HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton News Record, 1917-11-08, Page 7A Dyspepsia Cure
M.D. advises : "Persons who
suffer from severe Indiges-
tion and constipation can
cure themselves by taking
fifteen to thirty drops of Ex-
tract of Roots after each
meal and at bedtime. This
remedy is known as Mother
Seigel's Curative Syrup in
the drugtrade." Get the
genuine. 50c. and $1.00
Bottles.
®:t:Sr.�Cif6`.�s�'t '�Ci71 CZwti'.V1-,S:tYU$R..'.t:S:+w•`am
•
ses
Reducing
The war has so increased'th'e cost of living, the
housewife ;roust make her money go further,
By using Red Rose Tea, which chiefly consists of
strong, rich Assam teas, she can keep her tea -bins
down. The rich Assam
strength requires less tea in ,,.,, : : ,•� >
the pot—and there's only 4441,
one tea with the rich Red �'•tllal,
Roseflay ! or
Kept Good by the
Sealed Package
640
.lot• Winter
Days
11
A stunning example of the straight
silhouette, this dress has a pleated
skirt fn instep Iength with the simple
waist authorized by ' Fashion. Note
the long, tight sleeves and the high
collar. McCall' Pattern No. 8019,
Ladies' Dress. In 5 sizes; .34 to 42
bust. Price, 20 cents.
Every one needs a warm coat this
time of year, and a coat that covers
the costume is .considered very smart
this season. McCall Pattern No.
8051, Ladies' Coat. In 5 sizes; 84 to
42 bust, Price, 20 cents.
These patterns ' m'ay' be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from the McCall Co., .70 Bond St.,
Toronto, Dept. W.
"Dinna marry for Biller, lad," said
an old collier, in a warning voice, to
young• man," "When me an' Jean
Were wed, sixty years sin', we sat
doon an' turned oor pooches oot, an'
there was half 'a croon in mine and
four shiilin's in hers. • Weel, every
time we've fa'in oat sin' Syne, blow
ine if Jean hasna aye feenished up by
tln'owin' that extra eichteen pence in
my tee' ."
Save
hp the Use
Of Wheat
'By eating
GrapcNuts
All the food value
of the grain i$ used in
making this delicious
food ; and its blend
Gf malted' barley not
oily adds to its non.
ritihiflg qualities but
produces e, fla.Vet of
Unusual richness,
All Foot
No Waste
tethadiste lfoetutu Cereal Co, std,.
Wfndser, Ont.
From the Ocean Shore
BITS OF .''NEWS, FROM THE.
MARITIME PROVINCES.
Items of Interest From Places Lap.
Ped By Waves of'the
Atlantis
•
Scab has affected some of the New
Brunswick apples,
Georgefewn, P.E.T., streets are now
lighted by electricity.
K. Unit, Military Hospitals Com-
mission, will have headquarters
Fredericton.
Sir Wallace Graham, Nova Scotia's
Chief Justice, died suddenly at the
breakfast table at his home in Hali-
fax.
Sergt.-Major Hurley, of Halifax, has
been awarded the D.C.M. and the'
Croix de Guerre for conduct at Vimy
e.
A steamer of the Royal Mail Steam
Packet Line caught fire while in Hali-
fax harbor. The fire was confined
principally to the lower hold, where
flour, oats and fertilizer was stowed.
The scarcity of cars is one of the
chief causes for the discouraging out-
look for pulp operations for the win-
ter in New Brunswick.
• High Sheriff John O'Brien, of
Northumberland, died last Satue4ey;
from injuries received at the railway
crossing above Chatham.
The exhibition of the products rais-
ed by the Glace Bay School children
is described by competent judges as
an exceptionally good one.
There was big round -up of rum:
men in Sydney, Cape Breton, detec-
tives', investigations resulting in
charges against 11 alleged lawbreak-
ers. '
Several Cape Breton skippers will
shortly leave Canada for overseas to
undergo special training preparatory
to taking up patrol work in the North
Sea.
"Syrney Academy is one of the fin-
est educational institutions in Nova
Scotia,' declared Dr. A. H. McKay,
superintendent of education for Nova
Scotia.
