HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1917-03-15, Page 7n A
AN INVITATION CANADA'S NATIONAL couple oracmillion csheopstand wneerly
TO SICKNESS GREATNESS 1Qµ ]nillian pigs, bringhltr trp the
Impin•e Blood Means a Break- A BILLION DOLLAR COUNTRY,
Down. in Your Health. SAYS FRANK YEIGH.
Impure blood is alt invitation to
sickness, Zho blood is at work
day,
and night to maintain the health,
and any lack of strength or purity in
the blood is a weakness in the de-
fense against disease. Anaemia is
the doctor's name for lack of blood.
"--•• There may be an actual loss in the
(quantity of the blood, or one or
more of its constituents may be lack-
ing. Its surest symptom is pallor.
Anaemia is particularly common in
,young i
Y g g els. Ib is not, however, con-
• lined to them alone, for it is this
!same lack of blood that prevents full
'recovery after la grippe, fevers, nla-
Ilaria and operations. It is also pre-
sent in old age and in persons who
lave been under unusual mental or
;physical strain. If you are suffer-
ing from this trouble take Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills for Pale People.
They make pure, new blood with
every dose and this new blood means
health and strengtl. Thousands
have proved the truth of these•state-
rnents, among them Mrs. John
Hyatt, Metiskow, Alta., who says
:—
"About a year ago I was in a badly
run down condition, my blood was
,watery, I was very nervous, slept
badly at night; suffered froni fre-
'quent headaches and found my
,housework an almost intolerable
burden, my appetite was poor, and I
did not seem to assimilate .the food I
l'took, altogether my condition 'seem -
ed serious. As there was no doctor
in our neighborhood I decided to give
'Dr. Williams' Pink Pills a trial, and
I have much cause to be thankful
that I did so, as in a few weeks I
'could feel a great change for the
letter. I continued the use of the
pills for some time longer, and found
a complete cure. I feel better than
i have for years and can therefore
cheerfully recommend Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills to all who are weak and
run down."
Yee can get these pills from any
!dealer in medicine or by mail at 50
'cents a box or six boxes for $2.60
from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
BRAVE CANADIANS.
Immortal Fame Won at Ypres by Men
Who Saved the Allied Line.
During the Battle of Ypres, when a
gas attack had emptied the. French
trenches for almost a mile, the Cana-
dians stretched their line to twice its
length and occupied the position that
the French had lost. All night they
held, says Every Week, and all. the
next day and all the next night. Beat-
ing off attacks, and counter -attacking,
losing the woods on their left and
gaining them again, being forced out
of the little town of Saint -Julien,
rallying and driving the Germans be-
fore them, without artillery or in-
• Bantry support, for two nights and a
day they held on, and saved the Al-
lied line.
Behind the town `of Saint -Julien,
far enough back to be'well protected,
the Canadians had a. hospital • filled
with convalescents. They were lying,
bandaged and nursed, but in good
spirits and well along toward recov-
ery, when suddenlythe news came
that the gas attack had been made
and that the French had been forced
to give ground.
With feverish haste the nurses and
doctors made preparations to move
their patients back to safety. When
they came to get their men, how 'er,
every bed except three was empty, and
in those three beds were three men
complaining bitterly—men who could
not
upand walk
get because they
had
lost one or bell feet. The others were
gone—not back, but forward—hot-
foot to the trenches. Most of them
died, but they had their share in
holding the line those two nights and
a day. '"
Just Another Libel.
A Scotsman who suffered terribly
from insomnia was advised to con-
sult a specialist. When the consul-
tation was over the unsophisticated
old man asked what there was to pay.
"One guinea," said the doctor, and the
old man paid it. Then he returned
home, Later, recounting his experi-
ence, he said, with a pathetic quaver
in his voice: -"You mat clue me o'
sleeplessness) Dae ye ken, I couldna'
Bleep for a hale fortnight efter thinkin'
,on whit I had•to pey him!"
