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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1917-08-31, Page 2e 1.1 one Saved s like having dollars handed to you --the articles listed below are money savers. -- Bought early they represent values that cannot be replaced at the prices. Preserving Kettles - - in granite, Beautiful three coat, white lined, with wood hall and perfect balance -just the kind that every housewife requires........1.75c to $1.50 One coat granite kettles, each .... 20c to 50c A Food Ch2pper is quite a common article but "The Uni- versal" saves time and labor in pickling or in makingjelly. Easily cleaned and a child can operate them. $1.85 to $2.25 The dry season I kills the old wooden pump. We ha.ve a stock of those 'strong iron heads, com- plete with tyl taders, to go at 58.50 A few good value stock pumps for 2 . inch pipe, complete with cylinder and 4 foot pipe for 512.00,71 Pulleys do not last, with heavy croos, why not keep an extra one on hand -40neto 45c Special Ham- meroei ckle plat- ed, warranted steel, for 85 cts. sre When si to is 60c. hig er. Who fail to receive The ybgntrli *One a favorsimian) of the fact at as a date 'When change etraddress is desired both the old and new &areas should be ADVERTISING `RATES. Display Advertising Rates 1 known 04 puektiom ft* Insertkin; three_ rtiOJIB. $100 Farms or Real Estate for sale 60e. ea& hisertion for one month of four ireeertions; 26e for each aubsetleimat iu &wartime Misceihmeous Articles for Sale, To Rent” Wanted, Lost, ; ete., each insertion 25e. Local ead- ers, bletices, etc:, lac per line per in- sertion. No notice less than 25e. Card of Thanks 50c. Legal Advertising 10e and 5e per line. Auction Sales, $2 for One insertion and $3 for two insertiOns fessional Cards not exceeding one inch ---$6 per year, rikt.; iotte are advancing in prine eveey day. You riled one for thresh- ing. Price....$1.35 TILLS„:-S0afort The Jiticiiiiq flit a \Fire Insurance Co. Head() Seaforth, Ont. DIRECTORY. OFFICERS. Connolly, Goderich, President Jas. Evans, Beechwood, Yiee-Presideei T. E. Hays, Seaford), Secy.-Treas. AGENTS s, Alex, Leitch, R. -R. No. 1, Clinton; Ed. Ilinehley, Seaforth; William Chesney, F..genondville; J. W. Yeti, Goderich; R. G. larinotli, ,Brodhagen- - DIRECTORS William Rum,- No.. 2, Seaforth; John. Bennewies, Brodhagen; James Evans, Esechwood; M. Megwen, Clinton; Jas. Connolly, Godericle; D. F. McGregor, R. R. No. 3, Seaforth; G. Grieve, No. 4 Walton; Robert Ferris, Hailock; George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. ELM. p.m. etiderich Leave 7.00 2.30 Myth 7.37 3,07 Walton 7.50 $19- tinelph. 9.35 5.05 FROM TORONTO 8.20 5.10 10,15 7.00 12.58 8.42 12.10 9.07 12.30 9.19 Goderich 12.45 9.45 Connections at Guelph Junction with Main Line for Galt, Woodstock, Lon- don, Detroit and Chicago and 'all inn immediate points. Toronto (Leave) Guelph (arrive) Walton Werth Auburn Iron Pumps ik pump M Repairung a n prepar ed to tut MS ail seed of .0 ore and L It Pumps a id a llsizes , P Fitting- e c. Galvan- 1 Steel Fenicst nd Water troughs Ste lc le ena end attle Basins.., Akeo a , aidsot pump repairingdone on To or notice. For terms, etc., apt. ly at Pump Factory, Goderich St„ East, or at residence, North Main Street . F. Welsh Seaford) C. P. R. TIME TABLE eoUILPH GODERICII I3RANCH. TO TORONTO - G. T. R. TIME TABLE Trains Leave Seaforth as follows: 10.55 a.ra FotoClinton, Goderich, Wingliam and Sinonrano. 5.88 p.ra. - For Clinto, Wingham and Mare's -dine. 1.1.03 p.m. - For Clinton, Goderich 1.51 s. in. -For Stratford, Guelph, Toronto, Orillia, North l3ay and into west, Bedleville and Peter- tl eloints east. 1.15 p.m. - For Stratford, Toronto, Montreal and points east. LONDON, BUBON AND BRUCE loath - SAL Iftleigkaa. lkoposi a' CM WM. 6 6 6' 6 •• 0666: 1.24 Losdisbore.. T.111 Camisa. •-e *Kt*. II* 4411 ..... 9, 4.11 Sawn 1.114 8.111 LIM '41modon. osiii;ro Nara 4111.1110 NAKAO .SAIA -.104 assf V.4114 •-• IV; .fAt4 eQ41 elte. .41X.Sit ape. let • lik'41-41, -aais 11A11 STOWIACH 011 001ISTIPATION CURED BY MILBURN'S LAXMLIVER PILLS Mr. srvester Clements, Galt, Ont., wfites: 'I wish to eipress my heartfelt thatiks for what Milbure's I,axa-Liver -Pills hive done for me. I have been stifieprint froM a bad stomach and con- stipation, aidwouldbe off work for 4 or tfi months a year. I was hardly able to be inside without gelling a severe head- ache. 