Mr. -A. J. Tingley, of Moncton, has
been appointed .chief over the T.C.R.
police on the eastern division. Each
division of the eastern lines will have
inspectors.
The faculty and students of the
University of New Brunswick have
come to an amicable settlement of
their recent differences over the in-
itiation of freshmen.
There is an agitation going on in
Halifax in regard to Sunday selling.
It is claimed that a large number of
shops keep open and do business
regularly on Sunday.
The joint committee of the city
council and Fredericton Board of
Trade will take concerted action to
oppose the petition of the New
Brunswick Telephone Company for a
change in the schedule of night rates.
Ernest G. Sherwood, manager of
the Fraser Valley Milk Producers'
Association, at a meeting in Sydney
stated that the proposed Government
embargo on ice cream would mean
death to cows, and that it would re-
duce the demand for butter fat, thus
causing a temporary surplus of milk.
THE PRESENT-DAY COOK.
The Most Important Factor For Effi-
ciency in the Modern Home.
Women will learn only by the bitter
lesson of experience. The mother is
the greatest . asset of the home and
she is, aside from her spiritual care,
her guidance and nursing ability, the
real dictator of the universe. For her
choice of food determines her family's
usefulness.
In the kitchen of the household men
and women are made or unmade.
Drink, rascality, waywardness,
criminality, can often be traced to the
kind of food partaken.
Heredity is a bug -a -boo on which to
blame faults. No two individuals can
eat and prosper on the same food. The
up-to-date housewife must learn food
and its value, and know her family
and its requirements,
• The woman who puts off the pre-
partition of meals until the last few
minutes befel.° they must be served
really has no time to become aequaint-
ed with the food
value
and
theou n n
a t t
of nutriment contained therein.
To cut the cost of living utilize
foods within your reach. Turnips,
carrots, brussel sprouts, cabbage, eels
ery, beets and .,spinach afford an abun-
dant variety of vegetables during the
'winter. They have the virtue of be-
ing fresh, which is necessary during
the cold months. These vegetables
supply the body with its ciuota of min-
eral salts,
Fish,' the cheaper ants of meat,
cornmeal, whole wheat, and cheese,
when combined with plenty of good
home-made bread, will satisfy the
inost particular epicure,
.A Toothbrush That is Clean
What is claimed to he a sanitary
toothbrush is made with a folding
handle The handle does more than
fold over: the bristles of the brush. It
forms a 1•oceptacle for' a disinfectant
which will keep the brush perfoetly
sterilized and antiseptietliiy clean un-
til it is reettly for use again,
TUNS PILLAGED ST, QUENTIN. I
Yand;nlisnl Aeeigned to Officers and
• Soldiers of Two German Regiments..
The Germans according to the
French claims,.not only deliheratelY
caused the fires that have partially
ruined the beautiful and famous catbo-
dral of St, :quentin, but pillaged the
city before they set fire'to a part of it,I
The vandalism is laid to the door of
officers and soldiers of the 116th and
117th Regiments of the Twenty-fifth'
German Division, and, more or less
directly to the commanders of these
units respectively. Colonel Gjing,
Colonel Ifletz and General von Sohaer-
fenstein, who aro charged with having
ordered a systematic pillage of St.
Quentin as soon as they entered the
city,
Ofilcera, with soldiers to do the
heavy worlc, went about the city, it
was asserted, and carried off furni-
sure, eilver'wfare, pianos and valuable
pictures and shipped them to Ger-
many. They even took safes filled
with valuables and did it openly, pil-
ing their loot on to vans in midday.
One officer and a number of soldiers
were observed, it is said, as they " at-
teinpted to steal strong boxes from
the- bank.
The pilaging troops worked under
orders to establish a depot for loot on
the route to Cambrai, where "finds"
from various towns were concentrat-
ed. The soldiers received instructions
to take anything they pleased or that
looked valuable, and in consequence
Hard ` to, Drop Meat?