Foods Are
Increasing
In Price
But you can still buy
drape -Nuts
at
the same price.
This staple cereal in
its air -tight, wax -pro-
tected package will •
keep indefinitely, .yet
is ready to eat at a
ln'omen't'S notice.
Grape -Nuts is full of
compact nouri,S11nielit
With a delightful
Wheat a n d barley
flavor.
The Host Economical of
Prepared Cereals
Agriculture, Exports, Natural Re-
sources, Manufactures and Mer-
cantile Advancement.
How many Canadians know Can-
ada ?
an-ada?
How many Canadians realize her
ratio of progress, the riches of her
natural resources, or her present de-
gree of development, under way?
Howr big
many comprehend the b g
things being done, despite war condi-
tions? Take the wonderful story for
the last fiscal or calendar year. It tells
us that Canada is a Billion -Dollar
country, and, more in the big totals
and aggregates; over a billion in bank
deposits; in life and fire insurance in
force, in manufacturing capital, in
value of manufactured products; in
foreign trade, in productive values of
the soil, fisheries, forests and mines
combined.
Then there is the striking and sug-
gestive list of big undertakings -pri-
vate and governmental—under' way,
even though some may be temporarily
baited 'till the war is over. It is pos-
sible that few realize the great works
being carried out in connection with
harbor improvements and the de-
velopment of transportation facilities.
What of that big Halifax job—of
spending $30,000,000 on new.termin-
als, piers, and harbor slips that will
docl:•two-score of the world's largest
ships at time? When completed,
it will make Halifax one of thegreat-
est, of Canadian seaports as well as
one of the most important naval sta-
tions under the British flag. •
Gigantic Undertakings.
Have you kept your eye on similar
undertakings in the harbors of St.
John, Quebec, Montreal ? Every time
one visite these great Canadian sea-
ports new docks are seen, new eleva-
tors rear their huge tea-caddy fronts,
new warehouses shelter vast stores,
and commerce is carried on on a vast-
er scale.
Has the significance aver struck
you of ocean liners finding a 30 -foot
channel at low -tide 800 miles from
the open sea right to the waterfront
of Montreal? or of smaller craft being
able to sail over two thousand miles
further into the very heart of the con-
tinent to the wharves of Port Arthur
and Fort William?
Or, what about the $24,000;000 worlc
under way in Toronto harbor? When
finished, it will make 646 acres of fac-
tory sites, 130 acres of new water-
ways, 236 acres of streets and railway
reservations, 30 miles of public road-
ways and 30 miles .of railway sidings,
Then, there is the new Welland
Ship Canal; one of the biggest public
works ever undertaken in the Domin-
ion. Its ultimate cost of $50,000,000
is not the only or chief feature, but
its magnitude, from an engineering
point of view, with seven gigantic lift
locks, instead of 24 in the present
canal, and with a 30 -foot depth in-
stead of 14. The estimated time of
passing a loaded' freight vessel
through the entire canal, from Lake
Erie to Lake Ontario, is eight hours,
half' of the time now required. The
amount of concrete used in the canal P
would build a solid wall 20 feet high,
six feet wide and 100 miles long!
There's a factory in your town. You
see the procession of toile's going to
and front its doors every day, but how
large an industrial army would yon
see if the elnpleyes of the 20,000 in-
dustrial establishments were to line
up? It is estimated that Canada's
present annual manufacturing produe-
tiop reaches the enormoustats! of $1,-
899,000,000. Few also realize that 600
branch United States factories have
been established in Canada, represent-
ing an investment of $150,000,000, :and
that the number is steadily increasing.
This feet reminds one that • Great
Britain has invested four billions, and
the United States nearly a billion in
Canada, and every investor knows
that the
security is good.
road.
"The Magazine of Wall Street,"
Now Yorlc, saysi "Canada has an ex-
traordinary record for prompt pay-
ment of all municipal obligations."