'I tried doctor's medicine • and other remedies, but got' no relief until a friend advised me to useJiddlhurn's Inese er Pills.. Now I- can work inside 'Wftbont any headaches or pain. I would not be without your remedy for anything, I write this so that, anyone suffering the same as I did may -use them and be cured." Milburn's 1-axa-Liver Pills are 25.cents per vial. Pot sale at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt- of price by The T. Milburn. Co., Limited, Torrto, Ont. CREAM WANTED. We have our Creamery now in full operation, andiwe want your patrOn- age. We arey prepared to pay you the highest prices for your cream, pay you every two weeks, N., c'gh, sample and test each can of eream carefully' and giveyou statement of the dame. We also supply cans free of charge< and give you an honest business deal. Call in and see us or drop us a card for particulars. 1 Seaforth Creamery. Seaforth Ontario MIME WAS 50 BAD, Thought She Would Lose Child. During the hot weather young children are very much subject to diarrhoea., in fact, more so than. adults, on account of the more delicete constructiou of their constitution. It behooves every mother to look after her children on the first sign of any looseness of the bowels, for if they do not some serious bowel trouble such as diarrhoea, dysentery. cholera infa.n- tum, cholera morbus, summer complaint, etc., is liable to follow, and they will perhaps, loose their little, one by- not taking the preca.ution. to cheek this loose- ness of the bowels by using Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. Mrs. R. et Hillis, St. Mary's, Ont. writes: "My little girl was so bad witt: diarrhoea the doctor could not cure her, and we were sure we were going to lose her. A friend of mine told me to use Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry, so I sent for a bottle right away, aed by the time I had given her one bottle she was able to sit up, and before I had the second bottle used she was cured. tell every- body about this sure ctu-e. The price is 35c. a bottle, but it is well worth it. It is II. years since I first itried it, and will always keep it on hand. It is good for old and young alike." " Dn'rowler's "has been ou the market for the past 72 years, so if you want to be on the safe side be sure aad see that you' get "Dr. Powlern" when you ask for it. The genuine is inautifactureel only by The T. ligiihern 00., TOMMItas Ont. • SEAFORTH, Friday, August 31, 1917 ew as Relieved from P diA E.Pinkham's Comppu4d. SEAFORTII, Friday, August ,31, 1917 WHAT THE MISSIONS ARE DOING The following are extracts from the address of Mrs. J. T. Hall, giv- en before the Presbyterial of tile Wo- men' Missionary Societies of the Presbyterian church at Kingston, re- cently, and show the remarkable pro- gress being made in the evangeliza- tion of the world: In such an hoer of . our Empire's destiny as this, and at trie beginning of such a meeting as this, the words found in the lith and 12th verses of the 21st chapter of Isaiah seem singularly appropriate. "The burden of Idumaea. He calleth to me out of Seir, Watchman, what of the night? Watchman, what of the night? The watchman said, the Morning. cometh and also the night." What is meant by a watchman. - who was this .particular W.atchnean- And why did the man out of Seir call to him? In the early days of human history international frights and -usuages were unknown. Such an act as a public `declaration of wan-, was never consid- ered a public duty. On the contrary the more secret 'end silently a \hostile army could make its attack, -the more to its credit. Border populations were thus kept in a, state of continual suspense, were mac* to bear the brunt of imminerable perils and) a- -berms. For this reason, watchmen *ere posted on the walls or 5n -the towers of the border -cities to watch for the appearance or approach- of an enemy and give instant alarm. The man chosen fOr this pesitien must be one who had long lived on the border .