The Clinton News Record, 1917-07-19, Page 7lOrter.
Rome Bank Enjoys
tf
Steady Progress
g
Iius Added .$5,000,000 to.Ite Assets in
Past fiscal Year --Thrift Campaign
Resulted in Gain of Over $2,000,000
in Deposits—Large Increase in
Earnings. Earned 11:14% on Capi-
tal Against 7% Last Year.
In its annual statement for the fiscal
Year to May 81st, 1917, the Home
Bank shows that rapid progress has
been made during the past twelve-
month period,
The Home Bank naefor some time
past been eti'engthening its organiza-
tion and the benefits it has derived
therefrom are shown in the growth
and expansion of the general business
Of the bank, a healthy growth in
deposits and an ability to carry out its
entire share of all Government financ-
ing brought out during the year. In
addition, it is evident that with its
and cob -
resent effective organization
P
nections, the bank will be able to play
a still more prominent part in the
financing of Canada's industrial re-
quiremente in the post-war period.
The confidence the Canadian public
have in the Bank is reflected by a gain
of over $2,000,000 in deposits, these
now reaching a total of over $12,600,-
000 compared with $10,133,735. At
the same time there has also been a
very large gain in deposits by and
balances due to the Dominion Govern-
ment, as they have advanced to $3,-
360,355,
3;360,355, as against- only $500,000 the
previous year..
With the larger business which the
bank has handled, there has been a
gratifying increase in the net profits
which amounted to $217,059.5'7, equiva-
lent to 11.14 per cent. on a paid-up
- 'capital as compared with $133,406.26
in the previous year. After the pay-
ment
ayment of dividends and subscriptions to
Red Cross, Patriotic and other funds,.
a balance was carried forward of
$140,238, against $42,790 in the previ-
ous year.
LITERARY VALUE OF FOOD.
Character of Writer's Product is
Governed by His Diet.
The amateur literary craftsman will
do well to look to the quality and
character of his three meals a day.
An investigator who has been check-
ing up on literary history has evolved
the curious theory that the quality and
character of literary product is gov-
erned almost entirely by the diet of
the writer.
A literary man,: according to the
new' thought, can get any kind of a
game he wants by regulating his diet.
Toast and tea, for instance, would be
about the right -feed for Spring poetry,
while pig's •knuckles and sauerkraut
would be fine for any topic that called
for plain speaking, right to the point.
r►' Thus J. Whitcomb Riley was at his
best • when subsisting on Graham
crackers. When J. Whitcomb was in
a condition of absolute hunger he was
capable of reaching out and grapping
a word to rhyme any time that he
Wanted it. Mark Twain favored
champagne and light lunches, and
some of his most sparkling humor was
tossed off after lunch. Ben Johnson,
we are told, wrote heavy stiff, almost
exclusively, following his regular even-
ing meal of beer, biscuits and beef, and
whenever the biscuits were stale there
was a distinct note of pessimism in
his writing.
Carlyle wrote some of his moat pon-
derous messages on a eornbeef and
cabbage diet. Poe was particul'ariy
given to melancholy poetry after toy-
ing with beer and pretzels: Dante,
we are told, wrote "The Inferno" after
absorbing a heavy meal cotnposed al-
most exclusively of macaroni that was
a trifle underdone.
No doubt, by watching literary pro-
duction closely, we can, in time, segre-
gate the menu into, its varied literary
meanings. Even now there is a strong
impression that various writers are
subsisting on sawdust, baledhay, rhu-
barb and dessicated barbed wire. Have
you a little writer in your home? Try
the system out.
4
-"•••• A reel of broad tape which, when
fastened to mired wheel, will unwind
and form a dry pathway, has been in-
vented, the object being to enable ::n
automobile to pull itself out of a mud -
hole.
Instant
Postu m
A table drink that
has taken the place
of tea and coffee
in thousands of
Canadian homes.
"There's a Reason"
Delightful flavor
Rich aroma
Healthful
Econolnmical
Sold tib+ grocers everywhere
,oma.rmm,nansnteinrs tccw. a a* '
A SHOWER IN
GRANDMO'THER'S GARDEN.
