HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1912-08-15, Page 6.iso.mosseiss•rasemonfraliSa*ar
There are no dead flies
lying about when
WILSON'S
FLY PADS
are used as directed.
All Druggists, Gro-
cers and General Deal-
ers sell them:
ENGLISH WOMEN ASSAILED.
Either Masculine or Doll -like, Says
Dr. lffaeder of Zurich.
Dr, A. Maeder of Zurich, Ger-
many, contributes an article to
Imago, a scientific review, on the
English woman.
He divides the women of England
into two classes which are repre-
sented by the eeltreenes of the 'nes-
' ouline and the dolleike types.
"The first may be ignanecliately re-
cognized," he writes, ''by the
build, -which shows masculine
traits., the face being angular with
something rough about the fele
tures, while the gait has something
• disagreeably decided, energetic and
heavy.
"The suffragette belong to this
type. Her manner of thought and
feeling is ego -central.
"The impression of a. want of wo-
manliness is received everywhere in
London, Compare; for instance,
two theatrical performances, the
one M Paris and the other in Lon-
don. In London dancing and bal-
let are merely gymnastic exercises,
completely lacking in womanly
character and femineee grace,
"The English idea, of beauty is
that of a Botticelli `Madonna.' No
full, ripe forms are aimed at, but
the attainment of the.straight line.
The undeveloped girl is the ideal of
• the English woman, who wears
short white skirts at 50. The Ru-
• bens type is never seen.
"To this ideal anuch of the refusal
to eat sufficient food on the part of
the English girls is no doubt due.
I gained the impression that many
' of these girls did not desire mar-
riage, or at least wished to Put it off
as long as possible. , •
es, ."The other type, the doll, Which
" we very seldom see heeeseis quite
ineantine and undeveleified. She
seemed to me like a pretty play-
thing."
IT WASN'T,
"Doesn't your choir sing at the
prison any more?"
"No, several of the prisoners ob-
jected on the ground that it wasn't
included in their sentences."
When HolMway's (Dorn Cure is
applied to a corn or wale it kills
the roots and the callosity comes
out without injury to the flesh.
The target is never lacking if a
man has money to throw at the
birds.
Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
When a man begins to pay as
rauch attention to a dime as he for-
merly did to a dollar it's a sign he
is getting rich.
Wise mothers who know the vir-
tues of Mother Graves' Worm Ex-
terminator always have it at hand,
because it proves its value.
You may have noticed that "high
flyers" never display wings.
Minard's Liniment CUros Colds, eta.
1111111111inis...misliomil
MRS G. A. SEL/3Y AND GUILD
Uses Only Cuticura
Soap for Prize Baby
'I have alwaye used Cutloura
Loa!) and HO other for my baby, and
e has never hada Fore of any Rind:
ha[
He dem net even o e as most ha.
bins do. I feel that t Its all owing
to Cutioura Soap for e is fine and
- healthy, and when five months old •
won a prize in a baby tented. 14
makes my heart Mho to go into so ' •
many homes and see a sweet f
baby with the whole top of tete
a solid mass of Boyd, eaumed by tee
.... , me ot poor soap. I always oxeyes
mend Outioura, anti nine times out
Of bin themet time I see the mother
' she sem ' Ott I I afar glad yoe told
no of Outtoura. (Signed) Wire.
G. A. Selby,Itedondo Beulah, Calif.
Althorns Calloura Soap Is sola to ema-
ciate sad deal* evereilrhere, s Potol tO
"Cancers," Deft SM, Boston, USA, will
Ware a liberal' latapple. with as.P, book en
She On Of akin. NOP anti lialr.
PERILS OF WORKINGMEN
THE USE OF MANY MATERIALS
CAUSE POI$ONINC,.
Foreign Lams Prohibiting Use of
Ingredients Harmful to
Health.
Despite all the precautions and
safeguards that are employed to
protect workers, they are subject
to many dangers and diseases which
it is almost impossible to prevent.
The following are ,specific examples
of industrial disease:
Lead poisoning—recognized in its
• forms of lead colic, lead tremor and
lead palsy—is a disease common to
all workers dealing with lead
Such occupations comprise the
smelting of lead ore in the mines,
the manufacture of red and white
lead, china, earthenware, glass,
and the nee of paints, as in carriage
making, shipbuilding and house
decorating. Plumbers are very
lieble to its attack.