How Canada's .government revenue
has grown since the paltry $13,900,000
of 1867-8 1 Tho estimated revenue for
1916-17 is $200,000,000—a tidy sum,
in itself an index of . the country's
prosperity. -
re
en
le
us
es
oil
ve
ry
of
ur
us
at
to
RAGS' RIGHTS,
Economies Both Little and Great;A
Needed in Canada To -day.
There neverhas been a time wh
a greater spirit of intelligent economy
has taken possession of the peop
of this cod"ntry than now. Many of
seem to• realize that little economi
are needed. We study menus and fo
values and remodeling of clothing;
do not deprive ourselves of necessa
things, but?''we make better use
what we have. We have learned o
lesson well, thus far; but some of
have, unfortunately. stopped at th
point, and there is yet another step
go.
A recent magazine deplored the in-
ferior quality of the paper used by
many. publications !nowadays. The
reason for this, according to the
magazine article, is that scarcity of
rags makes it necessary to use great-
er quantities of wood -pulp in the man-
ufacture of paper. Which shows one
waste that some housewives have not
stopped -.-the burning of old rags. As
an economic principle no one has a
right to destroy anything that can be
used anywhere.
The country housewives of thirty
years ago saved every rag. There were
a half-dozen or more rag peddlers who
made regular quarterly trips past the
country home of the writer, then a
child of ten. The tin and glassware
that they carried seemed something
wonderful, and still more wonderful
the fact that they would exchange it
for old rags and rubbers. - These tra-
veling
raveling ragmen were extremely well-
known; not so much by the names on
the wagons, as by their traits. One
was universally styled "the old cheat"
among our coterie; not because he had
cheated all, but because he had dis-
pleased one, and advertising of this
nature was as well advanced then as
it is to -day. Another was "the fair
man." This had no reference to per-
sonal beauty, but signified approval of
his business methods. Through the
advertising of his friends he secured
more trade than another rival whose
large red wagon bore the lettering
"Honest John."
There is to -day a much bettor mar-
ket for old rags. Let us save them—
erfectly clean, sanitary ones, f
course—and let their existence end
only when their last possible use is ex-
hausted. We can not' furnish rag pa-
per enough, perhaps, but. we need not
condemn even one rag to an untimely
end.
All waste paper should also be sav-
ed and sold for future use. This is
one of the many things, that modern
machinery and methods are able to
make over e again into o fare h
s paper;
P
er
and ourwood-pulp � sod -pulp supply is sail in
Y
need of conservation" ,Paper we must
have. ,We can lessen the danger of
amine by saving our rags to make the
etter grades, and our old papers to
ake the grades that are so necessary
our daily lives.
•
Do you - know that some of our 50
big Canadian pulp and paper mills are
being enlarged, and that naw ones,
equally large, are planned or in pro-
cess of construction?
Or have you heard that the Can-
adian ship -building industry has a
prospect of being revived; that the
lumber industry i
s expecting; Y if not
p g,
alreadyexperiencing;
--a-marked ex-
pansion owing to wademands, and
that the 500 flour mills of the eonn-
try are taxed to capacity, that the f
total eapacity is 100,100 barrels every lm
24 hours; that Canada's pulpwood in
Open up a Health
Account by eating foods
that Make you fit for the
day's Work without over-
taxing the stomach, kidneys
or liver. The continued eat-
ing of indigestible foods with
w
large percentage of waste
means diseased livers and
poisoned intestines. I`,eep
your stomach sweet and clean
and. your bowels healthyand
active • by eating Shred,dei1
Wheat Biscuit. It is easily
digested. It contains all the
material aln
cede for the e no '-
ul
ishment of the human body.
Open a health account for
you to draw upon. For
breakfast or any meal with
rnilk or . cream. Made in"
Canada.
NATIVE •AGRICULTURE.
Showing the Native African How To
Obtain Results_ in Farming.
