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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1914-12-10, Page 6' RIIEUMATIG ,,MISMII Can Only Bo Cured Through the Blood. Liniments of No Use r - In no disease does the blood be -. r Dome thin so rapidly as in rhouana- I tisrn. Not only &es it •become thin I but it is leaded with impurities - I rheumatic poisons. 'Without the I I proper 'treatment these poisons in- crease, the inflamed jeints,swell Dad r the patient becomes a cripple. 0 There are a number. of methods of r treating rheumatism, most of them aiming to keep down the rheumatic • poisons until nature can buiadi up the blood. sufficiently to overcome them. But tutiayonable conditions of cold or daanpness may give the disease the 'advantage and a relapse or renewed attack follows. ' Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale People buikl up the blood and en- able it to east out the rheumatic poisone with the natural secretions of the body. Thousands have 'tried this treatment with •the most bene- ficial retults. That every sufferer who does not try Dr. Williante' Pink Pills is neglecting the most helpful meansof recovery is sh.own by t.he following !statements Mrs, Ernelino Smith, St. Jerome, Que., says: "I• was attacked with what the doctor • • said was inflammatory rheumatism. • The joints of my bands, feet aind r limbs were •badly ',swollen, and 1 r suffered the most excruciating pain. I Notwithstanding medical treatment 0 the trouble became so bad that I 0 could not go about. My appetite r began to fail ime and.I WaG growing r physically weak. A neighbor who r had been benefitted by Dr. Wil - r aims' Pink Pills advised me to try r them and I decided to do to. In r the eourse •of a few weeks I noted 0 acurte improvement, and my appetite r began to return. Then the awell- r ing in my joints began to disap- pear, and it woe nob long until I was perfect13, cured and I have had no return of the 'trouble." Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are aold by ,all dealers in medicine or will be sent by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes,for $2,50 by writing direct to The Dr, Wilhelm's.' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, 4. Willa You Wink. The unconscious act of winking bears quite important relation to the welfare of the eye. This being the most delicate and sensitive or- gan of the body ex -posed to the air, it is in constant need of the protec- tion given by the eyelids, which not only close quickly at the approach of .clanger, but are employed in weshing the surface of the eye. Moistening is required to offset the drying effect of the air, and clean- ing to prevent the injurious effect ordirt. Every time you wink the eye is washed, Inside the eye is the little tear gland which, as its name implies, is busy -storing up the supply of times. This gland keeps the inside of the lid moist, and you wink au tem a tically whenever the serface of the cye becomes dry or a particle e.i dust or anything else strikes it. This work is done as often as necessary, and to realize how often it is necessary try how long you cam keep your eyes open without winking. The British Soldier. Lord Raglan, Lieutenant -Govern- or of the Isle of Man, at an ambu- lance prize .distribution in Douglas, 'relates an incident tilttabrative of ,the self-sacrificing spirit of the British soldier. When his Excel- lertey's son, the Hon. Wellesley Somerset, who is a lieutenant in tag Welsh Regiment, was seriously *sounded during the recent fighting In Belgium, a, private soldier of the regiment first bound up the wound cleverly. and having done so remarked -"They .shall not hit yoe again. sir,'and lay down in front of his wounded officer, effect- ually interposing his own body as a protection against the enemy's Ere. Use COT Talent. • Everman, every woman, every child, has Sarno talent, some power, some opportunity of getting good and doing good. Each day offers Game occasion for using this talent. As we use it, it gradually inereasee, improves, becomes native to the el -tempter. As we neglect it, it dwindles and waiters and clisesa pears. This is the stern and be- nign law by 'which we five. This makes character real and enduring. BUSY DOCTOR Sometimes Overlooks a Point. The physician is such a busy maro that he et:airtime& overlooks a Yalu - .able Taint to which his attention may be called by an intelligent pa- tient who is a thinker. "About a year ago my attention vsaa called to Grape -Nuts by one of my patients," a physician writes. 