These definite foram of lead poi-
sonieg last Often for six months,
says the Chicago Tribune, but they
are, if anything less serious than
the chronic form, where the work-
er's system becomes impregnated
•with the poison. This brings on
anaemia, diminution of physical
and mental force, neurasthenia, the
outward and eisible signs of which
are chronic•headaches, bus of eye-
sight, forms of neuritis and lack of
ambition and initiative. Alcohol
and tobacco are
PREDISPOSING CAUSES.
It has been found that oxide of
zinc may be substituted for white
lead in paint. France was the first
country, in 1909, to'realize the ne-
cessity of enforcing the use of this
innocuous substitute. The law then
passed states that after 1914 thence
of white lead in all paints shall be
abandoned. The last two years
have seeta the passing of similar
bills in Italy Germany and Bel-
gium. Statistics as to percentage
of lead workers who have in the
'past been victims to the poison are
to hand, but space will not permit
setting them down. Suffice it that
the percentages, vrithoutprecaution-
ary methods of treatment, are ter-
ribly high.
Many of the symptoms of arseni-
cal poisoning are identical with
those of lead, but the poisoneitself
is even more insidious than lead,
inducing temporary paralysis fee
months. The arsenic poison is given
off in fumes or exists in fine dust,
and is always present among work-
ers in arsenic mines or those who
are engaged in preparing arsenic
for use in th earts, for the dyeing
of -wall papers and febrics and for
the curing of furs. •
Dr. Alan Stan, who has written
on this subject, states that he is
personally acquainted with one
case of arsenical poisoning, not
among the workers, but among the
outside public, whieh was directly
traceable to wall paper. In 1899 a
widespread epidemic of arsenical
poisonitig occurred in England,
which was traced to the beer manu-
factured in Salford and Manches-
ter.
This beer was brewed by the aid
of •
"INVERSE SUGAR"
or glucose, a substance in the pre-
paration of whMh sulphuric acid is
used. This acid was the source of
the arsenic, it - having been made
from arsenical pyrites instead of
from iron pyrites. Examination
showed that the glucose contained
four parts of arsenic to 10,000
• parts, and that the beer contained
from 0.14 to 0.28 grains of arsenious
acid to the gallon.
Hundreds of persons were affect-
ed, many being paralyzed for
months. The use of glucose in
which arsenic can be found should
be prevented by Mw. There is even
danger to the wearers of furs, re-
searches having shown that there
are sometimes as many as 170
grain,s of arsenic to the ecteare ytted
to be found in such meterials.
Mercurial poisoning is rampant
among those employed in the manu-
facture of barometers and thermo-
meters, in the separation of gold
and eilver from various ores by
means of an a,malgam in which mer-
cury is used; in the manufacture -of
incandescent lamps, where mercur-
ial puespe are used to cause a vac-
uum; in processes of gilding and
bronzing and in the silvering of
mirrors.
Phosphorous poisoning among the
makers of matches has been more
often alleded to than the others;
t even rejoices in a vernacular
men& of its own--phossy jaw. This
is a disgusting disease in which the
jaw eventually becomes by the rat-
ting of the jaw bones a pulpy, im-
mobile mass. Another effect is a
fragility of the long bones through
which spontaneous fractures may
occur from muscular effort only.
4.
SAWDUST FOR DYNAMITE.
The family man, who ,occasionally
indulges in home carpentering,
knows full well how sawduet seems
to week into every crevice, to cling
'to one's clothes, and to make itself
geenrail nuisance. But, despised
though sawdust may be, it is a by-
product with many uses. Used as an
absorbent for nitro-glycerine, it
produces dynamite. Used vvith
clay, and burned, it produces a fire-
proof 'hrickt teat enakee excellent
and very cluriebM material for build-
ing work. Sawdust mixed with
some suitable binding material and
eempressed makes splendid mould-
ing and imitation carvings, whilst
if mingled with Portland cement it
produces a most lasting materiel
for floors, •Bellow walls that one
desirea to • make sound -proof, or
peace against frog, may be pecked
with sawdust, and as a materiallor
Preteeting fragile articles in tran-
sit there is neehing better,
GUARD BABY'S HEALTH
• IN THE SUMMER
• The summer months are the most
dangerous to little ones. The com-
plaints of that season weech ere
cholera infantum, colM, diarrhoea
and desentery come on so quickly
that often a little one is beyond aid
before the mother realizes he is
really ill. The mother must be on
her guard to'preventthese troubles
or if they ole come on suddenly to
cure them. No other medicine is of
such aid to thcs mother during hot
weather as is Baby's Own Tablets.