The black mane a natural taste
for agriculture—up to a certain point.
He is willing to` cultivate his little
garden just enough to give him the
next year's food supply. Here his
farming ambitions end.
At 010 Umtali, 200 miles from the
east coast, in Rhodesia, is a flourish-
ing agricultural college that is putting
some new ideas of farming into his
irresponsible head.
Under the old 'regime, husband and
wife go into the field, carrying the
crudest kind of native hoe. They
spend several days in the back -break-
ing toil required to tarn up the land.
This done, the farmer sows a small
grain like millet into the rows dug
with his little hoe, and here and there
throughout the field, about five paces
apart, he plants two orithree grains
of corn. With whole tons of fertilizer
available, he never thinks of enriching
the soil.
,I -Ie sees that the white man gets
vastly more grain that he does from
a piece of land exactly the same size,
and his own diminutive• vegetables
seem smaller than ever to him when
he sees the white mans harvest, but
it needed the agricultural college at
Old Umtali to make him see how
easily he can get the same results on
his own little garden patch.*
At first the natives did not take
kindly to this civilized information
and thirteen young insurgents had to
be expelled from the school. Now,
however, there is the keenest interest
and appreciation. Results talk, •
•
Drink Hot Water
With Meals To Stop
Stomach Disorders
A Physician's Advioe
Thousancls of unfortunate people suffer
almost daily from dyspepsia, indigestion,
fermentation, sour acid stomach, flatu-
lence, gases or distress after eating. If
they would only form the agreeable habit
of slowly drinking wltlt each meal a
glassful of hot water containing a half
teaspoonful of pure bleurated magnesia
they would soon lind their stomach so
.strengthened and improved that they
o could eat the richest and most satisfying
meals without the leant symptom of in-
digestion.
Nearly all so called digestive troubles
are caused by an excess of acid and an
insuffielent blood supply In the stoeiaeh
causing the food to ferment and sour be-
fore digestion can take place. A glass of
hot water will draw the blood to the
stomach and the blsurated tnagnesla will
neutralize the 'stomach acids and retake
the food contents bland and sweet. Easy,
natural digestion without distress of any
kind is the result. Bisurn.tod Magnesia
is not a laxative, is harmless, pleasant
and easy to take and can be obtained
from any
al druggist, Do
no�
confuse
eBsMotivated Magnesia with other form of
mngnehia--milks, citrates, etc., but
get
it In the -pure blsurated form (powder or
tablets) espculalby prepared for this pur-
pose.
crop in 1916 was worth $15,000,000,
and that only 38 per cent of the pulp-
wood cut•in Canada in 1910 was made
into pulp in Canadian mills, as against
59 per cent. in 1915?
Commerce on Vast Scale.
Letus go a step further. Like our
mother country, we're a trading na-
tion—junior member of the well-
known business firm of John Bull
& Sons, still doing business at the
old steed. What a fine fat total our
foreign trade now makes, for the last
fiscal year of $1,447,$78,298. It was
only $131,027,532 in 1867-8, the/ first
year under Confederation. And watch
the big total grow,•war or no war,
with an estimated total for 1916-1.7 of
$2,000,000,0001
Of the total Canadian exports of
$741,000,000 in 1915-16, 84 per cent.
was of"tho produce of Canada. Can-
ada is now an exporting instead of an
importing country.
Or, take the trade' during the war
period. During the second'" year of
the war, from August to August, Can-
ada's total trade (exclusive of coin
and bullion) reached the high peak
record of $1,668,880,000, as compared
with $920,532,000 for the preceding
twelve months; while the balance of
trade in Canada's favor grew to $359,-
860,000 in the second year of the war,
as compared with $89,088,000 during
the first year.
War Munitions.
Over 000 of our industrial plants aro
making war munitions. War orders
totalled, on December 1, IOftt, $550,-
000,000, and further orders, of half as
much more, are promised.
