal machine discovered
in their possession consisted of two
fifty -pound 'boxes of nitro-glycerine
and 'other chemicals, with clock-
work connections.
One of the Germans, Hans Halle,
confessed that they had intended to
send this and other death -clucks by
the mail and passenger boobs. The
packages were -to be consigned to
fictitious
addressesafter they ha
d
been timed to ealo,de six daysfsom
the time the vessels lest port.
.
Experts who examined the death -
clock ock said 'that, if it had Ibsen sent
wird exploded as arranged; it would
have been impossible ear anyone
to have escaped, and the ship would
probably neverr have been heard of
again.
Bombs as Parcels.
This recalls the "postal" murder-
er named Harry I£tbtz, who died
two years ago through injuries re-
ceived by the explosion of an infer-
nal machine he was constructing.
Just before he expired, Klotz
confessed that it wa's he who made
and sent by post ;the bombs which
killed Miss Grace Taylor and Mrs.
Madeline Hererra within the pre-
vious two years. He also despatch-
ed the bomb that injured the police-
man in the house of a fastens judge.
in 1912,. being evidently intended so
kill 'the judge, to whom it had been
posted.
Last year' the .trial took place in
.Berlin of Wilhelm H,o;pf, who 'was
charged with having poisoned his
father, his first wife, and his two
children by means of arsenic, and
with having attempted to poison
bis mother and his second and third
wives. •
The eatention of the police was
first attracted by Hopi's numerous
purchases of poison, microbes. One
of the chief witnesses against the
man was his third wife, 'who said
that she had had a narrow escape
from death, and that she was only
saved 'because she left his house.
Microbes in Fruit.
Hes husband used Ito inject viru-
lent disease germs into fruit and
other 'edibles that he posted to her.
Hopes first wife died three years
alter 'their marriage. She was in-
sured for £1,000. His second wife
was insured for 21,500; his third for
£4,000. In order to prevent Poet -
mortem examinations, the murder-
er persuaded his, victims to empress
a wish ih their wills that they
should be cremated, a wish, which,
needless to say, he himself carried
crit promptly.
A similar case, an which a Iran
sent poison to his wife 'through'the
post, eaanebefore the 'lieunicb au-
thorities some time ago.
This man married a young woman
possessing ,a lot of money and some
valuable property. The couple es -
solved to go to America, and bee
fere they started a parcel carne:
through the post atlttressed to the
young wife. It ;purported 'to 'be a
remedy 'for seasickness serer by a
friend,
On the voyage the poor woman
was taken seriously •ill afterdrink-
ing the gontenbs of the bottle. The
poison did not kill bee, however;
but she arrived in, New York penni-
less, for her hufbagid bed disap-
peared, returned home, and sold
his wife's ,property,
Traced by the P.S.I.R.
Although these wily criminals'
have committed murder and alt
tem!iated murder ithrough the poet,
before now the Post Office hasheen,
the means of bracing murderers.
The Posit Office has ills "secret
service, ;called the Poisltal Secret Iii-,
gliiry Branch, where any letter 'or
parcel arousing suspicion, is' care;
fully opened. A ;sharp l.00k',out is
kept for letters addressed to a
"wanted" person by his' friends,
for instance. -
Neill Cream, 'the notorious pois-
oner, was discovered chiefly
through the aid green to the police
bIt the Postal Secret Inquiry
Branch. Neill Cream ,was a Cana
dime, and Scotland Yard managed
to secure a .sannplle of the notepaper
that he used. '
The .P,iS.J.B. was notified, and
letters 'we,re stopped that ;were
found to 'be written on Canadian-.
made (paper. 'On' being opened,
some of them;were found Ito have
been =written •by Neill Creagn to
various public men demanding
money. Thus was the poisonerand
blackmailer tracked and arrested.
Disappointing. the Gloaters.
"I winter ''ave a tooth drawn,"
said the youngster with the pugna-
cious face, "and I .ivan,t gas."