They regulate the bowels and sto-
mach and aro absolutely safe, Sold
by medicine dealers. or by mails at
25 cents a box from The Dr, Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brookville,
Ont.
ODD FACTS ABOUT SLEEP. ,
Caused By Withdrawal of Blood
From the Brain. ,
All the organs of life rest in some
way or other. The heart has an in-
terval of rest between each com-
bined act of 'contraction and expan-
sion and the beginning of a fresh
act, Between each expiration of
the lungs and the ,saceeding inspira-
tion Were le a period Of repose.
Physiologists have calculated that
the heart reposes during one-fourth
of the time, Certain of the other
organs suspend their aetieity in
part during sleep. Old physiolo-
gists supposed that sleep was
caused by the pressure of the blood
on the brain. But modern physio-
logy, with a tendency to regard the
brain as the origin of all force and
of all functions of the body, inclines
to the view that sleep is caused by
a withdrawal of blood from the
brain. A curious trait bee marked
men of large brain—that of sleeping
at will. Bonaparte used to throw
himself on the ground and go to
sleep within a space of two minutes.
Pitt was a sound sleeper and slept
night after night in thhe House of
Commons, while his colleagues
watched the debate and roused hen
when it was necessary that he
should speak.
4.
'WHAT WE WASH WITH.
One of the few inventions that
are not ascribed to foreign ingenu-
ity is that common household arti-
cle, soap. It is said that the an-
cient Britons were the first makers
of soap, and that the Romans, when
they conquered this island took the
invention back again with them to
Italy. Most of whet we wake with
is made from fat, but abroad their
are stature], soaps. There is the
soap -root of Spain, the soap -berry
of Chili, and the bark of the Peru-
vian soap -tree. At a little town in
Mexico, soap actually takes the
place of copper eoinage I In an-
other pant of the seme South
American Republic the inhabitants
eat soap, finding much nourishment
therein. The French term for soap,
"eavon," by the way, owes its ori-
gin to the town of Savona, in
Frame, where east quantities of
the material were formerly manu-
factured,
111"1"111.1
Old folks who need something
of the kind, find
NIA-ORLI-CO
LAXATIVES
tmost effective without any discomfort.
Increased doses not needed. 25o. a boa
at your druggist's.
National Otos and Chandail CO, of Canada, trailed
164
SUPERNATURAL BEINIS.
Some Superstitions of the Irish
Peasantry.
It is still believed by large eum-
• bees ofehe Irish peasantry that cer-
tain supernatural :beings, which
they call elves; exist, and that thee
sometimeevisit the aboclefrof neer-
tals.
These elves are said to be but
three or four inches in height; they
may mike themselves transparent
or invisible at will; they are'reporte
ed to dwell in beeptifel under-
ground grottoes, ancleare supposed
to play many mischievous pranks
with human beings:
One of the 'customs attributed to
the elves is that of coming down the
chimney, or even through a key-
hole, talcing children away and re-
placing them with witch-lika babes,
which are, therefore, called
changelings.
The rural parts of Europe, as well
as ef Asia, fairly teem with still
lingeling superstitions not 'a bit
less Misuse than that just mention-
ed. In many Irish districts impli-
cit belief is still give nto th.e exis-
tence of a banshee, or female spirit
of the household.
Anether supernatural being in
Ireland is Oheriettnne, who reveals
himself to mortals as a wrinkled
old man and leads those whom he
favors to find hidden treasures. A
less beneficent apirit, is that of
Phooka, a fierce demon, who hur-
ries bus victims to destruetion
across bogs and over yawning pre-
cipices. Phooka takes many shapes,
&molding to the superstition, but
most often appears as an eagle or a
black horse.
In Scotland the belief in Kelpie
and Brownie, yet lingers in remote
Highland fastnesses, and there are
certain secluded districts in Eng-
land, sunk in ignorance, where pea-
sants may be found who are con-
vinced that •misfortune -working
witches still live and work their
malignant spells. It is less than 40
years ago that a poor old French-
man was outrageously maltreated
in a,n English viulage because he
was suepected of witchcraft. To
this day many a Devonshire man
and woman believe in the influence
of the evil eye and will religiously
S'hun a person who is thought to
possess this ocular deformity.