It city man or country dweller, you
know a herd of cattle, a flock of sheep
and a litter of pigs when you see
them, belt did you ever visualize the
entire live -stock Wealth of Canada?
,suppose you sit on' the fence and
watch the four -footed procession go
by; two by two, in the good olcl " able
fashion—over 13,000,000 of than,
Worth ,$750,000,000. What a fine pro -
Cashel .our 8,000,000 horses would
make; what a suggestion of "trio eat -
tie on a thousand bine," the 6,0001000
CHILDHOOD AILJEN1'TS
The ills of childhood come swiftly
and too often before a tip ctor can '-e
called in or medicine obtained the lit-
tle one is beyond aid. The wise
mother will always safeguard her lit-
tle one by keeping Baby's Own Tab-
lets in. the home. This medicine al-
ways does good—it can never do barns.
,Concerning it Mrs, Napoleon Lambert,
St. Ignace, Que., writes:—"Baby's
Own Tablets are an excellent medi-
cine for childhood ailments and I am
well pleased with their use." The
Tablets are sold by medicine dealers
or by mail at 25 cents a- box front The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville,
Ont.
SOWED SEVENTY ACMES.
Did French Woman Who }tad Never
Before Plowed.
The French women from the first
have taken it for granted that they
must replace the men at home. No
urging has been necessary.
"Not only the wives and daughters,
but also the mothers of soldiers, un-
dertook the uninterrupted continu-
ance of
the prod '
1 ac ctioit'of food front
the moment the: men were called up."
And again, "French rencli women appear
to accept the carrying on of agricul-
tural work as their natural and pro-
per share o3' the hardships of war."
One woman who had never touch-
ed a plow, after two days' instruction
plowed and sowed seventy acres. An-
other carried on work on fifty aevee of
arable land, ten acres of vineyard, six
cows, soma sheep, fowls and rabbits.
This one French woman, with only oc-
casional help, kept going by herself
what two men hacl been regularly em•
ployed to do before, Another ease on
record is that of two young women
and one old widow who worked on a
farm of 100 aer'oe ,producing corn, oil,
wire, eidlr, milk, cheese, poultry and
rabbits.
1008eflyd's irinhaent fol'ea o oVorp*neoe,
Now She Knows.
A. young woman unversed in the
mysteries of baseball was presented
to a famous player.
"I lover -the game," she confided to
him. "I love especially to watch the
man at the bat. It is so cute, too,
the way he keeps hitting the ground
gently with the end of the bat. Why
does he do that?"
"Wall, you see, miss," explained
the player, "the worms have an an-
noying habit of coming up to sae
who's batting and that naturally puts
the batter out a bit, so he just taps
them on the head lightly, and down
they go again""
RSTatsmatigun
Is My Weather Prophet.
can tell stormy weather days
off b the twinges an m s1
Y �' lour-.
Y
ders and knees. But here's ani
old friend that soon drives' out the pains
sad aches.
Sloth's Liniment is eo easy to apply, no
rubbing,. at all, it Rimes right in end fixes
the pain, Cleaner than mussy plasters and
ointments, Try it kr gout, lumbago, lieu-
tnl''ia, bruises end sprains.
At your druggist, 25c. 50c. rind $1.00.
ISSUC No. 1'i•--•'17
The Renhnental Liar,
She was a sweet young thing,, and
having come down to sea her soldier
brother, vvho was on duty at that time,
she was being taken round by his
chum, She was, of course, fall of
5uestlous,
"Who is that person?" oho asked,
pointing to a color sergeant.
"Oh, he shook hands with the King;•
that is why lie is wearing' a crown on
his arm, you see," replied the truth.
fui man,
"And who it that?" she asked, see-
ing ea gymnastic instructor with . a
badge of crossed Indian Clubs,.
"That is tho barber; do you not see
the scissors• on his arm?'',
Seeing yet another mn with sulfa
decorated with -stars, she asked, "And
that one?"