All depends on what you eat
It isgood
a
time to study "food value,"
You may be eating the
wrong foods, the foods that
cost =stand give the least
nutriment. Shredded
Wheat Biscuit contains
more real, -body-building
1'1pound
nutriment, p Un for pound,
than meat, eggs or potatoes
and costs much less. Two
of these Biscuits with milk
and a little fruit make a
nourishing meal at a Cost of
a few cents. Make Shredded
Wheat your "meat," A satis-
fying breakfast on which to
start the day''s work. It is
ready -cooked and ready -to -
eat. Made in Canada.
CANADA
AND THE WORLD'S
SUPPLY OF WHEAT
It was with considerable satisfac-
tion that readers in all Allied coun-
tries received the statement made a
short time ago by the Institute of Ag-
riculture at Roane, that 1917 had seen
an lamas() in the wheat crop of the
principal countries of the world, out -
have "cleared out" the city of St. side of the Central Powers, of 3.8 per
Quentin as well as countless smaller cent, over 1916. These figures were
places. Numberless men on furlough Rased on returns from Spain, France,
are said to have gone back to their Scotland, Ireland, Switzerland, Cana-
da, the Miffed States, India, Japan
homes laden with loot. and Algeria, whieh,countries are this
Nor has money been overlooked in year estimated to ehow.a,total wheat
the vandal hunt. One soldier of the production of 1,665,448,000 bushels.
116th Regiment is supposed to have At the same time these same coup=
uncovered 30,000 francs and to have tries show an increase in their' barley
appropriated it, while smaller sums crop of 2.4 per cent; an increase la
are missing from a number of homes. their rye crap of 1'0.7 per can't; au
g increase in their oat crop of 19.9 per
To -day there remains in St. Quentin cent. "lied an increase in their corn
homes only old, broken and worthless crop of 25.8 per cent. That suoh in -
furniture. ' Everything of value has creases should be possible among na-
been carried away. tions, most of wham are engaged in
war, is in Itself a tribute to the pro-
• ductive energy of manhood.
The enormous total og.1,665, 448,000
bushels of wheat is so great that it
•
refuses, to be grasped by the human
Few people realize that nervous mind without seine units of coenpari-
arlments often arise from digestive son. If tbis crop of wbeat'were load
troubles. The stomach fails;_ for some ed into freight cars, 1,000 bushels to
reason, to digest food properly. Then the car, and each car occupied forty
re -
the system languishes mid 'the nerves feet of the raold loadedeit inwo2
present one solid train 12,617
become exhausted jp4triving to con- miles in length—more than enough to
Untie their worn" Impure blood 'also reach half way round the world at the
causes nerve troubles, but frequently equator. These loaded cars, without
it Is in the stomach where the mss- engines, would occupy seven -eighths
chief starts. As the nourishment is of the entire trackage of the Canadian
carried to the aeries by the blood, it Pacific Railway, known as the world's
will' be seen what an important can- gr eis,trhow ration other company.
There is, however, another point of
nection exists between the stomach, view, and a very appropriate one at
the nerves and the blood, and how this particular period, when the agri-
such troubles as nervous headaches, cultural countries aro called upon to
nervous dyspepsia and insomnia may Produce the utmost pound oP food,
begin. While the countries mentioned have
In such cases relief is easily obtain_ done well their accomplisbment
ashrinks into ineiguiocance when com-
ble by means of Dr, Williams' Pink
pared with their possibilities. For
Pills. These pills replenish the blood
instants the three Canadian
provinces
with the food elements on which the of Manitoba,
Saskatchewan anti Alber-
nerves thrive; at the salve time they to could produce three times the total
exercise a tonic influence on the di- wheat crop above referred to ! Tills
gestive organs, enabling the system to statement may seem extravagant un -
derive naurislmnent from the 'Food talc- til submitted to the test of cold figures,
Then we get data ]Ike this
en, By this perfectly natural proces
s
nervous ills are steadily dispelled by
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. If you are
suffering from nerves, or require a
blood -malting tonic, give these pills a
fair trial, and see how speedily the
best of health will be yours.
You can get these pills through any
dealer in medicine, or by mail at 50
cents -a box or six boxes for $2.50 from
The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brock-
ville, Ont.