Perhaps of all countries Italy is
the most rife with superstition in
all its strange and imaginative
varieties. Italians believe in the
evil eye. They have a false spirit,
which is given to practical jokes on
poor mortals, and a darker hob-
goblin, the Feta Morgans, who
draws youths beneath the waves of
the Straits of Messina, -be drown.
There is a 'certain 'walnut tree
near Benevento, in Italy, around
which the witches are said to gather
on ceetair nights; and many a pea-
sant of the Campa,gna, 'believes that
the witches assemble on midsum-
mer nights allele the ruins of the
Roman Forum where they turn
ni
theselve,s int).- huge black cats.
As one proceeds east the supersti-
tions of the ignorant thicken and -
multiply. India is full of super-
natural traditions and fantasies.
HOW MANY OF 'US
Fail to Select Food Nature De-
mands to Ward Off Ailments?
A Ky, lady, speaking about food,
says: "I was accustomed to eating
a,11 kinds of ordinary food until, for
some reason, indigestion and nerv-
ous prostration set in.
"After I had run down seriously
my attention was called to the ne-
cessity of some change in my diet,
and I discontinued my ordinary
breakfast and began using Grape -
Nuts with a good quantity of rich
cream.
"In a few days niore my condition
changed in a remarkable way, and
I began to have a strength that I
had never been possessed of before,
a vigor of body etncl a poise of mind
that amazed me., It was entirely
new in ray experience.
"My former attacks of indiges-
tion had been a,ccompa,nied by hese
flashes, and many times my condi-
tion was distressing with blind
spelis of dizziness, rush of blood to
the head and neuralgic .pains in the
chest.
"Since using Grape -Nuts alone
for breakfast I have been free from
these troubles, except at times
when I have indulged en rich, greasy
foods in quantity, then I would be
wa,rned by a pain uneer the left
shoulder blade, and unless I heeded
the 'warning the old trouble would
come back, but when I finally got
to know where these troubles ori-
ginated I returned to my Grape -
Nuts a,nd cream a,nd the pain and
disturbance left very quickly.
"I am now in prime health as a
result of my use of Grape -Nuts."
Name given by Canadian , Postern
Co., Windsors Ont.
"There's a reason;" and it is ex-
plained in the little book, "The
Road to Wellville," in pkgs.
Ever road the above letter? A new one
appears from time to time, They aro
Senuino, trtio, and full of human interest.
JOHN AND JEANNIE.
John and Jeannie went for a walk
,one evening. After walking for
some time in silence John ventured
to remark: "Jeannie, your eyes are
like clia,mends."
Jeannie—"Is that so, John?"
(Pause).
John—"Jeannie, your neck is like
a swan's."
Jeannie—"Is that so, John 1"
• (Another pause).
John.--"Jeatinie, your teeth are
like the stars."
• Jeannie—"How do you make that
out, John ? I can quite understend
my neck being like a swan's and
my eyes like diamonds, but how do
you out any teeth are like the
st
Yohn—"Why, Jeannie, it's just
because they Genie out at night,"
PUT A STOP TO IT.
A good story is told of is certain
gallaiit Colonel. The inspection of
a crack rifle corps which he com-
manded passed off satisfactorily;
there were no complaints, and the
regiment was evidently in good or-
der. "But," said the inspecting
General, "I am bound to tell you,
Colonel B—, that rumors have
reached me of gambling being car-
ried on extensively among your offi-
cers."
"That may have been the case,"
said the Colonel, "some months
age, but I can aseure you that
nothing ef the kind is in, vogue now,
because I've won all the ready mon-
ey in the regiment, and I would net
allow any gambling on credit."
Its Virtue Cannot be Described,—
No one can exflain the subtle power
that Dr. Thomas', Eclectric Oil pos-
sesses. The originator was himself
surprised by the wonderful quali-
ties that his compound possessed.
That he was the benefactor of hu-
manity is shown by the myriads
that rise in praise of thie wonder-
ful Oil. So familiar is everyone
with it that it is prized as a house-
hold medicine everywhere.
ALWAYS SOME, DRAWBACK.
"He married the prettiest girl in
town."
;:WoewIll''
• Nhe's kicking because she
can't cook."
ED, 4.
ISSEE 1313—'12
MOST VVONDERRIL TIMEPIECE
A. FRENCHMAN INTENTS 'A
UNIQUE Cto CIE.