Ail ;the little bloeeoms are a•bowilig
and Mbobbing^
Pansies acid Petunias, Featherfew
and Phlox;
Stately Madam Peony in satin is hob-
nobbing
With her Bumble nelgbborfolk, the
gingham Four•O'.Cloclls.
See the scarlet Runners, all wowing-
ing and a -swaying,
Every blossom gleaming like a jewel
nowly set,
Moving, olt, so lightly, to the tune the
Rain's a•playing—
Suoli a stately, graceful, joyous, an.
tique minuet!
Morning Glory blossoms all their
crimpled 'edges tighten,
But Morning Glory buds are a -swell-
ing fair and free ;
Hardly can;tliey wait till the morning
sky shall brighten
Ere they open wide, their hearts to.
hurnming bird and bee,
Whore the SweetPeas swing their cen-
sers, arl.a• h1 in
sets, rose -a- dpo a n g,
Where the Clove Pinks glow and
sweetie, jeweled fresh and fine,
Where the Vine o' Cinnamon in stopt
'
curves is a -t i w n
ing,
Whore the Garden ;Lilies lift their
loveliness benign.
Where the Lavender's a -row,' with
Sage and Coriander; '
Mint and Dill and Caraway a -crowd-
ing close and sweet,
Where the gentle Rosemary and
Southern -wood philander,
What an Incense rises, for a garden
goddess meet!
Yes, and look you—at her wide -flung
window she is standing,
Like her own Forget -Me -Nota her
eyes of beamingjblue ;
Soft the folds of shining, snowy hair
her -dear brow banding.
"Children, see !" she softly cries,
"He maketh all things new 1"
—Minnie L. Upton.
'1
HOW IS YOUR APPETITE?
Loss of appetite during the sum-
mer months is a common trouble,
and indicates that the digestive sys-
tem is out of order. Lacking a
healthy appetite many people—es-
pecially women—go too, long with
put food, or eat sparingly because
food seems to distress them, and it
is'ne wonder that they complain that
they are constantly tired and unable
to stand the hot weather. This sim-
ply means that the digestive system
is not doing its proper work, and that
the nutriment that should come from
the food is not being distributed to the
various organs of the body. In other
words the blood is growing thin and
watery.
You need a summer tonic, and In
all the realm of medicine there is no
tonic can equal Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills. Take a short treatment with
these pills now and .notice how
promptly your appetite returns and
your power to digest food improves.
Your food will then do you good,
your strength will return and you
will no longer complain that the hot
'weather tires you out.
The best time to _begin taking Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills is the moment
you feel the least bit out of sorts.
The sooner you do so the sooner you
will regain your old time energy.
You can get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail at 50
cents a box or six boxes for $2.50
from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont.
"FIGHTING" ANIMALS.
The Yarns About Fighting to the
Death Not Founded on Fact.
It is a great error for the senti-
mental nature writers, or "nature
fakers,' as they have been termed, to
describe battles to the death between
well -matured antagonists either of
different kinds or the same species.
Animals do fight and for many rea-
sons; hunger may compel one to at-
tack another if he thinks he can get
away with the job of killing it; two
males may scrap savagely over the
complicated question of courtship; or
two or more of either sex may fight
over a bit of food or a kill. But, how-
ever strong the incentive, however
deep the anger, there is always the
sense of injury and the'pain of in-
flicted hurts to Cause these creatures
to cease before being very badly
clawed up, bitten or torn. There is
never enough of gameness to warrant
a fight to the death unless an antag-
onist is so superior to another that its
injuries are slight in comparison to
what it may sustain,
Wildcats sometimes get into fights
that make the woods resound with
their snarls and growlings, but they
quit before much harm is done, one
generally being whipped. Foxes fight
also, shedding blood on the late win-
ter snows, and now and„tthen they get
into pretty evenly matched contesta
with racoons and minks,
Minks also fight each other, often
over 'the food question, one having
caught fish,bird or mouse that an-
other covets entire, but while this is
sharp and savage one quits before
great injury is done.