-knew the contour of the in short, short, he must be an expert with eagle eye and 'cool nerve, mid, above all faithful to the trust imPased -upon But who was this partielar watch- man, not one chosen by Israel and stationed on the tower of one of their border cities. This watchman was a servant chosen by Jehovah himsel,f-ird'evatchman stationed by. God on the 'Tower of Faith', the pin- nacle of vision', td speak words of warning to disobedient, captive Is- rael. But the cry itself, "Watehmatewhat of the night? Watchman, what of the night?" has come ringing down through the ages, pealing out through the darkness as nations pass through the night time of their history, It is the most pertinent question asked up- on' earth to -day. This earth has nev- er before passed through a night so dark as the agonizing hours of the past, almost three years Fiercest hatreds, ' blackest crimes, and the -most atrocious cruelties have ' run rampant, been prateised by a nation self-styled the strongest and most enlightened nation upon earth. Jus- tice and -trtith, have never before, in modern times, been so• ruthlessly trampled upon. Neverthas the doc- trine that rnight is _right been so shamefully flouted in the world's face. Oh the other hand, never be- fore in the history of man have na- tions more heroically withstood the oncoming of a bloody tyrant, - - But what are Sctrae of the indica- tions that the day is breaking? Nat- urally we turn to India, first. We know that in India are massed such evils, such entrenched and debasing beliefs. and superstitions as are com- bined nowhere else in the world, but it is the mission of our foreign mise sions dearest to our hearts -because it is a part of our own Empire. And as we kook for the morning light, * India, let us not centr-e our though. on our own 72 workers in Central Ito -die, but let us trn and get a glimpse from the world's watch tower of what is being accomphlised by the 5200 workers reptesentin.g the missionary Societies of the world. Some times we see progress best by comparison. In 1812 William Cary saw a leper burned alive, for Hindu religien teaches that leprosy is the punish- ment for some heineous sin committed in a previoui incarnation. Shortly after Lord Lawrence passed the first law of its kind in the Punjaub, "Thou shalt not burn thy lepers." When we remember such a condition as is in 1812 and then visitin imagination one of the man.y leper,. refuges now scat- tered over India, we see that the glac- ier of moral evils and entrenched sup- erstition is beginning to move. We are told that in the Allababad Colony each leper has his own roome his own garden plot, and his own spot at the fireplace where he may cook his fav- orite food in his own way. All that science van do is being done to miti- gate their pain, lessen their nisfigare- erzent; and they are, in spite of their physical condition, happy Christians, h.elpful to each other and grateful for their Refuge. They leper col- onies have all sorts of essoeiations and -societies; they tryj to play base - ban and cricket; have an apology for a band; hold a Bible class, and he almost all Refuges have a Chriatnin Taunton, mass.-" had pains in both and when my periods ceine I had to stay at home hi work and spi- er os. lon-g- time, One. day al woman -eimento our hours and asked :ay =Other why was Suffering. ,Motbor tom her that I Fed- fered every morel) and she saki, 'Wby dont you buy a e, bottle of. Lyeee Pinkbiun's Vegetable Compotehdt 4 mother bought it and the next 17101T, t. WaS so well alai wogked all the wol without staying at home a day, 1 in good beelth -now, end told lote girls about it " -Miss CYARICE MO'P.E3, 22 Russell Street, Taunton, Mass. Thousands of girls suffer in pilenze every month railer than consult a phy- sician. If girls who are troubled with painful or irregular periods, backache, headache, dragging -down sensations, fainting spells or indigestion would take Lydia E. Milldam's Vegetable Com - pond, a -safe veld pure remedy made from roots and herbs, much suffering