'At the time my own health was bad aod I wa's ,pretty well run down, but I Saw at once that the theories behind Grape -Nuts were sound nod thab if the. ,faod was Mt that WaS claimed, it was a perfect food, "So I commenced to use Grape - Nuts with oneam twice a day, and in is short time I began MO improve in every way and I lan now math r • stronger, feel better and weigh more than ever before in my life. "I know that all of 'thie good is due to Grape -Nuts, and I tan firmly convinced that the claims made for the fond are true. "I have recommended, and still recommend, Grape -Nuts to a great many of my patients with eplendid results, and in some cases tale im- provement of patcente on this fine food has been wonderful. • "As a general food, Grape -Nuts stands alone." "There's a. Ren - San'' Name given by Canadian Posts -on Co:, %miser, Ont. Leek in pkgs, for the famous little book, "The Road to Wed/vale." Seer read the above letter A now on, appears tram Li1110 to time. They ars gtoodne, true, anti full et human Interest. ' STORY OF LOUVAIN'S RUIN AN 'AMERICA:lei AUTHOR TELLS WHAT TIE BEARD. . Told By the Men Who Know Most about the Ruined City. Only ,a, year and it half ago I had gone down from Basesele in 00 lTl- pany 'with a young American stud- ent,. writes Mr. Barnes, the New York author and editor. I saw Lou- aain as it was then; as it had been for over six handred years, as it, will never be again. Anit was Sunday, the lath of 'September, of this.yeair of disgrace, 1914, that I sat, in the little .front. parlor of the house of Mgr. Deploige, president of the Superior Institute of Philo- sophy tlie University of 'Louvain. Seated at the table were Prof. Leon Veriest and Prof. Aldred Nerirtex, acting Burgomaster of Louvain, and by thairony of circumstances also raafessor of international law in this second oldest university of Europe. The .spea.ker's English was fluenb, and his words forcible and well chosen. . "It was all so unexpected," he said, "so frightfully astonishing, this destruction of our city and the murder, of Our people Even to us, it is hard to understand aed to be- lieve it. The First Shot. "For eight days the Germans bad lived here in the town. We had treated them well; they had eaten much of our food and partaken much of our wine. There was, no beer left; that had all gone in the Met three- clays. "The 'streets were quiet; ourown bourgeois police patrolled the streets in the daytime, Ibut were •not allowed to be on duty after 7 o'clock in the evening. There was no proper provost guard, although the Germans claimed to have estab- lished such, "On Tuesday, the 25th of August, at 8.10 a.m.,ithe dreadful thing be- gan. Late n the afternoon Ger- man soldiers had COMe in and had been well received; they seemed to be under no command, but wander- ed about collecting fooda" The professor paused. "Here is the gentleman who can tell yon the etory of the first shot." He indicated Prof. Leon Veriest, is slender, handsome man, with a dark, pointed beard. "It was :from his house, No. 18 Rue Leopold, that it took place. There is nothing but the wallaleft now. It is but a etep from liere; we can show you the very 'window. Let him tell you how it 'began." . Speaking Frenoh, but in the very quietest and calmest way Prof. Veriest 'began his story. "We were seated ab the table at dinner, my wife and I, a German officer., a eaptain of the Landwehr, who was quartered with us. Sud- denly an alarm sounded, and there was much running into the street. A mon ran by, shouting in German. The officer rose, and, buckling on his sword and revolver, went .oub. We closed the door and my wife and I stood in the hall. We thought perhaps our troops were coming, but we did mit know. Germans Started It. ,there was a great hammering on the door. We open- ed it slightly. and two soldiers burst through. They had both been drinking; one of them was quite drunk. I tried to stop them, tell- ing them that there was an officer in our house, but they ran past us up the stairs; they did not stop to open the window, but 1 ke the glass, and front there began to shoot, first two shots, then another, and then two more. Than they ran downstaire and went out the book way. "It may have been ten minutes, Bind there was more knocking and it great noise; four or five soldiers entered; they were not drunk, bat greatly excited. I tried to talk. with them, bob they would nob hs - ten. One fired at, me; the bullet went under my arm. "My wife was very brave; ehe eried to step in front. I dragged her back and again