NERVOUS AILMENTS
se
A REMARKABLE RECOVERY.
Canadian Surgeon Says Men Shot
Through the Brain Often Recover.
"It is surprising and pleasing to
know that a large percentage of men
shot through the brain.recover," is a
statement made by Colonel F.'McKel-
vey Bell in his new book, "THe First
Canadians in France." The subtitle
of Colonel Bell's book is "The Chroni-
cle of a Military Hospital in the War
Zone."
The author was attached to the first
contingent of the Canadian Overseas
as medical director and gives in sim-
ple, colloquial style the first, or at
least one of the very first accounts of
"foram this side to the trenches." Col-,
onel Bell writes:
"That morning I found a poor chap
who hod been shot through the brain
with a rifle bullet, The missile had
entered the temple since emerged at the
back of the skull, fracturing. the bone
both at the point of entry and exit.,
His heavy breathing and stupor told
us the case called for immediate re-
lief. In the operating rooln pieces of
the skull were removed, the depressed
bone lifted, and in ebout an hour the
patient was taken back to hie ward:
We had little hope of his recovery.
"The following slay, when ]' entered
the hospital, his bed was empty, I
thought: 'Poor fellow] He has died
in the night and no one has sent me
word: I turned to the man in the next
bed and asked:
"'What has become of your neigh-
bor?'
"'Oh,' he replied, 'he's just gone out
to the washtoom, he'll be back in a
few minutes. He stole out of the ward
while the nursing
sister
was in the
other room.' n s suifiiciniou P,onrnd
"While we were talking, be walked for
soothe grout apent'enpopplainslatwh:iiscla are
in, got quietly into bed and reached still awaiting the husbandman
for a cigarette."
,_,_,—,_,_,� • MinarS'a Liniment Cures Distemper.
THE CQ1 UBI;ING BRI'T'ONS,
What a French Writer Mas to Say of
tie t Effort.
Iiri !t Wes E fort .
1.11,.Roony, writing in the Perls Le
Pays, pays titia compliment to British
War effort; -
In 1.915 Britain's participation in
our offensive was still of a mister
character. In 1916 it became formid-
able op the Somme, In '1917 It is mow-
ing down the Teuton legions unrexnit-
tingglY, Britain can say to the enemy,
"We'have taken 110,000 Gorman pris-
oners, you hays only 83,000 British.
She can also says
"You have not taken one yard of my
Continental or Colonial territory. You
meant to invade Egypt, but our sol-
diers are now advancing towards
Palestine. You threatened India, but
we are invading Mesopotamia.
"You had opened your mouth"wvide
to swallow up the Belgian, French and
Portuguese colonies and a good part
of our own, but the French, Belgians,
Portuguese and British occupy nearly
all your African lands. You have been
banished from Asia, Your..ceecfdlly
secreted strategic islands are occu-
pied by our soldiers and those of the
Dominions• Spite of your submarines,
our Fleet is blockading you and im- 1.
mobilizing your dreadnoughts.
"Vanquished on the battlefield,
ewept from the seas, driven out of
the colonies, what have you taken in
exchange? Your greatest exploits
against England have been the cow-
ardly murder of women and :children
with the aid of Zeppelins and avione,
the drowning of crews and innocent
passengersby your pirates. We,
however, have wrested from you your
share of the universe."
LEMON JUICE IS.
FRECKLE REMOVER
GirleI Make this cheap beauty lotion
to Clear and whiten your skin.
Squbeze the juice of two lemons into
a bottle containing three ounces of
orchard white, shake well, and you
have a quarter pint of the best freckle
and tan lotion, and complexion beau-
tifier, at very, very small cost.
Your grocer has the lemons and any
drug store or toilet, counter will sup-
ply three ounces of orchard white for
a few cents. Maseage this sweetly
9ragrant lotion into the face, neck,
armsand hands each day and see how
freckles and blemishes disappear and
how clear, soft and white the skin be-
comes. Yes! It Is •harmless.