Bears generally get along with a
growl toward those whom they can-
not tolerate; rarely do they come to
blows: There Is a common agreement
to keep off of each other's domains,
or hunting grounds, which have ra-
ther definite though, wide limits,
Occasionally bears and punas have
been known to have strenuous argu-
ments cls to right of way or over the
"kill" of ono or the other, and if it is
a smaller black or cinnamon, bear the
claws and superior agility qt the big
cat may count for a vietery, If the
cougar is very large and very hungry
he tray oven suooeed in killing a smell
bear, Illally event! dish a serail
must be worth wltnesstng, All ell-
option to the foregoing rule of the
Tercet is fount] in the battles pf >llplq
deer, They ale not actually kill e0d
other, but their horns become looks
and they therefore starve to kith,
1E'ashion's Latest
Designs
Even in trim white linen, a suit may
look very military if large pockets and
stitched bands are added in just 'the
right g way. ..The simulated box -pleats
and large side .pockets help to give
this suit an almost soldierly air, which
a large collar tries to, divert toward
the navy, but the gun which the lit-
tle boy carries throws the balance to-
ward the military. McCall Pattern
No. 7'772, Boy's Suit;,,,knee trousers.
In 4 sizes; 2 to 8 years. Price, 15
cents.
Organdie is the material used to de-
velop this charming frock, with filet
lace for trimming. A plain skirt and
guimpe are topped by a sleeveless
overblouse or jumper which has panels
down the front connected with bands
of wide filet lace simulating pockets.
A belt formed of organdie and filet
lace holds the fulness in at the waist.
McCall Patterns, No. 7631, Ladies'
Overblouse with Guimpe; in 4 sizes, 34
to 40 bust; price, 20 cents; and No.
7515, Ladies' Two or Three -Piece
Skirt, 42 or 38 -inch length; in 6 sizes,
22 to 80 waist. Price, 15 cents.
These patterns may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or front
the McCall Co., 70 Bond St., Toronto,
Dept. W.
•
OLD MILITARY CUSTOMS.
Most of the Scottish Regiments Keep
Up "Kissing the Quaich."
On anniversaries and special occa-
sions most Scottish regiments keep
up a curious mess custom, called
"kissing the quaich." This latter is a
shallow' cup with two handles, which,
towards the end of dinner, is handed
to each officer in turn, full of liquor
whiskey. Custom decrees that the
vessel must be drained at a gulp, af-
ter which the holder twists it upside
down from him, and kisses the bottom
to show it is empty,
In Welsh regiments, on St. David's
Day, every subaltern who has joined
since the last anniversary has to
"pass the leek" that evening et mess.
That is to say, he eats one of these
not -too -nice -smelling vegetables raw,
while the regimental drummers sound
a "fanfare, . and his brother officers
cheer him ironically.
Some fe* regiments still keep up
the custom of placing on the mess
table at dinner the "Regent's wine,"
as it is called, one bottle each of port
and sherry. This is a legacy from
George IV., who, :when he was Regent,
decreed that every 'regiment should
have two bottles of wine to drink his
health in at his expense. In most
corps -nowadays, however, the money
is credited to the general mess fund.
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Eto,
invaluable Advice,
"I,liave'a, most valuable work to sell,
madam," saidi,the book agent, "It
tells you how?to do everything."
"'Does it tell how to got rid of a
pestering book agent?" asked the busy
woman,
"It does, madam," returned the
agent serenely. "It says you should
buy something from him."
?Il$U4I Nal 4
r„ength > l� 'Simmer
cglnes.tothe nzan or;w� otnaln
Mune daily diet,;,consists of
cereals 2and,�fruits; . X teat
and potatoes area heavy load
on the digestive organs; The
ideal Summer"diet is Shred.
tied Wheat Biscuit, a food
that is 100 per cent. whole,
wheat "and prepared in a
digestible form. For break-
fast with sliced bananas or
berries, with milk or cream.
Made in Canada.
NATIONAL PARK IS LARGEST
Snow -Clad Peaks are Impressive in
Massive Ruggedness:
Probably the most impressive thing
about the Canadian Rockies is their
massive ruggedness. These mountains
are tremendous uplifts . of stratified
rock of the devoniati, and carbonifer-
ous ages which have broken out of the
crust of the earth and slowly heaved
aloft. On the right and left the travel-
ler through this district will see sinew -
laden promontories rising thousands
of feet, penetrated by enormous al-
coves in which haze and shadow of
gorgeous coloring lie engulfed.