the shot, just, missing my head. We ran out into Wee garden. In is Sew minutes the house was all in flames. We had not time to save anything," Mgr. Deploige, a striking looking man with iron grey hair and about fifty years of age, leaned toward me. "C'est vrai," he said. And this was the story as ib was told to me of the first shot fired. The real cause was the sudden entry, in rather a oanic-stricken condi- tion of a Small body of German broops who had been driven with some loss out of the little Braaten, between Louvain and Madams. In .the semi -darkness they had come clattering in their hob -nailed boots into the. suburbs .and the alarm had spread before them. By the fire of -their own men one Ger- man was mortally wounded, two were slightly hurt, and a horse was a.nd for this nearly two hun- dred citizens, men, wom.en and chil- dren, euffered the 'penalty of death. They were shot in the streets or houses, or !burned to death in the holocaust that followed and that lasted fer two days, nearly one hundred dwelosings being given to the flames, including the priceless library. A crime of vandalism un- equalled! Parried. She was very temeh in love with him, and one .evening; while they were alone, she .asked : • , "Frank, tell inc truly ; you 'aavo 'kissed other girlshaven't your "Yes," replied ,tthe young Mall, 'but no one you know." TH STRULIPIE I. THE EAST — • THE A USTRIAN ,SOLDIEBS ARE DISHEARTENED. The Itussiatia, on the Contrary, lie- eept Their Lot VVith Complacency. A special .correspondent of The. London Times at LWOW (Lemberg), -Writes: I am more atid more ino Pressed daily with Ore complacence with which the Russian soldiers ac- cept their lot. There is no claieba that thea have been deeply .stirred by this war, and, though they be- moan the misery that it has brought nearly all seem to acee,pb it as some- thing ehat had to be. It is certain that they ,habe the 'Gel -mans -and are fighting willingly. But the case of the Austrians' is quite different. I talked a long time with a young Austrian reservist who has been lying now for weeks with is de- sperate wound through the body. • An Austrian Soldier's Story. He was a carpenter living near Prague. On anly 25 he was called to the colors without even knowing what the war was about and eating less when he did learn. I left my wife and ehildren weeks ago, he said, without any warning. They had rio money. Since then I have not heard a word from them and have no idea What has 'haapen- ed to: them or how they are manag- ing to live at all .without ne. Why is it / I am a blameless man. I have oe dislike of the Russians. They are a very friendly people. Yet we are all called away from our famil- ies and sent over here toattack men we have nothing whatever against. All die men in my regi- ment -who came as reservists feel .as I do about it -that is, all that are lett. Many have !been killed. We were sent forward after beiog told Iby Our officers that we were marching against a thoueand Rus- sians, and we fouel fifteen thous- and instead of one. I was shot through the back as we were wibh- drawing. After I fell into the Russians everything was easy for me. lam quite satisfied. They are very kind and the nurses very good to us. But always and always I am won...tang about my wife an.d my children. Not a word since I left. How can they live with nothing Thousands of .Cases. And as he spoke bis 'brown eyes filled with tears. In Austria to -clay there are thousands of such cases and every one of the 42 hospitals here is filled with them. The longer I remain in this town the more impressed I am with the order and peace that prevails. Every one is :within doors by 10. The bulk of the population seen& perfectly indifferent to their ethange of masters, Even the Austrians are not particularly hostile to Russia, and one of thaanomalies of the sit- uation isi that the new regime has maintained Austrian policemen to preserve order in tihe town, pend- ing tare arrival of officials that will eventually come from Russia to take 'their !places, IMPRISONED FOR BRAVERY. A French Soldier Gets Fifteen Days Imprisonment. So skid ,are the Allies in observ- ing the laws ormar that not even exceptional bravery or extraordiu. ara circumstances permit the viola- tion of them. A French soldier has just earned dm military medal for bravery, and Mteen days' iinprison- 'meat at the Beane time. The colonel of an infantry regiment tusked for a volunteer to take a mut and horse into the zone of fire to rescue a nurober of wounded men, who had been lying there for