might be avoided. Write to tydda E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Masa (confidential) for free advice which vrill prove helpful. -Mee- with unflinching oyes. And it is the great Eeglishspeaking peop that CAOTte nis now looking for idea1e. he has get her new national anthem io the tune a "God Save the 't not something to stir the ' of eVetY pritisher to think that Sritigh•Euipire, United AkitaoZ erica and China, by far the great part of the human race, all sing their ' national anthem to the same melody. But here is an oventSWeteing thought -which brings -withit over- whehning responsibility. It ,is the ; English language that God in his Pee- ' videnee has wade the tutor, the in- structor a awakened Cithia. The signs in poste offices, at railway sta- tions and in steams/lin ces,through- out China are now written in, Feiglish. as well Chinese, • But What is of infinitely greater impertanee,the Gov- ernment has ad'opted English as the language in which all Western sub -1 ' jects are to be taught in- their col- leges and universities. And for this reason: It was necessary to adopt some western language, for it Was actually easier to learn, a new lan- guage in order to study the western , eeiences than to make the necessary I translations, and create new terms ; in their own language. But -why did the Chinese Govern- ment choose the English language rather than any other western lan- guage, French or German for ins ' tame? Well, China is a practical na- tien-she has a great work to do -so she wisely seized the best tool at her I hand, which tool was the English lan- guage. As a matter oi fact, there were thousands of Chinese who cou teach the branches of western learning in the English lan- guage, and very few who could use any other western language, and how did this come about? Listen! It was because of the work of mission- ary teachers, men and women whom the scoffing world said had thrown thernsives away, buried themselves in Endeavor goeidty which is their jo the Orient. For two generations and pride. these heralds of the Cross had plant - This is only one of the ways he ed and fostered inissicomry schools which the weak and down -trodden of teaching our language; and when. the India are being rescued and tared for, day came that awakened China need - only one of the ruhny ways in wlueli ed a western language, ours was on „earnest practical Christianity is at_ the ground. When you think of the tacking superstition and error. The great change in the attitude of China outstanding fruits of the combined towards the foreigner, towards Chris - efforts in the last sixteen years, does efforts of all the churches working in India today may 134 seen, first in toe not your heart reecho the ancient great mass movements of outcasts watchman's cry, "The morning come - and aborigines towards ChriatianitY, there being cases wh.ere whole vill- ages and clans have turned to Christ; secondly, in the fact that when John R. Mott and Sherwood Eddy stood before the student body in 1912, the great halls were not large enough' to hold the audiences that gathered each night, to listen to the unswerving proclamations of the things ° of Christ. But perhaps the most convincing proof to us that the leaven of Christ is. world* in Indio, is the loyalty With -whihh a united India Thine het - self into the breach in the hour of Britain's peril. In leiier,tolonies and schools for the blind, int day -schools, boarding houses and colleges, in dis- pensary; - hospital and church, the Great' Sower is scattering the good seed in India,‘ seed twhich those upoit the watcb tower tell us will of a cit.