Some sections, miles and miles in
breath and thousands of feet thick,
have pushed straight up, so that their
strata remains as before; still other
sections are bent and crumpled under
prodigious side pressure, while/ all
have been broken down and worn
away until now they are only colossal
fragments of the original uplifts.,
At Banff, an altitude of 4.521 feet,
situated in the Canadian National
Park, are located the hot springs.
This park is 0 national reservation of
0,732 square miles, embracing parts of
the valleys of the Bow, Spray . and
Cascade rivers, Lake Minniwanka
and several noble mountain ranges.
Beyond are the Divide and the,Yoho
Valley.
This national park is the largest in
the world, being nearly one-half as
large again as the Yellowstone Park
of the United States. No part of the
Rockies exhibits a greater variety of
sublinie scenery, and nowhere are
goqd points of view and features of
interest so accessible, since many ex-
cellent roads and bridle paths have
been recently constructed. Banff is
in the midst of many impressive
mountains. Northward is Cascade
Mountain, 9,825 feet; eastward is
Mount Inglismalde and the Height of
Faireholme of the Fairholme subrange,
beyond which .lies Lake Minniwanka.
The sulphur springs at Banff are
noted for their curative properties
and each year are the gathering places
fortourists from all parts of the
world. Twenty miles south of Banff
is Mount Assiniboine, the Matterhorn
of the new world, the ascent of which,
after several unsuccessful attempts,
was made in the autumn of 1.901"by
James Outram and a pllrty of Swiss
guides.
0-0-0 0' o-0 0 0 0 0 0-0-0.
a YES..! LIFT A CORN ,."
0
OFF WITHOUT PAIN
O Cincinnati man tells how to dry
o up a corn or callus so it lifts
o off with fingers.
O—O—o—oro—O--0-0—O—o-•-O—O—O
You corn. -pestered men and women
need suffer no longer. Wear the shoes
that nearly killed you before, says this
Cincinnati authority, because a few
drops of freezone applied directly ,,n a
tender, aching corn or callus,•stops
soreness at once and soon the corn or
hardened callus loosens so it can be
lifted off, root and all, without pain.
A small bottle of freezone costs very
little at any drug store, but will posi-
tively take off every hard or soft corn
or callus. This should be tried, as it
is inexpensive and is said not to irri-
tate the surrounding skin.
If you druggist hasn't any freezone
tell him to get a small bottle for you
from his wholesale drug house. It is
fine stuff and acts like a charm every
time. •
•
DEMOCRATIC ART.
Many Pictures in. Royal Academy
Come From Humble Folk.
It need not be thought that the
walls of he Royal Academy in London
arcea preserve for those who have had
a special art tratning. Good pictures
o'f'ten come from quite unexpected
places, A publican is quite a fre-
quent exhibitor, whilst recently a
quartermaster of the Royal Engineers
had a picture exhibited, and'a railway
clerk and several postmen—thanks to
the Post Ofilee Arts Club—have been
exhibitors at our principal art exhibi-
tion within recent year's,
The best known policeman•artist is
undoubtedly Constable Jones, of
Leeds, who has had many canvasos
accepted, and hung, and one of the
bliliiant "bobby's" pupils—Mr. Walter
Marshall, a tram-repnlror—has also
been "hung" several' times—in the
artistic and not in the criminal sense,
although hehas been in the hands of
the police so long, He was only
twenty-three when his first picture
was aeeepted.
The fact is that there is likely to be
a great Widening of artistic accom,
plishreent in tbls oceentry, because col,
or Weide NO been taken up 50 elat,
lel'aetleally in the people's schools, And
if the tlevelelilnebt is Well directed
and fostered, it sliotild lie)p us to corn,
note with ally other country In the
World ixi the beaety of our designs in
ynantlfectuixed articles, for art is not
a thing of the studio only, hut of the
workshop,
5+aia515'0 Ihlnlhiieet (Mime iliplt55serle.
THE OLP CHINA AND THE NEW.