• Wakes Owner at a Given Hour,
Lights Lamps,. and Starts
Machinery.
When a, 1110,11 goes to sleep at
night in calm confidence that the
clock at his side will wake him at
6 the next morning'he illustrates
the faith (occasionally naisplaced)
that we of this century put in me-
chanical 'devices.
A French inventor,now invites us
to a more sublime exercise of our
confidence in machinery by bring-
ing out a elock that we may truet
to awaken es at different hours on
different days in the' ,week, to let
us sleep over indefinitely on Sun-
days, and to perform as many du-
ties between times, at specified mo-
ments as our fancy may dictate,
such as Austing a shoe factory 20
miles away at 5736 am on the 20th
of the month, lighting all the elec-
tric lamps in the City Hall every
day at 7.45, and so on.
11 this ,clock does net exhibit in-
telligence of its own it surely acts
as a remarkable storage battery of
its owner's intelligence, especially
when we consider that it requires
.only a single setting for an indefi-
nite performance of all these pre-
cise tasks. This device, which has
been named
THE AUTO SIGNAL •
by its inventor, Mr. Appoullot, is
described as follow
"The device rings an electric bell
for 20 seconds at / p.m., lights a
lamp automatically between 6 and
7 pen., and finally works an elec-
tric motor on Mondays and Tues-
days from 9 to 10 p.m. These ap-
plications are sufficient to show the
aim of the inventor.
"These diverse functions are ac-
complishe,c1 by signegra,phs which
are set at the hours chosen for the
working of the apparatus and which
are operated by the hour -hand, es-
pecially made for (this purpose.
"The signograph is a sort of disk
rnova,bM about an axis fixed to a
rod that is part of a ring turning
about the axle of the hands, but
having no relation with it. We may
thus change its place on the dial
without influencing the clockwork.
The movable disk, made of several
superimposed plates having each
its special use, bears three ring-
shaped ' protuberances arranged
crosswise.
"These are kept on the, plate by
cettral screw; orie receives the
impact of the 'hour -hand at the mo-
ment of its passage,
TURNING THE SIGNOGRAPH
a.nd closing the circuit of the bell,
for example. If the circuit is Ito be
kept 'dosed for some thne—,a few
minutes or a few hours—two signo-
graphs are used, one to close the
circuit and the. other pointing to
the houreerhen the serrvice is to
end, to break it.
"The signographs may be hourly,
daily, weekly or universal. en the
hourly signograre two of ,the ivory
rings diametrically opposed are
colored red, the others being white.
They are so arranged that the
white ones are on a radius of the
dial, the point of the signograph
being at the hour at which the ap-
paratus is to work. When the hour -
hand passes it aots on the white
ring and turns the, signograph. The
circuit is made and then broken af-
ter a eeriesd of time that varies ac-
cording to the w,a,y the device is set.
If it is desired that the sienogrape
shall not work, the red rings are
placed radially."—Literary Digest.
SHE KNEW.
"When does your husband find
time to do all his reeding7"
"Usuallywhen I want to tell him
i
simething mportant."
Mrs. Gabb--"Yes, my daughter
appears to have married very hap-
pily. Her husband has not wealth,
it must be .admitted, but he has
family." Mrs. Gadd—"Yes, I
heard he, was a widower with six
children,"
Dr. J. D. Kellogg's Dyeentery
Cordial is prepared from drugs
keown to the profession as thor-
oughly reliable for the cure of chol-
era, dysentery, diarrhoea, griping
pains and summer complaints. It
has been used successfully by medi-
cal practitioners for 0 number of
years wiih gratifying results. If
suffering from any summer com-
plaint it is just the medicine that
will cure you. Try a bottle. It
sells for 25 cents.
Self-made men sometimes need is
lot of alterations.
Minard's Linlment Cures Distemper.
It was at a charity dinner. A
careless waiter spilt a plate of soup
over one of the clergymen present.
he began. Thee re-
membering hiasaelf he turned to
his neighbors and asked—"Will
some layman kindly say a few
words appropriate to the occa-
sion?"