"Tett! tut!" murmured the dent-
ist. "You're not old enough for
gas. And I see you're not afraid
of a little pain. Be a man !"
" 'Tisn't that," runs a British
weekly's version of the story, "but'
I expect just at ithe end I'll give a
little 'bit of a squeal. '
"011e, that won't matter," the
dentist 'replied. "I shan't mind."
"No," retorted the, boy, "biut I
shall. Just you look out of the
window.'' '
The dentist 'turned to look out,
and saw a group of grinning lads
standing close be his window.
"'We'll?" he asked his youthful
patient. "What does that mean?"
Those are all 1 the kids I've
fought and linked," explained the
boy, "and they've all followed me
here just to 'hear me holler. Gim-
me gas!"
How Watt Was Paid.
James Watt, 'the great engineer,
during his apprenticeship in Lon-
don, had to live on Bs. a week, and
found it difficult. For his work on
the model of the Newcomen engine
he was paid £5 11s., and for, the
supervision of the constructioof
a bridge at Hamilton he -was paid
£7; his offer being less than that
of Smeaton, who offered to do ;the
work for £10. For his work as su-
perintendent of the Monkland Ca -
al lie received £200 per annum, and
for his survey of the proposed
Strathmore Canal he 'received the
stem £80—soot much, when the na-
ture of the work, ;a survey of forty
days, is considered.
a.
SAVED BABY'S LIFE
Mrs. Jos. Desrosiers, St. Al-
phonse, Que.; writes : "I cannot
say too mudh in favor of Baby's
Own Tablets, as they saved say
little one's life. Before giving him
the Palliate he was greatly troubled
with worms and was like a skeleton
and cried day and night. The Tab-
lets soon expelled the worms, rand
now baby is the picture of 'health.!'
Baby's Own Tablets:also break up
colds and simple fevers, curs eon-
stipation and indigestion and make
she teething period painless. They
are sold by medicine dealers or by
snail at 25 cents a box from The
Dr. Willit.
ams' Medicine Co., Brook-
e.
A GREAT SAVING.
Economical Methods of Purchasing
Supplies.
Nothing in municipal history ex-
cited more interest than the recent
adoption by the City of New York
of the C.P.R. method of purchas-
ing supplies. New York orders foe
municipal purchases total $22,000,-
000 worth of good each year and
found that there was much dupli-
cation and waste, some of the de-
par'tments paying' retail prices for
the :sam,e goods as were purchased.
wholesale 'by others. Under the
C.P.R. system everything is cen-
tralized so as to cut out the possi-
bility of duplication either in pur-
chase or payment of goods, while
the terms are naturally all the
more in favor of the railway. New
York City sent a special investiga-
tor round the Continent to study
methods of purchasing, supplies,
and he decided that the C.P.R. sys-
tem Was "the best for efficiency and
saving." This ware naturally the
source of much gratification to Sir
Thomas Shaughnessy, who was him-
self at one time purchasing agent
for the C.P.R., and established the
present system,. The New York ex-
pert investigator has been busy
ever since answering letters from:
others American munio&patldtres;
They pour in at the rate .of about
a hundred a week, all wanting to,
know about the C.P,R and its
model ; purc;h,asmmg de.part,mee*.
with a view to the adopting of simi-
lar method's rn other cities, It has
been calculated that the; adoption;
of C.P.R. methods by American
cities has saved - Uncle Sam a
waste of over, a billion dollars,
She Soon Gained
Forty Pounds
DAME BOlJCIIA,RD FOUND NE
HEALTH IN l)01)1)'S KID .•
NEY PILLS.
W
Now She' Is Advising All Her
I`ricnds Who Suffer From I{educt'
Disease to Use Dodd's'Kidney
Pill's.
Pertneuf, Hamilton Cove, Sague-
nay Co. .