Contrast Between the Pomp of Yee.
terday and Present Laek 9f
Ceremony.
The meeting of •the prince regent,
tilt op peror's father, wlio only yes.
tet'cday had been the real ruled• of
China, all-powerful, master of the pro,
petty and the llves of hie subleets, the
successor to twenty flue dynasties of
emperors, with Dr, Sun Yat-sen, the
republican leader, the eoneplrator and
rebel on whose head a, price had so
long been set, was a scene that the
witneesas will''alwaye remember. Mr,
Fernand Farjene1 describes it in
Through the Chinese Revolution t
While 1 was talking with Sun Yat.
Pen, says the author, a servant handed
a paper to the Chinese statesman,
"I must leave you at once," lie said.
"Here is the prime regent 1"
. He shook hands and hurried to ;a
room on the Upper floor, possibly with
the idea of typifying the new order of
things by compelling the representa-
tive to the imperial government to
Walk upstairs, to interview a son of
the people.
i h
.- As we went out into the hall to
watoh the approach of the formes'
sovereign, a blast of trumpets herald-
ed ibis coming, and the palace guards,
a
in their khaki uniforms and flat caps,
A ,
presented arms at the door, Then we
saw, in the sunlight, at the top of the
steps, a young Chinese about thirty
years of age, with a kindly face and a
shaven head, and bearing a blue robe
with a black sleeveless overcoat. Ac-
companying hhn were two or three
Chinese and a black -coated Duropean.
An officer of 'the palace guard preced-
ed the party.
The', little group advanced, but
numerous clerks and soldiers crowded
round, anxious to have a hearer view
of the prince before whom, only a
year ago, they would have prdstrated
themselves humbly. They stared at
him now impudently, and their little,
Furtive black oyes seemed to say, "You
are nobody to -day 1"
An ofilcial was obliged to clear the
way for the regent, who hurried along
and seemed anxious to avoid the stares
of the crowd. Escorted by an officer,
he passed close to us and climbed the
`great staircase, walking with ,bent
head and stooping shoulders, as if he
bore the weight of his past grandeur.
Finally the little party disappeared on
the door above,
On leaving the palace we encounter-
ed threb or Your servants wearing the
royal livery, blue robes with white,
conical hats covered with red fringes.
They were holding some little, i11 -
groomed horses. That was the sorry
remnant of all the imperial pomp !
•
SAVE THE CHILDREN
Mothers who keep - a box of Baby's
Own Tablets in the house may feel
that the lives of their little ones are
reasonably safe during the hot weath-
er. Stomach troubles; cholera in-
fantum and diarrhoea carry off thou-
sands of little ones every summer, in
most cases because the mother does
not have a safe medicine at hand to
give promptly. Baby's Own Tablets
cure these troubles, or is given oc-
casionally to the well child will pre=
vent their coming on. The Tablets
are guaranteed by a government an-
alyst to be absolutely harmless even
to the newborn babe. They are es-
pecially good in summer because they
regulate the bowels and keep • the
stomach sweet and pure. They are
sold by medicine dealers or by mail
at 25:cents a box from The Dr. Wil-
liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
HOMEMADE FAN.
Clever Device To Be - Attached to a
Rocking -Chair.
Every man can be his own electric
plant by using a device lately invent-
ed by an Indiana seeker ,after cooling
breezes. The fan he invented is an
attachment for a rocking -chair and
the power generated by the gentle
movement of the chair back and forth
on its rockers propels the fan, which
wafts its zephyrs upon the individual
in the chair.
The operation of the fan is com-
paratively simple. A shaft reaching
the floor is given an upward thrust
by the backward swing of the rock-
er. This shaft, through a journaled
connection with the ,shaft of the fan
itself, provides the motive -power for
turning the blades overhead.
Minard's Liniment Cures Garret in OOws
Sheep return more and better .fer-
tility to enrich the soil and distribute
the same more evenly than•any other
class of stock.
Dr. Ferdinand King, New York
Physician and Medical Author Sayst
EVERY WOMAN
EVERY MOTHER
EVERY DAUGHTER
NEEDS IRON
AT, TIMES
To put strength into her nerves
and color into her cheeps.