Bad Blood
is the direct and inevitable reeult of
irregular or constipated bowels and
dogged -up kidneys and skin. The
undigested food and other Nvaete mat,
ter which is allowed to accumillate
poisons the blood and the whole
system. Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills
act airectly on the boweie regulating
them—on the kidneys, saving theta
ease andatrength mproperly filter the
• blood --said on the akin, opening Ulla
the pores. For pure blood and good
health take
Dr. Mor's id
Indian Root Pills
tember the
A
Try it -test it—see for yourself -- filet "St. Lawrence
Granulated" is as choice a stigar as money can tally.
Get a TOO pound bag—or eyen a 20 pound bag—and compare
"St. Lawrence" with any other high-grade
granulated sugar.
Note the pure white color of "St. Lawrence"--ita
uniform grain—its diamond -like sparkle—its match-
less sweetness. These are the signs of quality.
And Prof. Horsey's analysis is the proof of purity
—"99 99/100 to t00% of pine cane sugar with no
impurities whatever". Insist on having "$1.
I,AWRliNCB GRANULATED" at your grocer's.
ST. LAWRENCE SUGAR REFINERIES LIMITED.
MONTREAL. 66A
IOntario
Veterinary
College
Affiliated with the University of
Toronto and under the control of
the Department of Agriculture
Of Ontario. Apply for Calendar.
E.A.A. GRANGE,V.5., M.Sc.,
Principal.
Toronto, Canada
Re-Operts
OCTOBER
1st, 1912
•QUEEN ON TREASURE HUNT.
Discovers Many Valuable Treasures
• in Windsor Castle.
• Queen Mary's latest pastime is
treasure -hunting in Windsor Cas-
tle, where there are several un-
used rooms that have not been sort-
ed for many a long day. King Ed-
ward and Queen Alexandra, during
their reign, started on the trail of
these lost possessions, discovering
many valuable works of art which
had passed out of living memory.
Not only. is the British Queen
overhauling a,nd classifying her pre-
decessors' discoveries upon many
eurious "finds" on ,her own account.
These include a splendid collection
af miniaeures of nineteenth century
beauties, which bar aunt, the
Grand Duchess of Mecklenburg-
Strelitz, 'has helped her to identify.
When the accumulations have been
sorted out and tabulated, they will
provide a much appreciated acces-
sion to one of . the national mu-
seums.
4.
Minard's Liniment Cures Carget In Cows.
MAY BE THAT'S IT.
• Si Pike—"Why are you painting
those chickens vivid colors 3,nd
sending them out on the road 7"
Wise Lem—'When the a,atoists
run one over they'll think they hit
a rare bird an' Pll settle for $10
apiece." .
'Small. but Potent.--Petrmelee's
Vegetable Pills are small, but they
are effective in action. Their fine
qualitiet as a corrector of stomach
troubles are known to thousands
and they are in 'constant demand
everywhere by those' who know
what a safe and simple remedy they
are. They need no introduction to
those acquainted with them, but to
those who may not know them they
are presented as the best prepara-
tion on the market for disorders of
the stomach.
NOTHING WORSE.
First Newsboy (urging les chum
on)—"Don't be a quitter I Go on
an' lick him."
Second Newsboy—"I won't, nei-
ther. I've got two black eyes now,
an' that's enough."
First Newsboy --"Well, wat's de
matter wid yer? Go on isa; lie can't
give yer any more, cam heel"
Ifinard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen,—I have used MINARD'S
LINIMENT on my vessel and in MY family
for years, and for the every day ills and
accidents of life I consider it has ne
equal.
I would not start on a voyage without
it, if it Cost a dollar a bottle.
CAPT. P. IL DES.TARDIN,
Sohn "Storke," St Andre, Kamourasica.
McAndrews. the Chemist (at 2,
a.m.)—Two penn'orth of bicarbo-
nate of soda for the wife's indiges-
tion at this time o' night, when a
glass of hot water does just as
wall— Sandy (hastily)—,(Wee!
weal I Thanks for the advice; I'll
no bother ye after all. Good-
iliAghtS.'t'andard Merlicine.--Paaane-
of entirely vegetable 'substances
lee's Vegetable Pills, compounded'
known to -have a revivifying and sa-
lutary effect upon the digestive or-
gans, have through years of use at
tained eo eminent a position that
they rank as a standard medicine.
The ailing should remember this.
Simple in thee composition, they
can be assimilated by the weakest
stomach and are certain to have a
healthful and agreeable effeet on
the sluggish digestive organs.
I HAVE LEARNED FROM FIDO.
To keep clean. •
To swat the fly.
Ta emell beeore tastieg,
To go in out of the rain.