- tdinity;ir„6.bT,oxforrtivOlcLionti.ehtharv. efriittraixi?efoz 'ours bas passed its meridian-. Then look at China. Helen Barret Montgomery tells us that there never *as a madder enterprise, not one more foredoomed to failure than the attempt to convert China to Chris- tianity. Here was a people like their yellow 'Sands, innumerable. They Were self-contained arid self-sustain- ing, living on land they had possessed for ages. They had the oldest edu- cational system in the world, an en- cient religion, and both entrenched in the political life of the nation. They were devoted to the past, impervious to new ideas, and scornful of the outside world, refusing intercourse -with outside nations except when. for- , ced to grant it. Fot generations, the great,confident smiling world, like the man out of Seir, sotered at InisSions for China. Today no one who knows laughs at Christianity in China. The Chinese Church which in 1900 'Slumbered 100,- 000, to -day numbers 400,000; and one competent authority on the watch tower says that at the present rate of increase there -win. -be 100,000,000 Christians -in China in 1950; that is one-fourth -of the whole population of China will be Christian. Even in 1900 the madness of the enterprise to Christianize China was eilaio to the onmiscient critic; but what an almost incredible change has taken place in the few- brief years since then? As in India, progress can best be seen by comparison. In 1900, during the 'Boxer monement, the Governor of Shansi beheaded three missionaries with his own band, then made fifty Chinese -Christianei with their families kneel in the courtyard of his yarnen. They- ,were gilen an. opportunity to recant, but when the proclamation Was sred,a -bidding thexn to do so, a voice rose from the kneel- ing group,"Great man use your sword you need not ask that question again!. So they died. Their churches were razed, their schools burned, and the remaining Chinese Christians put to death. And yet listen! The Gov- ernor of this same blood-stained Pro- vince fourteen years later asked. the Board of Conimissioners foe Ameri- can Foreign Missions, to take charge of the Public Schools in a pelt of his own province numbering several mil- lion inhabitants. "We will erect the buildings, equip them, pay the teach- ers' salaries, and have the Mission entirely free to teach the Bible, "if only the board will furnish trained supervision.' What an amazing change in the attitude of Chinn to- wards Christianity, towards the hated foreigner, in fourteen brief years! Surely the Watchman on the tower can truly say, "The morning cometh." But this is only an indication. of the revolutionary changes that have swept over the whole of China since the Boxer movement. Their educational system of immemorial ages has been thrown on the scrap heap and re- placed by a modern system. The Man- chu dynasty overthrown; an absolute hereditary monarch has been replaced by a Republican Constitational Gov- ernment. The old dragon has' flopped you first hear of Christ? -at chmeh? , e ,laaretee- e out of their flag and the nation that I at prayer meeting?. on the street? for thousands of years has only look- by readingthBible?" the e or ed backward is nowfacing the future istic reply is "No! Iiheard abotot him ethl" But do. e not your heart also almost stand still as you measure the opportunities, the responsibilities this awakening spells? Then look for a moment at Korea. Some one has ,said that God compen- sates little eountleee by making them so gifted that all big lands can do is to strut and boast of their size. The Tittle land of Judah wrote the psalms, bore the prophets, and gave to the world the Chrint. Little Greece en-' etched the world with her philosophy end art. Little Switzerland teeches, the world &Moe:been little Belgium, unflinching heroism; lint it was left to little, forgotten, hermit Korea to recateb the isipture and passion of primitive Christianity. The introduction of Christianity in- to Korea is an affair of yesterday. In 1884 Dr. H. N. Allen went to Korea as a medical missionary, but found. the people so i stile that all he could do- was to rec, in in the coun- try as ae physician to the American iegatien. Later on, when revolution seemed imminent because of an at- tempt of the Korean government to introduce social reforme, the diplo- matic corps- of the English, American and German legations withdrew to their battleships, and of course the American Minister urged Dr. Allen to go with them. Dr. Allen replied -that he had come to h.elp the Korean people, was likely to be needed, and under the protection of God and the Flag, he proposed to