, Que., May 10th -(6peel/te
--Perfectly-' curedi "by they use of
Dodd's Kidney Pills, Deaner' Ilene
Bouchard, well known and liagihiea
respectedhere, is advising ale her
friends -who suffer from Kidney dis-
eals to use .Dedd'Is Kidney Pills.
"When I commenced, to, take
Dread's Kidney
Tills I was ��a run
,a' ;y
down I only weighed .eeglhity,
'
Poitnds , Dame Bouchard state•s.
"I only took four 'boxes in all 'butt
they brought me back leo health and
now .I weigh one 'hundred and
twenty pounds. You may publish
what I say if you wish,. for Dodd's
Kidney Pills have donee wondeals for
me,"
Kidney Bills do wonders
for run-down people ibecause they
cure' the Kidneys. Oared Kidneys
strain all the impurities, all the
poison, oitt of the' blood' and the
pure blood carries new nourish-
ment, health and life, to all parts
of the body. That's wily so many
people , "Doldd'e- Kidney .Pills
gave mesaya new ease of Life:;'
- '5
'Why Grass Is Green.
Doubtless: many have wondered
why the vegetation of the earth is
mostly green. That is—not what
makes it green, but why it is that
color instead of blue or red or pus
ple.
'Moisture, it has been -found, will
be oall'ecbed by the green foliage' in
proper quantities while foliage of
other colors will not ;be properly:
nourished by 'the dews and moisture
from earth and atmosphere.
A aa'ther curious experiment
proves this,
Paint a piece of glass yellow, an -
ether green and one red: sencl.one
black,, end place all these plauinted
pieoes of glass out in the open air
over nightduring a summer OTautumn night.
When examined early the follow -
hog morning it will be found that
the yellow piece will ba very wet
and the green piece only moist,
while the red and black pieces will
be dr
Y•
This is proof that yellow foliage
would collect too nuech dampness,
and the
red
and•,61ack •would,sillier
none, Green, which collects the
medium amount of moisture, seems
to. beh
toT
caror hesadapted to t
t ho
conditions 'existing 'existing throughout the
earth.
Yellow foliage has been known
to damp off and decoy under the
swine c'onditioin,e that make green
foliage, thrive.
A few yellow leaved plants . are
grown tender oonsidenable difficulty
under ordinary weather conditions,
So Painless
Absolutely
B•� No cutting, no Dias.
ora Its the sore spot,
tern or pads to press
Putnam's Extractor
makes the corn go
without pain. Takes
out the sting over -night. Never fails
—leaves no scar. Get a 250. bottle of
Putnam's Corn Extractor to -day.
d•
KIDNAPPER KILLED.
Macedonian Bandit Who Held Mis-
sionary for Ransom, Is Killed.
Go!
The 'Sofia (Bulgaria) correspond -
cat of Reuter's Telegram Company
states that Yanne 'Sandauelky, . the
Macedonian brigand leader who
gained notoriety in 1901 through the
kidnapping and holding for a large
ransom of Miss Ellen M. (Stone, an
American missionary, has been
slain,
Sandausky was killed in' the dis•
rest
between ;the mountain or Perlin
and the town of Nev'remkop by some
person 'whose name is not known,
Miss Stone and Mrs. Tsillca, the
wife of an Albanian preacher, were
captured and carried off by brig
ands on September 3, 1901, while
they were on their way 'with a com-
pany of friend's from Banslco to
Djumaa. There were more than
thirty -'five' brigands in the attacking:
Deity. Except Mrs. Tsillca, the
friends of Miss Stone were allowed
to proceed on their way. Later a
demand was made ;for $112,500 ran-
som for the release of the two wo-
Men.
The kidnapping of Miss Stone be-
came a matter of international im-
portance, and her release .was work
ed;for by 'the .,govei'n,ihent et Wash-
ington with energy. Ma'. Sipencer:
Eddy, First Secretary of the United
States Legation at ;Co nstantino'ple,
who had charge of the negotiations
to secure her release, declared on
February 2a, 1902, that the capture
of Miss Stone was a political mat•.