To speak" when I want things.
To know when a master appears.
• To scent an enemy and keep dis-
tance.
To growl at bullies.
To remenaber teak even bones
'have mareow.
To driek plentyof eeld water.
To refuse to drink alcohol.
To eliminete eats from ine ae-
qiutintance.
To be a faithful friend! and
To hit *the shady spots in summer.
FARMS FOR sate.
H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street,
Toronto.
131 IGHT THOUSAND DOLLARS WILL
111 buy beautiful hundred acres in
Northumberland County, including Stoat
and Implements, There is in the stook
4 horses, 10 cows, eta This is a snap, and
can be had on easy terms. Poseeesion at
once.
OOD FARMS IN LINCOLN, WELLAND,
Ur Halton, Pool, York, Durham, North.
urnborland, Prince Edward counties at
reasonable prices.
A1,13ERTA, SASKATCHEWAN AND
Manitoba lands in large or small
blocks.
1-1 EMT FARMS—ALL SIZES. IN THS
Niagara Fruit Bolt.
H. W. DAWSON, Toronto.
'MAU HELP WANTED,
RAILWAYS REQUIRE YOUNG MEN
for positions in stations. These men
are placed in positions as fast 9.8 we tan
prepare them, Railway °Stiehl endorse
our School. Nov is the time to Make ar.
rangements for Pall studies. Preo Book
No. 18 explains. Dominion School Railroad.
Mg, Toronto. .
GOOD TINSMITHS WANTED—STEADY
work. A. B. Ormsby, Limited, To.
ronto.
WANTED—By WELD KNOWN AtAir,
order house, dealing exclusively in
women's wearing apparel, local represen.
tatives to take orders from Catalogue.
State occupation and experience, ApPlY.
"Styletex," care A. McKim Co., Toronto,
MISCELLANEOUS,
ILT AY AND FARbl SCALES. Wilson's
1.1. Soule Works, 9 Esplanade. Toronto.
ANOER. TUMORS, LUMPS, at. In.
ternal and external, cured withouli
Pain by onr home treatment. Write MI
before too late. Dr. Hellman Medical Co..
Limited. Collingwood, Ont.
irt TON SCALE GUARANTEED. Wilson's
NJ Scale Works, 9 Esplanade, Toronto.
ONHOUND PUPS — GUARANTEED.
L' Write, Chas Resbeek, Vanleek 1011,
Ontario.
CLEANING LADIES'
WRLKINO OR OUTING SUITS
Offn be done perfectly hy our Freneh process Try It,
British American Dyeing Co.
Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa and Quebec.
ZS, MT sI31- 1,MC
CREOSOTE
0131.21.m:a.nr3Lea SES-bas,iL3re.oss
Protect Preserve—E3eautify
eamplea and Booklets on Application
JAMES LANGMUIR & CO., Limited
18741 Bathurst Street TORONTO
STOP
THIS
WITH
COOP 8 PLY KNOCKER
It ws glyo .1.10 011I1.• licrf neork handor and On
-w
uoyn tor y,..nr nlvolf Ono of files—contented
co
lam toad. to Inns man if o1.4 SIOr day, USS
Cooper'. tsfeif, ;none,. Enny fp 0.—
econnedwa—affininot--... c11..frta (Itnnorlar) Uhl;
OntIono arnpnrul) 51.0. Ilpeon0 at:Soln: Iron -011n
what other* ea f anon{ boom.fl, any donlen
WM. COOPER NEPSEWS;• TORONTO
suza.Futmo•wrueutout
COW COMFORT
is guaranteed to keep Files off your Cattle
02.01) FRB GALLON
Dilute with 4 gallons of water.
Write for n, gallon now to
THE MACLAREN IMPERIAL CHEESE Co
LTD., WOODSTOcil, ONTARIO.
Solo Idfra—The Saphtl Manntacturing Ce,
Limited, Montreal,
HOW IT WAS IVIANAGEeee,,,
"Did you take the cold plunges
your 'doctor ordered
"Yes. I didn't think I'd heve the
nerve, but I managed it."
"Ilow 1"
"Bought myself a ca.noe."
13y failing to d,o things 3101.1. don't
like to' do you will never aceomplish
very much.
Everybody now acittut.s
Zam-gult hest for these.
Let. it. give YOU ease
ceaufert,
Druattli owl Stores eveosvhefre
aflt]UUI