"Oh,het the e batt li n
a 0 astronomer;
he guides us on night manoeuvres."
"How interesting!" • replied the
maiden, when, seeing her compassion's
badge, that of an ancient stringed in-
strument, she asked, '"And dons that
thing mean you are the regimental
liar?"
Took e � �
Frsen s Advice
And Got Results
How M. C. Linllos Found a Cute
in Dodd's Kidney Pills.
One of the Reasons Why Dodd's Kid-
ney Pills Have Had a Phenomenal
Growth of Iropuhu•ity in the West
Ellscott, Alta., .Mar. 12th. (Special.)
—The growth of popularity'of Dodd's
Kidney Pills in this . section of the
Great West has been phenomenal,
They cure kidney disease. That much
has been proved again and again. One
of the latest proofs comes from M. C.
Lindon, well known and highly re-
spected here,
"Thanking Dodd's Kidney Pills
seems a small way of expressing my
gratitude," M. C. Lindon states. • "I
suffered from headaches and dizziness
and was unable to find anything that
would do me any good, I tried sev-
eral medicines that were advertised to
cure my trouble, but they did not.
"Dodd's Kidney Pills were recom-
mended to me by a friend and I sent
for a box and gave them a trial. The
result is that I am feeling fine now. I
shall always keep a box of Dodd's
Kidney Pills handy,"
Dodd's Kidney Pills cured M. C.
Lindon because the trouble came from
the kidneys. Lumbago, rheumatism,
dropsy, heart disease, diabetes and
Bright's Disease are other troubles
that comes from sick kidneys. To
cure them cure the kidneys with
Dodd's Kidney Pills.
NEWS FROM ENGLAND
NEWS f3$ MA]I. ABOUT dome
120L1, AND 1119 PEOPLE.
Oteorrrnces is the Land That Reins
Supreme !o the Commas. -
dal World.
Last weds in London there -Were
1,828 births and 1,522 deaths re-
gistered.
Scandinavian thrushes and red-
wings are now quite plentiful in the
London parks.
A very valuable discovery of coal
has been macre at Bilsthorpo, near
Southwell, Notts,
German prisoners taken recently on
the west front show marked signs of
privation.
Sir Maurice Bonham Carter, C
r Ii..B. ,
son-in-law of ex -Premier Asquith, has
entered the army.
A sum reaching 212,000 has been
raised in Northumberland county fbr-
the Sailors' Day Fund.
At a pantomime performance given
by the Chatham bluejackets 8175 was
raised for local charities.
Mr. John Murray has announced
that the biography of Lord Beacons-
field will be completed this spring.
A lot of tripe washed up on the
shore near Sandwich, from a wreck,
is affording a feast for the seagulls.
A large number of the soldiers are
investing their deferred regimental
pay in the Government's new war loan.
The Northumberland coal miners
have refused to go on strike without•
a ballot of the members first being
taken.
The Walthamstow Council has de-
cided to give preferential employ-
ment to discharged soldiers on the
tramways.
An award of £5,250 has been made
to the officers and crews of the British
vessels engaged in the Dogger Bank
battle.
A fine of 25 was imposed on Dr.
Heaton Smith, of Baguley Hospital,
for allowing 71 unshtuled lights in the
hospital.
• The Railvayinen's Vigilance Com-
mittee have decided to ask for an in-
crease of ten shillinge per week in
their wages.
The Cheshire Agricultural and I{or-
ticultural College has been closed,' to
remain closed until the conclusion of
the 'war.
MONEY ORDERS.
SENA a Dominion Express Money
Order. Theytitre payable everywhere.
Plenty of Timber.
It, is estimated that there are be -
tweets 200,000,000 and 300,000,000
acres covered by timber in Canada.
OTlitard's Liniment Carob Dische, Etta.
Intelligent Lati.