Potatoes make good food for poul-
try. The small potatoes, parings and
frosted or bruised potatoes can be
used for this purpose. Potatoes boil-
ed and fed warm are relished by the
fowls in cold weather. Equal parts
of potatoes and bran are sometimes
used. Large amounts of potatoes
will fatten chickens, ducks, geese and
turkeys.
From indications, the Stock Show to
be held at the Union Stock Yards of
.Toronto, December 7th and 8th next,
will be bigger than ever. The 1916
show had 376 entries, comprising in
According to, the Government of all 2,309 show animals, which sold for
Canada there' .aro in the provinces 1 the Christmas trade, some of which
mentioned the following areas suit-
able for agrtcgltural purposes :
Manitoba, 74,216,000 acres
Saskatchewan 93,459,000 "
Alberta 105,217,000 "
272,892,000 "
The average wheat crop in these
provincee for the last ten years has and Preece freed Greece from Turkish
been : Manitoba, n, 10 bushels per rule and ave her constitutional gov-
peracre; Saskatchewan, 18.44 bushels g
acre; Alberta, 20.19 bushels per ernment. Ninety years later the
acre. The average for the throe pro-
vinces is therefore practically 19
bushels Per sere. If you multiply the
available acreage, as given above, by
19, you will find that these provinces,
if entirely cultivated, are capable of
producing in. au average year 6,184,-
948,-000 bushels of wheat—consider-
ably more than throe tones the total
which is being produced this year,
1917, by Spain, Preece, Scotland, Ire
land, Switzerland, Canada, United
States, India, Japan and Algeria com-
bined. The single province of Alberta
can produce as nnlch wheat as. all of
these countries anh have more left
over than was grown in 1917 in all
Canada.
Of course, it is impossible, as a
practicable manner, to put every
arable acre of land in any country in
wheat, but if. we say for the salve of
illustration that one-third of the
arable land in these provinces is mum
mor-fallowed, one-third sown to coarse
grains Or pastaro, and one-third to
wheat, the proportion that is sawn to
wheat will produce a greeater crop
than that already -mentioned as being
grown by all the countries before re-
ferred to.
Those figures may be interesting
generally for the, great comparison
Which they afford, but they roust also
carry the conclusion that the wol'ld is
a very long way from having exhaust-
ed its food producing possibilities,
Any scarcity of food -production which
may now exist is traceable almost
entirely to an improper distribution
of population. In the older countries
populatipu is convened to exiet on
such limited areas that Production on
a relatively large scale is •imposs'ible,
whereas in the newer countries such
as Western Canada the population is
as yet totally insufficient to bring the
country under eulivation, These are
conditions which will deebtless right
themselves; in fact, the process of
correction 16 going on very rapidly,
and, whatever difficulties may he ex-
perienced its feeding the world during
n
o
,fir there can be
the next rely yo s,
question that they will be solved as
brought record prices, 'Premium list
hes been enlarged and each class car-
ries a handsome prize; leer further
particulars write C. F. Topping, care
of Union Stock Yds of•Toronto,
It was in 1827 that Great Britain
SATISFIED MOTHERS
A New Ilse For Wood,
The very latest wrinkle at soda
000 a mother has used Baby's Own fountains is the use of wooden dishes
Tablets for her liable ones ithe will use for serving ice cream and sundaes, re -
nothing eiso, The satisfaction she de placing •the cheap looking and flimsy
rives from their use Is woi1derfui, paper cups that came into use a few
They are easy to give the baby; their years ago in response to the demand
elation, is 91'00395 alai thorough an Si for a sanitary individual service.
above all they are absolutely ilar)n- Those wooden dishes aro pressed out
less, Concerning them MTs. Jean of very thin sheets of clear maple,
Deeiraine, L acotdaire, Sask., Writes : shaped to slip readily into silver hone-
-•'I am well satisfied with Baby's ors. They are tasteless, odorless and
Oten Tieblots, 11 had no trouble In giv- hygienic. The clean appearance of
ing them to nay baby and they he.ve the cups seems to add all appetizing
liltoreptiy cured her of constipation," flavor to tits frozen delicacy contained
The Tablets are gold by tsri ox therein, and they aro making a hit
dealers or by mall at 25 cents n. box with the patrons of. high grade soda
ne
ft'o c The Dt, WAliiams tsteddetno Co,, dispensaries.