more than twenty -lour hours, The soldier at once offered his services. During three days he made many journeys and had :brought back most of the wounded, when his horse was .aholb. He unharnessed the dead horse and started to pull the cart Mark to the French lines himself. It was hard work, and when a few hundred yards further on. he saw a tram- -Poet wagon of another regiment whieh had been abandoned., he quickly comaecleereel the horse. When he got backao camp he was promised the military medal for bravery, but his colonel, on the ,lechnical offence of requisitioning a horse without permission, sentenc- ed him to fifteen days' detention. The punishment has been recorcle.d as• an added distinction. Halted All Trains. Queen Victoria bad a distinct hor- ror of travelling by train, and the strictest precautions to guard against accident had to be taken be- fore she could be prevailed upon to Proceed on a railwaY loorney. This dislike was Shared by the Duke of, Wellington, and armee from the same 'cease -the tragic death of IIuskisson 'Ett the opeseiag of the Manchester line. Wellington actu- ally •witnessed the accident, and for twebty yea.rs after refused to travel by Tail, it is doubtful if he made any loager railway journey M his life than an occasional trip to Wit:al- tar. t. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills are made according to a forntula in use nearly a century ago among the Indians, and learned item them by Dr. Morse. Though repeateri at- tempts have been made, by physi- cians and chemists, it has been found impossible to improve the formula or the pills. Dr. Morse's Indian Root P1118 area household remedy through- out the world for Constipation and all Kidney and Liver troubles. They act promptly and effectively, and CleD.Rtiae the 87atroesta Melte (he Boa of It. A wiso Iran never grumbles. No amount c.f.:grumbling will ever 'taro a rainy day into a Danny uae, and' the 'grumbler is simply werstiag snitch needed energy. None of us. can escape Oisagreersbie sit,untions, • mild even the most prudent mao mast be prepared to have his stalls miscarry, his allies fail him, his celeulatieas turned upside down. What shall we do in each oases/ The good man., if a wise roam will make the best of it. Whether we are to blame or not, whether we recognize the hand of an enemy ea the blundering of a friend, it is foolish !to. make the bed worse by our complaints, or to refuse to see the visible bit of blate eky simply be- canae it is very small.. Whenever we Moe a difficult 'situation we should make the best of it. Even that may not be very good, but it is a great deal better than 'the womb, and it sometimes happens that in the:most unlovely places we find the most beautiful flowers. TI1011GLITS FOR TIM TheoGessmans are beginning to mealize !that justice is the greatest • .all military aesets.-Mr. Lloyd C4eorga. • Not six months hence, bill att this -moment, the cause has need of e ery strong man. -Archbishop of York. • The attain aspect of poverty is that it is a social disease which needs healing dike any other dis- ease.--LorsaWilliam 'Cecil. Tabe a successful guest requires allittle thought, a good deal of tact and an illimitable amount of sunny good nature and graciousness, - Jeanne Gaston. . He who postpones the day for lie - its he knows he ought to do is like bios fool who sits by the river and waits till it flows by; but it glides and will glide on till all time. -Horace. How a Sick Woman Can Regain Health READ THIS VERY CAREFULLY. "For years I was thin and delicate I lost color and was easily tired; yellow pallor, pimples and blotches on my face were not only mortifying to my feelings, but because I thought my skin would never look nice again I grew despondent. Then my appetite failed. I grew very weak. Various remedies, pins, tonics and tablets I tried without pernament benefit. A visit to my sister put into my hands a box of Dr. Hamiltou's Pills. She placed renaece upon them and now that they have made me a well womaa I would not be without them whatever they might cost. I found Dr, Hamit totes Pins by their mild yet searching action very suitable to the delicate character of a woman's nature. They never once griped ole, yet they estab- lished regularity, MY appetite grew keen -my blood red and pure -heavy rings under my eyes disappeared, and to -day my skin is as Meer and un- wrinkled as when I was a girl. Dr, Hamilton's Pills did it all." The above straightforward letter from Mrs. J. Y. Todd, wife of a well- known miller In Rogersville, Is proof