stay. During the day e of rioting wiaich followed, the nephew of the Emperor was wounded, and when Dr. Allen was called to the palace, he found 13 of the Korean physicians, as a last resort, about to pour boiling wax into the twible wounds of the prince He saved his life, and the Emperor, out of gratitude'gave him a hospital, and allowed other missionaries to settle in Korea. Thus the work began. The growth was slow at first; later on, the Kor- eans haves been described as a nation on the run to Christ; The phenome- nal growth began in 1904. In four year the number of Christians rose from 30,000 to 110,000. One church swarmed thirty-nine times in fifteen years and then' had 2000 members left in the parent church, and. today :there is a Christian community of one half million. This remarkable growth is due to two causes; first, every Korean (leis- tian is a Bible student, and secondly, he is not only a Bible student, but he feels it 1s duty to bring °theft-- to Christ. In most Oriental countries the num- ber of iLliterates is very great; not so in Korea. In Korea almost every Christian can read his Bible because reading is so easy. It, seems as if God in this forgotten • little hermit country had tucked away a forgotten and despised language to be brought to the light of day ev,,alen Jesus need- ed it. Five hundred years ago, an un- known genius invented for the Kor- eans he simpelst form of writing ev- ery known, so simple that the Koreans despised it, called it the dirty lan- guage. Indeed their scholars refused 'to u$+ it, preferring to use. the Chi- nese characters which are very diffi- cult to learn, and equally difficult to understand. But Jesus walked thro' Korea one day, picked this beautiful simple alphabet frout the dust, and perhaps said, "This is just what I need for the New Testament." At any rate, the 'missionaries seized it at once, put the Bible, Pilgrim's Pro- gress and some of Mr.Moody's tracts into this easy Korean script, and to- day Christian Koreans are Bible stu- dents, meeting in Bible classes and Bible Institutes which for siz,e and durtion are unequalled the whole world over. No wonder -then that each Korean Christian_ feels it his daty to bring others to Christ. Dr. James S. Gale tells us that when he asks a Korean Chrish.ari the question, "Where did "Pure and Uneo MWMMF/1.11151,11VMEMII(PM., ed" Preserving. J.,fie pyre Cane Sugar is be for preserving because of its purity, high -sweetening power aid r fine" granulation, 10,22and0 (n745451004 Cr. Sack Lantic Library of Cook Books, free for Red Ball Trade -mark cut from Carton or Sack. ATLANTIC SUGAR. REFINER Limited, Montreal from Brother Kim. He came to ley I house, and we read the Bible togeth- er As the watchman on the towers of Christ's church on earth flash out the glad tiding that the hoary east is awakening to the call of Christ, we women of the Presbyterian church of Canada thank God that we have been privileged to share in this greet work.! But listen, Christian friends, our share in the awakening of the nations of the east is the measure of our re- ! sponsibility for the course they take ; now they are atvake. Indii, Japan, are not creeping forward but plunging forward to unknown destiny. Let us not falter; let us not fail theii in this, their hour of peril, their tran- sitional stage; but let us pray con--; tinually that more men may be sent, more money be given, and that the , eneregizing power of the Spirit of God may work through our weak en- deavors, and the endeavors of all oth- er Christian agencies till India, China and Japan become virile Christian tta- tiOnIS. . ,And lastly, let us look for a mo- ment at our own beloved Canada. We are always thrilled when we think of the almost illimitable resources of our own heritage, of the future that lies before us. But we, also, have our problems and though they differ from the eroblems of the great east, they are knotty ,and press for immediate solution. Indeed, the watchmen upon the towers of Canada tell vs that to I assimilate the foreign population we I already possess is the most gigantic problem of its kind any modern na- tion has had to face. Rut