It mployer-•-Boy, tako this letter
and wait for an answer,
Now Boy—Yes, sir.
Employer—Well, what are you wait-
ing for?
Now IieY --Thc t,nawer, ah•,
inaid's liniment alellotiee N•enta,lsrle,
a
Everywhere facts y r�■,���
prove the menace of lightning
Once you realize that the danger of lightning lies in
its concentrated action otta singly spot in your roof,
you will appreciate the safety and protection, of a
Yedlerized roof, Pedlars ?'Ccorga'• Shingles lode
together on all four sides, farming a single eheetof
metal from cave to ridge, Lightning cannot concen-
trate on any single spot, for Pedlar Shin les spread it
over the whole surface of your roof. When properly
grounded, a Pedlarized roof is practically
Iedenhuesbie. This summer know the sou e5 and
peace of mind of a oafs stool roof by Podlorizm5 -
now With ' Georae" Shingles" write (gr rho
' I0 bit Roof" Booklet NOW
TI -IE PEDLAR PEOPLE, LIMITED .
(Established 1861) • '�. ��
3 xcculivOohae O(iigewe, anOnd Ft.•eotortm;
Brankest Montreal, Ottawa.
a
O
Tronto London.
den
winnie
P
s
• Pln
'Influenza, tero,CDI�Shipping
Fever akr lroa,talensmeq
-
.-
pU cured, and all others, no matter how "exposed,' lent front
• �% b >< 0 having any of thane diseases with six dose LIQ0Jxy DIB,.
...'?t °fit+?. Z TEMPER COMPOUND. Three to six doses often cure a
-A,•- vp �„ 3 case. Bost thing for brood mares; acts on the blood.
�9 rl t.• �0 Druggists and harness shuns or tnanuraoturers sell !t,
��� SPOHNMEDICAL ea, ciumGoshen,Intl,,U.S.A
x
POR SALE,
.F1 ]�"jt OR SALE CHEAP—GOOD BOARD -
house in. Owen Sound, 1n good
repair, good location, Near Depot and
P'ector•iss, Apply 11., McGrath, )8xecutor,
Transcona, Man.
"SEWBPLpZ3t5 Poi SACH
1tD ROPIT-MAILING NEWS AND JOB
.(� Otlioes for sale In good Ontario
towns., The most useful and interesting
of all businesses. Pull information on
application to Wilson Publishing Com-
pany, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto.
MISOELLANEOVS
TS IC1.011MS, N:Lw AND SECOND
.11..33 stand, 512.00 up. Send for special
price list. Varsity Cycle Worsts, 413
Spadlna Ave., Toronto.
CANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, ;ETC.':
internal and external, cured with.
out pain by. our Immo treatment. Write
us before too late, Dr. Bellman Medical
Ca, Limited, Collingwood, Ont.
Our Non -Corns.
A sergeant was training a squad of
recruits in musketry, when suddenly
someone appeared in the line of fire.
"Hi, there!" bellowed the sergeant,
"get beak, carn't yer? 'Anyone 'ud.
think the place belonged to iter."
"Well, it doesn't exactly," meekly
replied the interloper, "but my—er—
father in-law, you know, owns it, and
nearly half the country besides."
"Oh, does 'e?" was the irate ser-
geant's answer. "Well, if you was
yer father-in-law 'isself and walked
acrorst the range when my lads was
firing, you'd just as easily get shot
as any other fool. So 'op it."
No News is Good News.
"What's happened to Brown?"
"Nothing. I guess everyting is go-
ing all right with him, because it's
only when they're in trouble of some
sort that we hear from our friends."
We have been using MINARD'S
LINIMENT in cur home for a num-
ber of years and use no other Lin-
iment but MINARD'S, and we can
recommend it highly for sprains,
bruises, pains or tightness of the
chest, soreness of the throat, head-
ache or anything of that sort. We
will not be without it ono single day,
for we get a new bottle before the
other is all used. I can recommend
it highly to anyone.