sufficient that Dr. Hamilton's Pills. are a wonderful woman's medicine. Use no other pill but Dr. Hamilton's, 25c. per box, All dealers or The Catarrh - ozone Co., Kingston, Ontario. A IX CRY FIND FOR TILE C.P.R. A disco very which may m.eitii much to the Province of Ontario has been made at Caledonia, Springs, namely that the waters of one of the four epriings is' strongly radio -active, A reoent visitor, who had hitherto gone SOT &dt cure to the Austrian reeorb at Badgastein, was prevent- ed this year by thewar, and tried the Canadian spring. He wee struck by the similarity of the waters, which, on test, wase found to be due to the presence of radium: The last official analysis was- snack in 1903, before the ramifications of radium were fully recognized, but Professor Roam, 6f MeGill, has been conunissioned to make ,a new complete analysis. The value of a genuine radium spring 150 Europe calculated to average from two to three million doll:are, owing to the number of invalids who aro attnaest- eel to soca it toeing. INFORMATION FOR INVENTORS Messrs. Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis, patenb 'solicitors, 1Vasetateita, report that 142 Canadian patents were issued for the week ending Nov. 17th, 1914,97 of which wars granted bo Americans, 25 to Canadtaas, 10 to residents of Great Britain .aina Colonies, and 10 to resideats foreign eountries. Of the Canadians who received patents, 13 were residents of On- tario, 5 of Quebec, 9 of Alberta, 2 of , New Brunswick, 1 of Nova Scotia, 1 ef Saskai.tchewao, and 1 of British Columbia. If you want a man to follow your advice, tell him...Leo...di° ftS he pleases. Linlmen.tifires Diphtheria. On the Contrary. !Did that bottle of patent medi- cine do your aunt any geed?" '"Illerey, no ! On reading the eir- tular that came around it, she got twa \IIJR"KilwdAi:sSea.G1.8.E.'2111 FIGHTERS. Little Brown Men Happy When Fighting Is Closest. "Blood -brother" to our High- landers, aaid a soldier who becomes a fighrian'g fanatic when the bullets ere flying and the 'steel is flashing, tile Germans wila find the gallant Gurkhas, who form part of tae contingent alt the. front, r ape bandit: 1 . " Five .feet nothing,.eo a' rule, what the Clurlrha lacks in enclose he makes up for by this 'wiriness, agiliby, the d eadliness of his aim with a Title, lalld ILO MMOh-dreaded kulcri, hje feta rite weapon. • Tiao Gurkha, is never so Itappa del ED• • ITCHING BURNIIIS OF ECZEMA INTENSE Began on Child's Face, 'Spread all Over Head, Pimples Would Fes- ter and Break Like 3oils. Cutl- cura Soap and Ointment Healed. Elroso, Sask.-," My little boy had eczema when ho was about a week old. It began on itis face and sprottd ell over his head. It - was in pimples and they would foster and break like MG° bolls ail over his head, Mit we?e like rash on his face. Tho eczema was very itching and tho burning was intense; rnade Mtn so restlese ho could scarcely sleep. "1 tried•several ointments and salves and they eeemed to do very little good no I tried °Mecum Soap a,i Ointment after he had bean stele about a month. When I used. Culleura Soap and a few aPPIloatletle of Site °talcum Ointment I noticed ouch a difference. Ile was ahle to sloop and Ws face began to get a new skin on it. • I kept on using them for three months, and two cakes of Cluticura Soap and three boxes of Cuticura Ointment cured him." (Signed) Mrs. A. Thayer, July 13, 1144. Samples Free by Mall °talcum, Soap and Ointment do no much for pimples, blackheads, red, rough and oily skins, Itching, scaly scalps, dry, thin and falling hair, chapped hands and shapeless nails, that it is almost criminal not to use Ibsen. They do even more for skin -tor- tured infants and children. Although sold by dealers throughout tho world, a liberal sample of each will be mailed freo, with 35p. Skin Boole Address post-earcl " cure, Dela. D. 13os5on, U. S. A." when -wielding the kukri, a large, heavy knife, with a peculiar- alutpedourving blade, at cloee quar- ters. Wtitth it he ean easily cut a m.an in two, ,and, incredible though it may seem, a favorite feat at his native feetivals is to cut off the head of a bullock with one blow of the kulcri. Olose-quarter fighting is 'hia forte, and his im.petnesety to cross steel with the foe will an.tioubterily draw him into, many a hob cerner. The Gurkha iS the Jan of India, herd .aiS nails, the best of emote, and a fear- less fighter. He earned our undy- ing gratitude in the dark days el the Indian Mutiny, when that Em- pire seemed likely to be over- whelmed by the soutiossue