'ter and that all the people of Maee-
dom:ia were in sympathy with it, for.
they ;believed 'that it was a step to-
ward freeing Macedonia'from Turk-
ish rule.
Negotiations 'for Miss Stone'e re-
lease 'without the payment of a
ransom were'futile. rShe and Mrs.
T'ilka were 'finally, on February 23;r
1902, released i0 f to r the 'brigand had
received $05,000 ransom money.
H
Graciousness of Life.
Life is wonderfully gracious to
us. It brings leo -many opporeuni-
ties of recovery, iso nilany chances
of escape. But if we consistently
reject diem they inevitably dentin
bii en number, Even if they did
net the momentum of your own im-
bues would rush you past t'lhens as
life grew on. Tlliat tendency to
resentment, that habit of retalia-
tion, the d!isposetion of elnemty is
growing upon you. -
POPULAR PEOPLE.
Bright Items About' Men and Women
of the Moment.
Can women keep a secret? Ask
Mrs. Despard, sister of General
French, and Mrs: Parker, sister of
fiord Kitchener, to talk about the war,
dud then you y/111. be in no doubt as to
the answer.,
German caricatur!sts are fond of re-
presenting Si,'. Edward Grey as having
a thin, hooked nose. Ai ,a matter of
fact, he 'has a straight, finely -shaped
nose, full and beautifully modelled.
' People who think it strange that
Mr. Churchill should have been in the
trenches at Antwerp forget that in his
time has done at least five 'years'
active soldiering, '.arid had. no 'fewer
than three narrow escapes from death.
Admiral Beatty, the pavement artists
declare, is the best draw for their pur-
poses. In the first three months of
the war Lord Kitchener was their
"star" picture; in the second three
months Sir John French took his
lace; nowiti
s all � the t o admiral who
o
made the German battleships turn tail,
•Ourreat ;nen all seem
g to have a
weakness for a particular word or
phrase. Mr. Asquith, for instance, is
partial to the word ;settled," and is
continually speaking of the "settled"
policy or "settled" conviction of the
country. Sir John French likes the
phrase "makegood"--used notably in
the o
historic order der- "make good the
Aisne."
How to age gracefully is, well illu
strated in the case of Lord St. Aldwyn,'
who has lust been elevated to the rank
and- dignity of an earl. For all his
seventy-eight years, he is as straight
as a die in his walk, and can keep
pace with men fifty years his junior.
He is still remembered as 'Black
Michael," though the jet-black beard
that earned frim this sobriquet is to-
day white as snow.
3
Will Quickly a Cure
Any Sour Stomach
Relieves Fulness After Meals.
"When I was' worldng 'around the
farm last winter, I had an attack of in-
flammation," writes Mr. E. P. Dawkins,
of Port Richmond,' "I was weak for a
long time, but well enough to work
until, 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 pain and fulness, and
all the symptoms of intestinal indi-
gestion. Nothing helped me until I
used Dr, Hamilton's Pills. Instead of
hurting, like other pills, they acted
very mildly, and seemed to heal the
bowels. I did not require large doses
toget results with Dr. Hamilton's Pills,
and feel so glad that I have found a
mild yet certain, remedy. To -day I am
well—no pain, no sour
stomarili
a
good appetite, able to digest anything.
'iiitd5 is a whole lot of good for one
medicine to do, and
I can say Dr.
Hamilton's Pills are the best pills, and
my letter, I am sure, proves it."
Refuse a substitute for Dr. Hamil-
ton's Pills of M n I
dios
a e andutternii
B t,
sold in yellow boxes, 25e. All dealers,
or The Catarrhozone Co., Kingston,
Ont.
'I
That's Another Story.
He—"At a football dinner a man
got nip and left the teibte because
some one bold a• story he didn't ap-
prove of."
,She—"Oh, 'h•ow, noble of him!
What 'was the story?"
Minerd'a Liniment used by Phyoiolane.