There e a n
be no bea'z,ti-
f u1, healthy.
fear - 111001109
women With-
out Iron. The
trouble In the
past has Leon
Lunt when Wo-
men 710090(1
tiro 1 they gen-
erally tool;
ordinary Ms -
tank, talk 1r04
whloh of to 11
• ' a lh'ddod the
k,,tach and
id far mere
harm thee good, !Co -day cookers pre-
gqrlbo orag•arifp Iran — ,NtOatpd Sr0n,
fair pate., u' form df iron is orally
a0H mllatedC, vooti not biaolr n 01' n-
iitr0 the teet1, 1101 'Onset tile, stOmaoll,
t x111 i]1�0r00C4. Ire trength and On-
luranoe aY weal, 0�0 v4ua„ ttridtaille,
careworn, alaggort 1ct01i'Ihi woonon 300
per shout, 111 two Woers Ulu 111 many
t>;,so! irro wt N MVO; t 1,t0eit it iosultoswe
PeVi mild ic1pg, "fir, S�
,—
rrocl i• Oltr7ca7gt1a rX OF reoonnn0,0d-
00 weevil ey Syr, 5'ordinand Xing pun be
obtaino4 tram arty good drttaslet with
tin absolute gnar0Wtee of ptlegetoi d
meihay refartdett, 11t 10 didn41100d )Y etc
good duugalstp,
CURIOUS OLD BRIDGES,
The Clipital of Kasilnlir, in India, Ilas,
One of the ltlost Roinarlmble.
Probably no town in the world has
such strange bridges as Serinagar, the
capital of Keehn*, in India. The .pity
is built on the banks of the River
Jhelum, which is crossed by many
wooden bridges, lined with old and
dilapidated shops and houses, with
balconies and lattice windows. Some
of these ore very insecure, and look
as if they might at any time fall into
the river beneath.
The roofed Ifapellbruche, at Lu-
cerne, is one of the most interesting.
It
crosses the River Reams diagonally,
and has 112 triangular paintings be-'
neath -tile roof, recording the heroic
deeds of the old Switzers and the suf-!
ferings of their patron saints; In the
midst of the Kapellbrpche stands an
octagonal tower, wh'bh formed pat
of the fortifipations of the town in the
thirteenth century, The bridge was
built 1333.
Ona in of the most curious and ancient
bridges in Europe is that at Croyland,
in Lincolnshire,
which is supposed to
date from the ninth century. No road
now passes oyer and no water under
it. It consists of three points arches,
which meet in the centre, and the as-
cent is so steep that only foot -passen-
gers can go over it. Upon the bridge
is a seated figure in stone of -a robed
Saxon king.
MONEY ORDERS
A Dominion Express Money Order
for Five dollars costs three cents.
The woman'who has many dishes to
wash, and whose feet get tired, should
try standing on a rubber rug, such as
many people have at their front doors.
This sort of a foundation has a rest-
ful effect. •
Minari's Liniment Cures Distemper.
Warn the Children.
Parents and teachers should make
children understand the danger of eat-
ing' strange roots, plants or berries.
Every year many children are poi-
soned owing to the neglect of this
sirnple,precaution.
After i Murine Two Eyeriefor for a79red LifetimeUtes.
Movies
i Ged nate-Sore nyes-
Granulated -Rests
-Refreshes-Restores,
Marine ! s 0 a'av ori to Tre at -
meat for eyes that feel dry
and smart. vivo your fees as much oryour loying
tare as your Tooth andwiththe sumo rag ular,cy,
Caro for Them. 'You Cannot Buy Now Eyes!
Sold at Drug and Optical Stores or by MM. As,c
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago, for Free Ikea
Nearly ? every housekeeper makes
enough salad dressing to last several
days, but few know that it is a saving
to make -enough white sauce to last
two or three days. Make it thick,
then enough may be taken and thinned !
in preparing a cream soup for'
luncheon, or for the sauce for the
vegetables or pudding for dinner, or
for the basis of croquettes or fish balls.