sepoys, 10,000 Gurklues massing over from Nepal to aaeiot os. And many a stirring story is told el how the "little brown men of the hills" flung themselves ab the treaoherous sepoys and avenged the ghastly crane of Cawnpore. Fighting is seeoad nature to a Gurkha, .and great was his disap- pointment shen lie was not allowe,c1 to take part in the Boer War, He has always. been loyal to the Bri- tish, and the Gurkhas are the only troops in the woeld of a-hora it can be seal drat they have never shown panic in warfare. .As one military authority has put it, "Properly led and armed, 1,000,000 Gurkhas, if obtainable, would waak through Europe." There araltowever, only ten reginteats of Gurioluts in the In- dian army, each consisting of two battalionsof about 800 men. Exactas, how many of these are at tbe front at the present time it in difficult to Baal. But whatever the number, they may be reckoned upon to make the ICaleer change his opinion of French'e. "contemptible little army." BLED TO DEATH Tried to trim a 'wart wtth a razol and severed an artery. The only wart euro is "Putnam's," which removes 'warts, corns, callouses in one day.. Insist on getting Putnam's Corn and Wart Extractor, it's Ole best,' 25c. at all dealers. Evidence. Lawyer -When did your husband first allow signs of insaniby, mad' aim I Woiman-The day he married me. I then discovered 'that; he was mak- ing only $10 11 'week. I was cured of terrible lumbago by MINARD'S REV. WM. BROWN. I was ouved of a bad cane of earache by bilEARD'S iLINIMENT. MRS. S. ICAULBACK. I was (lured or trentitirto lunge by laNARD'S LINIMENT, MU. S. MASTERS, Ab any rate love isn't stone blind. It can generally aleteet a Raw in an engagement ring. Minard's Liniment Cures Distemper. The Housewife. Master of the House (married to a .suffragette) - What's happening about the dinner, Mary Maid -There ain't going to be none, sir. Master -What ! No dinnail Maid - No, sir. The missus 'as come 'tome front jail, sir, an' ate up heverythink in the 'ousel ' HOME ,LE 8 S AND IEJ1LPLESS. A Pen Pail:nee of the Sulteriag Bel gi um,. In the course of am article in the NM ace nth .Century on Bel gi ten in Wart': a re.00rd itt personal ex- peliencee, M. J. H. Whitehouee teals of one visit he paid (towards the end of ,Sepeember) 'be A:ntiwera Cleated r al , as lack _ b sought home with dramatic loree bbs seer:like which Baligiu.m was making. "It wths the hour 'of the afternoon 'ser- vice. Outside was the crowded, eager life of an excited pepulacee, finding outlet fee: ibe emotion and solace dor its lease le communal entercourse, Inside., the Vag Con- gregation was .composed largely of women, nearly all of them in deep mourning. Many of them eeemed very old; they !wept tor sons, the Rale ones clinging to their ,duress ler fathers. Their fa.cee, 'beautiful wails the .boil and thought of years, were irepre.e.sive. They might have stepped from the wonderful Flemish canvases in the Art Gal- lery of their city. ,"A fea, days late.r these mourn- ing ,women, old and 3toung,, bearing in primitive bundles .all that they eauld eave of their honseholdegoods, formed pant of the procession front the city of itsi entire population. History itself ;cart 'scarcely offer a parallel to it .spectacle ao charged with human suffering. Five hun- dred, thoueand peaceful and unof- -fending inhabitants, homeless an.d helpless, were fleeing into the dark - new. Elam .the banks of the Scheldt .asnicht flashes of fire they had what for many of thean wee their limb vision of the city of their birth." Pleurisy Pains Vaillsh ! Chest Colds 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 abet, will destroy the pain, will have you smiling and happy In no time. "I caught cold last week while mo- toring," writes 1a, T, mansoe, from Linden. "My chest was full of conges- tion, my throat was mighty sore, and I had the fiercest stitch in my side you could imagine. AS a boy I was accustomed to have my mother use Nerviline for all our minor ailments, and remembering what confidence she had in Nerving°, I sent out fee a bot- tle at once. Between noon and eight o'clock I had is whole bottle rubbed on, and then got into a perspiration under the blankets. This drove the Nerviline in good and deep, and I woke up next meriting fresh as a 001 - lar and absolutely cured, Nerviline is now always part of my travelling kit, and I will never be without it." The large 500. faintly size bottle is the most economical, or you can easily get the 25c. trial Bige from any dealer. Some people give according