Brockville, Oat, b1inera's Linfatoat Gatos Colds, ltd,
same two Powers have had once more
to rescue Greece, this time from one
of Turkey's allies.
In the drama of life there are more
thinking parts than there are actors
to fill them.
MONEY ORDERS
It is always safe to send a Dominion
Express Money'Order. Five dollars
costs three cents.
Love blinds some men, and is makes
lots of others too near-sighted for
military service.
Minara's Liniment Cures Diphtheria.
Small Johnny was wriggling and
twisting in a vain endeavor to put his
arms through the sleeves of an under-
garment and then get it over his head•
After several futile attempts he Call-
ed out to his mother—"Say, mamma,
when I get to be an angel and have
wings, I don't see how I'1 get nay
shirt one"
so
1/RWE Granulated Eyelids;
u Sore Eyes, Lyes inflamed by
Sun, Dust and Wind quickly
relieved 310 hl.u,isc.,Try Ole
,+ - i+ n•r'� yeuruyesaudl11S6 'sSycs.
u (LeaNoSinarting,JustEyeCsedart
119nrine a Remedy Ate Your Drnsrtist's "r by
Ey ymall 60a par bottle. McNno
05, Solve, in Tnbos 211. For boob. of etc E,,, --Fra.,
Ask Marine Eye 11Cecaedy Co., Chicago
Medical statistics have shown that
eight men die suddenly from disease
to one woman.
Miaard's Liniment Cures t4arget in yews
If you have a. pine floor, do not
wear out your life scrubbing it, Cov,,
er it with a good linoleum. If varnish-
ed year,it will not
1 once 111 twice a
oc
wear out for five or ten years with
good care. If mugs are ]sept where
standing, it will save the feet as well
as the linoleum.
Why, Doge' Noses. Are Csld..
When your faithful dog pokes his
nose into your hated even your affec-
tion cannot prevent a little shiver, be-
cause the nose is so sold. Why is it7
When the body of a dog is 00 warns,
why should this one spot be different
from all the rest of him? The cold.
nem .of a dog'a-nage Is due to the fact
that it must be kept moist all the time
in order to sharpen his sense et smell,
And, of course, as the moisture is
evaporating all the time, it keeps his
nose cold,. A dog depends a great deal
on his powers of smell, especially in
the *wild state, and 11 is because of his
keenness of scent that he is valuable
to man for hunting purposes, In ad-
dition to the olfactory or smelling.
nerves inside a dog's nostrils
the whole black membrane around
the nose is very sensitive, but this
sensitiveness can only be retained by
moisture. Thusitis that when a
dog's nose IS dry and warm he is ill
and needs doctoring.
Millard's Liniment Co„ Limited.
Gentlemen,—I have used MIN-
ARD'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 no equal,
I would not start on a voyage with-
out it if it cosh a dollar a bottle.
CAPT. F. R. DESJARDIN,.
Seim"St'orke," St. Andre, leamou-
raeka.
Small Edgar—"Girls , are awfully
stuck up, aren't they, mamma?"
Mamma—"Oh, I don't know. What
makee you think they are?' Small
Edgar—"Why, they think they are
just as important as boys."
o--o--.o—o—o-o—o—o—o-o—o—o —
WOMEN 1 IT IS MAGIC 1 0
LIFT OUT ,ANY CORN
Apply a few drops then Ilft
corns or calluses off with
fingers—no_pain.
.-.o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o—o--
Just think! You can
lift off any corn or cal-
lus without pain or sore-
ness.
A Cincinnati man dis-
covered this ether com-
pound and named it
freezone. Any drug-
gist will sell a tiny bot-
tle_of freezone, like here
shown, for very little
cost. You apply aifew
drops directly upon a
tender corn or callus.
Instantly the soreness
disappears, then short-
ly you will find the corn
or callus so loose that
you can lift it right off.
freezone is wonder-
ful. It dries instantly.
It doesn't eat away the
corn or callus, but
shrivels it ' up without
even irlttating the surrounding skin.