Rejected.
Young Man—I asked, but I receiv-
ed not.
Parson Prim — Then you aslced
amiss.
Young Man (sadly)—Yes, I asked
a miss.
Ora t urated Eyelids,
Eyes inflamed by expo-
sure to 885. Dustand Wind
soSquickly relieved by Marino
Eye Bundy. NoSmarting.
just Eye Comfort At
Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. 6i rine Eye
SelvoinTubes 25e. For Beek elllteEyerreeask
Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
Teacher — What is a mountain
range? Pupil—A mountain range is
a large cools stove.
Minard's Liniment Cures Dandruff.
Remarkable Wonsan.
"His wife is a remarkable woman."
"Ho* so?"
"She can look stylish in bonnets
that 110 likes."
.�"
F.
f,>r Py ..
c,
.can
wre
You wit find relief in Sam-ibuk i
l't eases the burning, stinging
pain, stops bleeding and brings
ease. Perseverance, with Zan
t ul(, means cure. Why not prove
this 7 .A0 .DruppiA'oa:.
Ls ane Sto0es.--
b0a
F-040)
r1'
*%�trrxtr„„ _......_•....
Moneyy In the comm.
erclal Poultry bust.
Hess? Yes! if youhavea
laying strain. We admit
ours to be the greatest
Poultry success in Can-
ada, Circular of tuts
Free, Hatching Eggs 108
ter cent fertility guaran
eed. Stock for Sale.
RlacllcLIFfE rOULTRY FARM Dor p 11111811811113, 0147.
The Soul of a Piano is the
Action. Insist on the
"OTTO HJ I G E LB °
PIANO ACTION
1300I0 ON
DOG DISEASES
And How to Feed
,tolled free to nor address by
America's tho Author
Pioneer H. CLAY CLOVER CO., Inc.
Dog Remedios 118 West 31st Street, New York
EAGLE
MOTOR
srycc
Write today for our bid
FREE CATALOGUE
showing our full line of Bicycles for
Men and Women, Boys and Girls --
Tires, Coaster Brakes, Wheels, Inner
Tubes, Lamps, Bells, Cyclometers,
Saddles, Equipment and Parts for
Bicycles. You eau buy your supplies
from us at wholesale prices.
T. W., BOYD & SON,
Greater
production per
acre is urgent
whether for peace needs
or war necessities. It is
a matter of national con-
cern that this year's crops
be fertilized to increase
yields and maintain fer-
tility.
Fertilizers have an im-
portant place in fanning
every year—a double place this
year. Prices and demands for
farm products have doubled.
Fertilize your corn and other
spring crops to get larger yields
and profits,
Let tis help you with
your soils and crop prob-
ems. Write for our
free Soil Profit
Bulletins.
�}y��k`:d t�a�'G'NYfs`2
Prevent locked wheels
and hot boxes by the
use of
MICA
• AXLE 'GREASE
Mica forms n smooth
coating on the axle
spindle—keeps it cool
and well lubricated.
THE
IMPERIAL 011., COMPANY
United
BRANCHES THROUGHOUT
CANADA
•
Pi
Nrci1
When your head is (1011 and heavy, year tongue fiwrecl, and you feel
done -up and good for nothing, without knowing what is really tho
matter with you, probably all that is needed to restore you to health and •
vigour is a few doses of a reliable'
digestive tonic and stomachic rem-
edy such as Mother Seigel's Syrup.
Take it after each meal for a fowl
;lays and note how beneficial is its action upon the stonlach,livcrand bowels--'
how it restores tone and healthy activity to these important organs, and bye
so doing enables you to gain new stores of vigour, vitality and health.
FOR THz
STOMACH AND LAVER
N O111 -1E6
"t:MELT') Cts'°
The new 1.00 size contains //Tree /hues 08 1111(2 { as the trial size
sold at 300 11er bottle. 50I5'•