what will that problem of its benntionieonwro that problem be if, when the war is , over, the tide of emigration runs high ! asso!many in autboritv nredict? The! work taxes the strength of those who 1 are facing it now. Should we not, I then, ceaselessly strive to enlist ev- ery woman of our church that we I may be able to cope with the task that will be ours when the war is over.. We are not, however, facing this problem in just the same way we fac- ed it last year when -,sve were in Lon- don, for in -the interval an instrument of great power has been put into our hands. - Many of us nethaps have not wanted the reseeansibility of the bal- lot Ahriny from the use of it. But weanust admit that its pessiiilitioe are -groat if the women of Canada use it _aright. And is it not possible that God in his Providence has „given us the ballot for such an hour as this, that, like Esther of old, we have come into the kingdom for such a -time as this? Shall we not then ' bring ail the powers of our heart and VelMor-Sorminmemesintemreenr4444 e"-• tit 'n 1 mind to hear upon the right -in: of the ballot, that we may use it as a sacred trust, as an instrument jhr, which we may the better premrve our homes, protect our sons and dangh. ters, arel help weld out cosmopolitan population of many beliefs and lent guakes into one homogeneous, Gee_ fearing nation? 11MML --• • French and English, as vieli as Amerdican women in France, have formed an organization, the object of which is to look after the Americae. soldier boys now on the other side of llis e need for all poedble the ocean. th aidSoogreat Allies' fighting forces o.n the western front that women have been pressed into service as mechanit cians at the French Aviation etations, Mrs. Esther B. Darling, of Nome, tAolasthkae F, rwenchoh sgoolvdernmmanyentr, achainsgreedeivogs, ed the Cross of War won by Alssks dogs for service at the -front in tarn porting ninety tons a ehells to mix,. lated post under fire. AN AGE OF WEAK NERVES No heart for anythingi'd is the ety at thousands of men and women who might be made well by the new, re blood Dr .Williams Pink Pills sot:ally make. - Misery day and night is the lot of hosts of men and women who are te., day the victims of week =yes. Their pale, drawn faces and dejected attitude tell a sad tale for MMUS wealpfess means being tortured by morbid thoughts and unaecouetall_e fits of depression. These sufferers aro painfully sensitive and easily agitated by some Chance remark. Sleaden& lieSS robs them of energy Est strength; flair eyes are sunken, their Jimbs tremble, appetite is poor memory off4en fails. Thit nervor,:; exha .ustion is one of the moet serios evils affecting men and Women of to -day. The only waynto bring ket sound, vigorous health is to feed ts starved nerves whieh are clamoring for new rich, red blood. This good blood, can be had through 11* use of Dr. Williams Pink Pills, which fact accounts for the tho cures of nervons diseases bout by this powerful blood and nerve restorer.. Through use of this medicine thousands of pendent people have been made brig active and strong. Dr. Wilreeens1 Pink Pills are by all dealers in medicine or may be had by mail et 50e a box or six boxes for $2.50 from the Dr. Williaans' Med- icine Co., Brockville, Ont. VIE (Too I. Not. jss gone te a few si a Toronto, - pea rimm.mmTmlaIND, BTAX.11519 tete eetteteinmeeti Everywhereiwam in work, study or plc. Own of Cu is a welcorae help. Toth, h:-:eath, appe- tite, digestion and spirits are the bet- ter for it. WIIRLSZLV'S -makes the next pipe or cigar taste better. It pleasantly sweetens and soothes mouth and throat. Three stip Flavours The Flavour f Lasts Seared tight -Kept right Be &UFO watau.-.---es After every More raer than year. Die fanten.n without es not at short del the 'child Baby's Ov kept in young eh the tab' bowel tro suddenly lets will Anders° Or Tab little o weak st when su plaint an healthe- by inedici ents Medjcii AN Lieut. The a son nedy, of with the nailing sent in over the In a lete 31's eper gee:emit "No great 21 I had 0 -- and note satisfied, another, the pi Cape. raesent taking but the e enel we