Bard, soft orcorns between the toes,
as well as painful calluses, lift right
off. There is no pain before or after-
wards. If your druggist hasn't
freezone, tell him to order a small bot-
tle for you from his wholesale drug
house. et--, •
Jii1.1OJ:i0 113)0101) l UP9 !I„1812 10
alanths. :81P.104:'
131, of t''1111d1'
e WQ'Jds beat
brecdint; nf.teon ad twenty doll e each,
'J'1i Gtlbert, !sox 044, Wa,lkervlaj7o, O8l.
CA2001011, TUUAI0110. LU'J13J'$. ,t8lin
w� lnterna7 and '•Mterllal, • cared Wlthr.
oat pain 5y cur 5011111 tretttmont, it"ritd
ue before 6c! ltttcr Dr. 11aJlmJlfedlcyr
po„ Lltnited, 0011ngwoud.0n3
The Soul of a Piano SS the
Action. Insist on tern,
fI tl O T O HL'-.
PIANO ACTION'
commereomioneenneesseme
Geo. Wright Bt
Co., Props.
If YOit
Are Not
Already
Acquainted
let me introduce you to the Walker
House (The House of Plenty),
wherein home comfort is made the
paramount factor: It is the one
hotel where the management lend
every effort to make its patrons
feel it is "just like home."
THE WALKER HOUSE
Tho HOLM Of Plenty
TORONTO, CANADA
FREE TO GIRLS
IVe will give trite beautiful prize free
of all charge to any girl or young lady
who will. sell 40 packages of our lovely
embossed Xmas postcard's at 10 cents 4,
package.
The lllxtenston Bracelet is of rolled
gold plate and fits any arm.
Bend us your name and we will Fond
you the cards, When sold send us the
money and we will send you the l,race•3 ,
let. Address :
noMER-WARREre c0.
Di7PT. 80 TORONTO, CAN.
\ • \\\\\V
Clear Your Co; *mon
While You Sleep
On retiring gently smear the face
with Cuticurer Ointment. Wash o(E in
five minutes with Cuticura Soap and Trot
water, using plenty of Soap and con-
tinue bathing a few minutes with Soap.
Rinse with tepid water. The cleansing,
soothing influence of this treatment on
the pores extends through the night.
It may be repeated on rising,
• Sample Bitch Free by Mail. Address post-
card: "Cuticura, Dept. N Boston, U. S. A."
Sold throughout the world.
DYKE TO
.SICK WO,1 EN
Positive Proof That Lydia
E. Pinicham's Vegetable
Compound Relieves
Suffering.
Bridgeton,N.J.—"I cannot speak too
highly of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta-
ble Compound fon
inflammation an cf
other weaknesses.
was very irregular
and would have ter-
rible pains so that B
could hardly take a
step. Sometimes
would be so misera-
ble that I could not
sweep a room. E
doctored part of the,
time but felt no:
change. I later took Lydia E. Pink --
ham's Vegetable Compound and some
felt a change for the better. I took it
until I was in good healthy condition.
I recommend the Pinkham remedies tar
all women as I have used them with such
good results."—Mrs. MILFORD T. Cues-
MINGS, 322 Harmony St., Penn's Grove,]
N. J.
Such testimony should be accepted by
all women as convincing evidence of
the excellence of Lydia E. Pinlcham's
Vegetable Compound as a remedy for
the distressing ills of women such as
displacements, inflammation,uleeration,
backache, painful periods, nervousneset
and kindred ailments.
A
Braises and Spfl"atns
Have Sloan's Liniment handy for
bruises and sprains and all pains and
aches. Quick relief follows its
prompt application. No need to
rub. It quickly penetrates to the
trouble and drives out the, pain,
Cleaner than mussy plasters or oint-
ments. Sloan's Liniment does not
stain the skin nor clog the pores,
For rheumatic aches, neuralgia,
sti4s muscles, lame back, lumbago. sour.
strains. and sprains, it gives quick relief,
Generous sized bottles at all druagiets,
25c., 50e,, 31.00.
p.IlMeV CO. aFcANAMAMTO.
3l*#llr.toN, est.