h.) their means, and some aecording bo their -meanness. ------- Sore Eyes inflamed by expo- Granlaged Eyelids, cure to Sun; Rust and Wind ;ell% rsedlyie.vNedboSmarting. • just Eye Com fc:1;rt5.1"Aill; yes Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Markle Eye SaltainTubes 25c.Ito_rflook of ibefyeFreeask Druggists or mow Lys Remedy Co., Chicago Harry -Marry me anol your small- est wishes will always be fulfilled, Carrie -I ant able to do that my- self. What I want is a man who will gratify my biggest wishes. A WARM WINTER. • June weather provalle in California, the ideal watering place, reached tomfortably and convenientlY ,by the Chicago and North Western Ity., Pour splendid trains daily from the new 'Passenger Terminal, Chicago, The Overland Limited -fastest train to Ban Franci.sco; the Leo A.ngelee Limited, Woo daYe to Land of Sunshine, the famous San Francisco Limited and ttbir California Rates, illustrated matter on California and the 1915 .Expositions naid full petition. Mrs on application to B. II. Bennett, Geri. eral Agent, 46 Youge Street, Toronto, Ont, When a doctor is irritabie it may .be bacaase he is oeb of seetients. Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, &u. Delicately tleyoured- Higioly coneen- tratecl. OUP —771 WHY WORRY Choose yeair variety and ask your grorar for 'Clark's'. FARMS FOR SALE, H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street, ,.Toronto. 0)1 S15IOL .5 IFFTeilr LiniriBUOT 01011 W, Daweon, Brampton, or 90 Col. borne St., Toronto. H. W. DAWSON, ,Celbrirne 51.. Toronte• MISCELLANEOUS, (I ANGER. TUMORS. ETC., 'kJ internal and external, cured ' with• out pain by our home treatraent. '4Yrita us before too late Dr, Bellman Medlosl Co., Limited, Collinewood. OM, ATENTS OF INVENTIONS PIGEON, PIGEON & DAVIS ete St. James St., - alentreal Write tor Infwmatlea Nent and ,Second-hand, for heating d power purposes. Water .m• es TANKS AND SMOKE A KO S. POLSOM WORKSiamismo TORONTO Engineers and Shipbuilders. Ifiaohinery For ilde Engine, sha.fting, belting, pulleys, etc, from large factory for sale. Whee•lock engine, 18 by 49, complete with cylinder frame, fiy wheel, beat- ings, etc, all in good condition. Shafting from one inch to three inches, pulleys thirty inches to fifty inches, bolting six inches twelve inches. Will .sell entire ye in part. NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED. S. Frank Wilson & Sons, 73 Adelaide Street West, Toraim. nere's Money in Vow Maple Grove L'e -worth its weight in gold no't that adulterator° of pure Syrup are being put to ilight 10" the Covernment'e now tgotrylive leglelatdolnFarreere will Ile 01155of getting full Value for the girtu. ine artkile. To get the best re, sults. from your grove you will need our "Champion' Evaporator, lot us know how many trees you toe and we will send, you parr,culare as to omit, &c. Write for free book. lot. THE GRIMM MFG. CO., LIMITED 58 weangton St,, Montreal, Que. FROM FACTORY, DIRECT TQ YOU. HOUSE PAINTS $1.25 UA' No Middleman's profit. Reroutes Mixed Paints hoe earnml a ITan• tation for reliability, Composed of Otto ,best materials. Werke easily, holds Its lustre atid color longer than tho regular 82.00 Painta, Will not crack, blister re, scale. DARN PAINTS Guaranteed 750. gal. Sold • in 5 gal. cans. Write to -day for color carde. 0 tiaredi,t teed satisfaction or money refunded. H. & 0. WILLIAMS COMPANY, 121 Et alnico° St., Toronto, NIMES Mobilized. !She -.I told pa you wanted set him the next time. you Calla!, He -What did he Sae -He eta for you to come on; he wasn't afraid of you. Many a fellow has called it girl Homy, only to be stung in the end. Minard's Liniment Cures Carget In news. Warm the Cold Corners .ser DEC LAR E," said Mrs. Com- fort, "I thought no one ever would use that upstairs room. And you couldn't blame them -it cer- tainly was chilly, and there didn't seem to be any vvay of heating it. Final- ly I got this Per- fection Heater and noW it is as good as an extra room. With a Per- fection to keep it warm it is perfectly comfortable." The Perfection can be carried anywhere, where there is neod of extra heat. In five minutes it will warm any ordinary room. 8 TfiE, ISSUE 51-'14. PERF nm T1ON smola HEATERS it is solid, good-looking, easy to clean and rewick, and burns withont smoke or odor. At hardware and furniture stores every- where, Look for the Triangle trademark. Made in Canada ROYALITE OIL is best for all 1.111e3 THE IMPERIAL OIL CO. Limited Toronto Ouebec Halifax Montreal St. John Winnipeg Vancouver -----tatamarmesateavaresna 505