He Stuttered.
"How do you like my new
ferioe I"
"I'd like it better .if the pickets
were an equal distance apart. Why
did you build it like 'that?"
"The only mean I could get to
build it stutte're'd,"
I cured a horse of the Mange with
MINA RD'S LINIrMENT.
CHRISTOPHER SAUNDERS.
Dalhousie.
I cured a horee, badly torn by a
pitch f ark, with MINARD'S LINIMENT.
St. Peter's, C. 13. : EDW. LINLISIP.
I cured a horse of a bad swelling by
MIN ATM'S LINi14IENT. •
Bathurst, Nlt, THOS, W PAYNE.
The period ,front one full moon to
another is 29 days, 12 hours, and
44.4 ani rut tee.
Beep Minard'e Liniment in the house.
There are five thousand miles of
navigable waterways in Holland.
SWINDASIStira
nxessainestnellner
COTTEN & FOSTER
'AUTO AN
D
BOAT TOPS
Ford owners write for
our catalogue.
SEARS -CROSS
Speedometer Station.
179 Queen Street West,
TORONTO, ' - ONT.
w
Ault for =nerd's and 'take no other ,'D' Cl"
ISSUE 20—'15.
Pleurisy Pains. Vanish !
Chest Cohrs' Cured
NERVILINE HAS NEVER FAILED
TO CURE
Don't Suffer!
Nerviline is your relief,
Nerviline lust rubbed on, lots of it,
will ease that drawn, tight feeling
over your , ilia pa,
will have you swillmilingdestroy and happy -inin
no time.
'I caught cold last week while mot
'oring," writes P. T. -Mallory, fiom
Linden, "My chest was full of con-
gestion, my throat was mighty sore,
and I had the fiercest stitch in my
side you could intagine. Ae..a boy I
was accustomed to have my mother
use Nerviline for all our minor all -
meats, and remembering what confi-
dence she had in Nerviline, I sent oat
for a bottle at once. Between noon
and eight o'clock I had a whole bottle
rubbed shed 'on•
and
thengot into pers-
piration
a
•
under the blankets.; This
drbve the Nerviline v no in•
good and deep,
cep,.
and I woke up next morning fresh as
a -dollar and absolutely cured. Neva
line is now always part of my travel-
ling lett,- and I will never be without
it."
The large 50o. family size' bottle is
the most economical, or you can
ear
-
diteYalgeert the 250. trial size from any
Another Poser. .
"Oh, Tommy, dwelt ask' so many
foolish questions," •said"his lather.
'bIf it were so very foolish you
could answer it, eouldnet you?"
asked Tonsmiy.
Minnrd'e Liniment Lumberman's Priend.
Lost His Equilibrium.
"Oholly seems to be unbal-
anced."
"Yes. :His valet failed, to : part
his hair exactlyin the middle."
SoreGranulated Eyelids,
Eyes inflamed by expo-
sure to Sun, Dust and Wind
yes
quicklyrelievedbyMarine
L Eye Remedy. No Smarting,
just e
E • Comfort. L At
Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Mudge Eye
SalveinTubes25c. ForBookollheEyehreeask
Druggists orefurine,Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
His Old Mare.
"Horse's!" Said the Yankee.
"Guess 'you can't talk tome about
horses. I had min odd -snare, Mazy -
pop, who once licked our best ex-
press by a couple of guiles on a
thirty mile run to Chicago."
"That'•s nothing," said the Cana-
dian. "I was out on, any farm one
day, about fifty mien from the
house, when is frightful storm came
Up. turned the pony's head, ler
homey and, do you know, lie .raced
the storm so closefor thee•
t last ten
e
miles that I didn't feel a drop,
while my old clog, only ten yeards
behind, had to swiimp the whole
dip Canoe. ,
SEED POTATOES.
1iAmy IIt48li OOnn3LEIt POTATOES,"
specially eeleri t,d and flos ernmellt
inspected for seed.Only limited quantity,
Price, One Gonerperbushelf.o.b. liraniTh
ten. Also Connoisseur's Prde and New..
Snow, two excellent new potatoes. Price,
Two ^Dollars per budhol. Special erase .
for large quantity. Oaeh must aecom.
pony all orders. E. W. Demean, Eramp.
NEWSPAPERS FOR BALE.
PitOPIT•MAidINO NEWS AND JOB Ol-
LL
flees for sale in good Ontario towns.
The most useful and interesting of all
busineeees. Pull information on applies..
inn to Wilson Publishing Oompany, 73
West Adelaide 'St., 'Toronto.
pmIBCEn.LAMflouuS.
Cambia, TUMORS, LUMPS, .ETC.,
Cambia,
and external, cured with-
out pain by our home treatment, Write
us before too late. Dr. Denman Medical
Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont.
AA
NO g�,MOREE DANDRUFF.
DANDRV URE
Will atop your falling hair, cure
the' itching, end
make
a
ke you.
r
hair
glossy and smooth. Sampleenough
3 chive, 15 cents.
t54 TradersHank Bldg.,Toronto, On
,
iffigieslEsE
ae'a,
HAWK BICYCLES
An up-to-date nigh Grade
BicyclefittedwithRe lerCtain,
New Departure Coaster Brake
and Nubs, Detachable Tires,
highgrade equipment,inch,d-
iag nauanatae,.$22.50.
f
Pump,
FREE Tools15 Catalogue,
70 pages of Bicycles,Srendries,
and Repair MateriaYe,' can
buy your supplies from us at.
Wholesale Prices.
T, W; BOYD & SON,
S7 NotreDame SL West,Monlreal.
Wandsworth is the largest boa
ough in London. Holborn is the
smallest.
Members of the Allied Countries
have carried off Nobel prizes on
twenty-two eecasions; members of
the oounbries opposed to them have
carried off Nobel prizes on twenty
occasions.
s 'tint
bes-fs.,remedy
;mown 'for Sunburn;
beat 'crashes, 'eCWema•
ore feet. stings 6nQMisters.
A skin food)
All Druggists d Ste =d0
OP asren a.
ehiMirigrO
Canoes, Skiffs, Motor Boats
THE PETERBOROUGH LINE.
It any canoe can give you satisfaction, It is a "PETERBOROUGH."
Always and ever :the acme of service, model, strength and fin-
ish. Over fifty'styles and sizes. Write for catalogue. The latest canoe
is the Peterborough canvas covered. Ask for illustrated folder. Skiffs
for the popular Outboard Motors. Power Launches, all sizes and pow-
ers. Get folders telling all about these.
'THE PETERBOROU ItI CANOE comPaUIV, LIMITED,
PETERBOROUGH, ONT.
"O verstern " V Bottom $5500
Motor Boat
OCIt
Freight Prepaid to any Railway Station in
Ontario. Length 15 Ft., Beam 3 Ft. 9 In.,'
Depth 1 Ft, 6 In. ANY MOTOR FITS.
.specification No. 2B giving engine prices on request. Got our quotations
on—"The Penetang Line" Commercial and Pleasure Launches, now
boats and Canoes.
THE GIDLEY BOAT CO., LIMITED, PENETANG, CAN.
‘411
MEALS ARE NEVER LATE
VHEN you have a NEW, PERFECTION Oil'"
Cookstove to help you with the Cooking.
It lights at the touch of a match—like gas, adjusts in-
stantly, high or low, by merely raising or lowering the
wick. It means gas stove comfort with kerosene oil."
NEW PERFECTION Oil Cookstoves are made in 1, 2; 3, and 4
burner sizes; if your dealer cannot supply you, write us duect.
BOYALITE OIL
GIVES
BEST. RESULTS
"NOW SERVING
LOAN 2,000,000
ES. .t, HOMES"
THE IMPERIAL' OIL COMPANY
Limited
BRANCHES IN ALL CITIES