This is to certify that fourteen.
years ago I got the cords of my left
wrist nearly severed, and was for
about nine months that I had no use
of my hand, and tried other Liniments,
also doctors, and was receiving no
benefit. By a persuasion from a
friend I got MINARD'S LINIMENT
and used one bottle which completely
cured me, and have been using MIN-
ARD'S LINIMENT in my family ever
since and find it the same as when I
first used it, and would neyer be with,
out it.
ISAAC E. MANN,
Aug. 31st, 1908. Metapedia, P. Q.
Paper board, one of the best noncon-
ductors of heat known, makes an ideal
mat for the dining table. The upper
side of the board is made liquid proof,
while the underside, that next to the
polished table, is as soft as felt. These'
paper mats are made to fit standard
size tables, and can be bought at a
much. lower rate than the heavy felt -
pad.
WPWra AT.'alte VOA t7Arat
1?IhQFI'i-MA.Ki.l+l0 NEWS AND 304
O010e0 for sato In good enlarle
tpwes, 'i'ho meet 4140101 and Interesting
Of all galn
slnesees, l+'Stl! IgforatiOit oa
UPD1100on to WIISOn uhils#InK cam,
sons, a Adelaide Street, Toronto,
MIsOELLa1'A7!lol1p
GANCPR, -TUMORS, Lumrs, Tiff C„
, 111te1•nal end external, oared with -
Met 4nin 11y our Home treatment. Wrl te
US before too late lar. 130lman Medical
CO., Limited, Collingw0o9, Ont,
Ameilci's
Pioneer
Reg Remedies
noo5C o10
DOG DISEASES
,And How to Feed
•!rolled free to ear nddress by
the Author
IL CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc,
118 West 31st Street, Now York
The Soul of a Piano is the
Action. Insist on the
"OTTO HIGELV
PIANO ACTION
LiItle Soll as
APi�if�ISigllt
With Ringworm Which Turned to
Eczema. Just One Mass. Cuti-
cura Completely Healed. .
"My little son, three years old, took
ringworm on lus left arm,,. and he
scratched it so that it turned to eczema.
It then spread to his back, chest, arms,
legs and head. It was just one mass of
corruption and it -made my heart ache
to see lam scratch; he would just tear
himself. He was a pitiful sight.
"I read about Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment. By the time I had used theeecond
box of Cuticura Ointment with the Cuti-
cura Soap he was completely healed."
(Signed) Mrs. R. R. Peachey, R. R. 1,
W ldemar, Ont., December 30, 1916.
Cuticura Soap daily for the toilet and
Cuticura Ointment as needed prevent
pimples, blackheads or other eruptions.
For Free Sample Each by Mail ad-
dress post -card: "Cuticura, Dept. A,
Boston, 13. S. A." Sold everywhere.
The first cement plant in Korea will
be opened in the near future by Jap-
anese.
BROKE1 DO
HEALTH
Woman Tells How $5 Worth
of Pinkham's Compound
Made Her Well.
Lima,.Ohio. -"Iwas all broken down
in healtfrom a displacement. One of my
lady friends came to
see me and she ad-
vised me to com-
mence taking Lydia
E. Pinkham's Veg-
etable Compound
and to use Lydia E.
Pinkham's Sanative
Wash. I began tak-
ing your remedies
and took$5.00worth
and in two months
was a well woman
after three doctors said I never would
stand up straight again. I was a mid-
wife for seven years and I recommended
the Vegetable Compound to every wo-
man to take before birth and after-
wards, and they all got along so nicely
that it surely is a godsend to suffering
women. If women wish to write to
me I will be delighted to answer them."
-Mrs.JENNIE MoYER, 342 E.North St.,
Lima, Ohio.
Women who suffer from displace-
ments, weakness, irregularities, ner-
vousness, backache, or bearing -down
pains, need the tonic properties of the
toots and herbs contained in Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
That is the end of the sealing process when
you use Parowax. No papers or -strings to
bother with -.'no irksome labor with jar tops.
Just pour
' PURE REPIN'EED PARA ITINIr.
over your jellies and they
will be kept absolutely
air -tight. No mold -no
fermentation -and no
trouble.
FOR ME LAUNDRY — See
directions on Parowar labels for its
use in valuable service in washing.
At grocery, department and
general stores everywhere.
THE IMPERIAL OIL
COMPANY
Limited
1: