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The Huron Expositor, 1923-01-05, Page 3
darn= are SO nllcmeroAepl, a for Bonds and other eta d -risk o4.1 try renting MosRental.jd W PoiY e safest jewelry, oar 114067 Deposit RTH BRANCH, R. M. JONES, Manager. lAINARMOOLIKaw FOB 4111,01stitsrosrrin DISTRICT 1 A'rmsa8 r t �r J SUFFERED FOR ;TEARS , BUT NOW .QUITE WELL., !Cannot .Speak' Too illghly of Dodd's • " Kidney Pills. Quebec Matt, ised Dodd's Kidney Pills and recommends them to all who Sufer from Kidney Ills. Cordonnier Dequin, Quebec, ;an. 8th '(Special).—"For many years I' suffer- ed with bad kidneys and ,could get nothing to relieve me. At last, I thought of Dodd's Kidney Pills- and commenced taking them. I am now eserfectly well." Mr. L. Fremblay, who lives here, snakes the above statement. He feels that he owes it to other sufferers of !kidney trouble, to tell them how he found relief from his suffering. Other sufferers from kidney com- plaints tell of being relieved by Dodd's Kidney Pills. They act directly on the kidneys. They Strengthen them and put them in shape to strain the ,uric acid out of the blood. :Ask your neighbors if Dodd's Kid - rimy Pills are not the best remedy for :sick kidneys. NEW MOTOR HIGHWAY IN' JASPER PARK Jasper, Alta.—A survey for a pos- sible location for a forty-five mile stretch of motor road in Jasper Nat- iional Park from the town of Jasper to the eastern park boudary is being carried out by two location survey parties under the supervision of the Engineering Service of the Canadian National Parks Branch; Depattment .of the Interior. Two lines are being sun, one following for a distance of •approximately twentyrfive miles the :abandoned Grand Trunk Pacific and 'Canadian Northern -railway beds and the other running wholly independent of the old road beds. By this means fit will be possible to select the most .econopiioal route and at the same time .gyetwt'Imaine wfist .por1lons of the abaad- ,oned grade may be utilized. , When completed this road will form en important link -in the proposed Ed- monton - Vancouver motor highway. The. Provincial Governinesit of Alberta dtisis-already started work on the road from Edmonton to the eastern park ;boundary. OPENING tot f�l�itl LOYAL' HOTEL IN MONTREAL This establishment recorded .as be- ing the largest hotel in the .British Empire, opened its doors recently with the, most woerful, gathering ever organized in Montreal assembled to glartiicipate in such . a ceremony. Two trumpeters in the gorgeous 'Uniform. of His Majesty's Grenadier 'Guards sounded a blare on the trum- iet and the guests proceeded into the 'two' great dining rooms of the hotel. In the main dining room a magnificent .chamber in ,,t,he Italian Renaissance style, were assembled the guests of honor, including the .Rt. Hon. Mac- Kenzie King, and various gentlemen representing many interests financial, transportation, coinmercia? and in- •dustrial. Dinner, over which Mr. Wm. M. Dirks,president of the Montreal Board of Trade, presided, was served to the accompaniment of music, orchestras being placed in the main dining room :and also in the cafe. It was wonder- ful that the service wag so excellent, • considering the handicaps under which the staff worked. As to numbers, ,there were quite twelve ' hundred guests present. As to the hotel itself, it was really .Opened in the early day when guests arrived from New' York, Toronto, Quebec and other places. 'Those were placed in comfortable rodents /When at night the dinner guests 'began to arrive, they :found-ieveryr 'thing in, working order. There were 'in the streets traffic constables to di, deet' the 'motors, est the doors, there Were porters to vise each ticket and Ito discern that the propel? doer had in entered. Once inside, it was a -revelation ,to' see. the changes of , 24 hWtirs. It seemed that frena every 'place in Canada and the United States �, rs had beset'" the• Went Rtheoyal to e • t loobby 'almost fill With ; of blooms. It was an affair of color. The great rooms are colorful, but ' they merely 'served as trainee to the wonderful hoes of the gowns worn by the ladles' who attended the 'dinner and remain- ed emained for the dance. ' The Premier spoke et length, his speech being punctuated by cheers. He was followed by Sir tomer Gotiin, who spoke in French.' •"' • c a rt ABSOLUTE ZERO Rather more than two centuries ago Fahrenheit invented his thermometer and obtained his zero point 32 degrees below the point' where -water changes to ice, by mixing snow and salam- moniac.. At the time "this was be- lieved to be the lowest possible tem- perature, but successive experiment- ers step by step lowered the "heat gradient" until Sir James Dewar, at the Royal Institution, liquified air at a temperature 312 deg. F. below the Fahrenheit zero, and in 1898 reduced hydrogen to the solid state ' 436 de- grees below. Many years ago Lord Kelvin dem- onstrated the theoretical possibility of these frigid temperatures and in- vented the "absolutfe" temperature scale, with its zero 273 degrees be- low the Centigrade• zero, which is equivalent to 459 degrees below the Fahrenheit zero. 'This absolute scale was based on the fact that at the temperature of the Centigrade zero the volume of a gas can be increased one. 273rd part by increasing its tem- perature 1 degree Centigrade, and similarly reduced by an • equivalent decrease of temperature. Thus at - 273 degrees Centigrade (the absolute zero) a gas -would have no volume and no pressure, and all movement would cease. It is 'probably the tem- perature of inter -stiller space. When Sir James Dewar froze hydro- gen at an absolute temperature of 14 degrees ( 259 deg. Centigrade) physicists, adopting his methods, worked hard to reach the „absolute zero. But the apparatus necessary is very costly, and Sir James was forced to confess that the financial resources at his disposal were utter- ly *adequate to enable him to make the final conquest. Fortunately, Professor K. Omes, in the richly -endowed laboratories of Leyden University, was ;in,* position to continua the' work,t .owed sQ much.<to the meter - of .liquid sirs hu in 1008 he .'reduced tial*` t6 the liquid state at'...49 deg. Cent ggra do only four dog ; above thOlthsolute Since then the Dutch scientist' Ede vonn bridge a appar- stosy Checked, Thick Skinned sad : Good Welt Flavored. j + `^ fi, To -day, out cies, came the remarkable Fruit Eaters Will We . It -- IS ' .1 deep, Bich Loamy `` Is Pref =red generous May fie Growing In Some , '.,, -..-Gel Geed Varieties to Start gratitude , when Lady Ontario Pence R "'s ' t "+'if ' with_fiboutAepsragus-•-When otratheona handed to the reluctant Sir Charles ,McGregor a cheque for Egg19'actory. �" ;+' •�', to out Wheat- ooltry Increase 1100,000 whet; 81y Charles' banking (Contributed by Ontario Department of fncolOe. 1 house was crashing to ruin. The act Agriculture. Toropto.) was briefly commented on at the (Contributed by Ontario Department of time. Somewhere ours farm in the apple Agriculture. Toronto.) j On October 16th of this year growing districts of Ontario there are Location.—An open, sunny position peps went the rounds that the rosy red seedling apples. Seedling suits them best. of Sir Charles M Gregor was apples that•may have character's that Bode—They prefer a deep, well trouble. More Mtn $3,000,000 would make them valuable com- drained, fairly rich, loamy soil, but larg$ely of the funds o{ Hrltish gene inercial sorts, if such could be intro- duced ntra eraLr colonels captains and privates duce; to the public. True, there are thousands of worthless seedlings, but sortie fence row or orcherd area is now growing a tree or trees that pro- duce a superior fruit` Box Packing Apeles„at'a Premium. Ontario needs an apple suited to box packing, and it may be from ad unnamed seedling that aitch want will lect social cis - details of the .:sacrifice and of a debt of be supplied. If those having really 'good seedling apples - w=ield bring them' to light so that their qualities might be Judged by those competent to do so, an apple worth .while might be unearthed and introduced to the public. Western apples shipped in boxes have invaded the Ontario mar- ket because of their color, and ship- ping quality. The bright red color attracts the puyer and the thick skin preserves the good appearance of the individual. • Thick Skins Most Desirable. Thin skinned Ontario varieties will not stand the shipping and long ex- posure in the retail- stores to the sane degree as the Western thick skinned apples. Western apples may ho punky and -become unfit for use, nut still look well, as the . exterior will stand alone. Ontario needs a good lion pack apple, something rosy red, of good quality, and a good thick protective coat. Where, Oh Where, is It To -day? Perhaps soniewhere�iT a.tence row such an apple may now be found. no knows. What have you? —L. Stevenson, Sec., Dept. of Agriculture, r.'oronto. RUNNING AN EGG FACTORY. Valuable Hints as to How to Make ' the Best of the lien. Ever flock of hens is an egg fac- tory. Like any other factory the flock can be given the best materials in the world• to Cork on and still fail' to produce enough to pay for run- ning the plant. ' Good feed in'suffi- cient variety is necessary far egg production, but the ability to manu- facture eggs from feed must be there first. It pays to cull out the poor layers any time, to save the feed and labor they coat, but to make a profit on them it is best to cull in late sum- mer um mer or early fall, before the rush of spring chickens lowers the market price of old hens. Shut up all the hens and pullets I some evening. Count them and de- t Gide just how 'many tan be readily kept `guring.She coinii�ngy�year without 4 ort roduerfai Ind nciTassgth ` danger of disease. The next morning the flock is ready to be culled. Poor layers and all old tenni. CJpples, and hetes with broken- ; do n abdomens oi'-frozen .toes. 8. The sick, quiet,- inactive hens th'f send much time on the roost. } . All "crow heads" with long, I I slim heads anis beats. 5. The large, coarse -headed hens will do well in 'almost any good gar- was on deposit for the bank was an deli soil Do not dig in fresh straw/ officially designated agent . of the mane...,t planting time. If any ms h War O ice. cure U ,used, it should ,be' well Late that afternoon a limo _ rotted and should ile, dug. in so as up to !life Coon! of the •grayrhairsd woman, slight figure, not to come in -direct contact with , a was of sou tare, stepped out, t esttered the #►enki� ' house and asked the corms or bulbs. Manure is best l� dug.in the fall previous to planting. that her card .be taken to 'Sir Charles. The ground should be dug over .; She was instantly 'admitted.. Sir Charles was much distressed .at ' again just before planting the corms. the call; assuming,' that this inguen-, Planting.=- becorms (bulbs). may tial` lady had money on deposit with,. be planted an$ time in May or early his bank. June. Flowering corMe should not But Lady Strathcona had • come be lees than one and a halt inches not to get, but to give -give in the in diameter. Platt the corm* from full knowledge that the cheque on three to -tour inches deep and about another bank which she produced, . six inches apart. They may be set calling for the equivalent of $500, - either in rows about two feet or 000, would never be returned to her. three ' feet apart, or in groups; con- Yet she gave it, even pressed it upon venient for staking and cultivating. Sir* Charles, insisting that he accept The small cormels (small bulbs) it, which finally he did. should be planted about two inches He knew and tol=d Lady Strathcona frankly that the' • £100,000 cheque could not save the' bank. , And it didn't, for next day the bank sus- pended and it was uiaclosed that the institution was nothing more than a shell, the book assets, in large part, utterly' worthless. Gradually the story percolated outward. The late Lord Strathcona, known It was on that 16th of October as plain Donald Smith, was a Brit- that Lady Strathcona, sipping isher who many years ago desired to "Caravan" tea in the home of,, a fare forth into the distant world to friend, heard the rumor,- Dowd in seek his fortune. He had not funds "The City" Sir Charles. McGregor nor had he influence abroad. Can- was writing a notice to poet the ada was promising. Many young next morning, that the. bank was Britishers had gone out there to find suspended. brilliant opportunity. The Common- I Lady `Strathcona, however, hur- wealth was as a young giant, in- pied to her motor car, drove to the heriting vast crude wealth and yet - bank, and laid on Sir Charles' table to grow into capacity to utilize it. 1 a cheque. for £100,000 ($500,000). Donald Smith Went to Sir Charles ' Sir Charles told her it would not McGregor, a canny Scotman who save the bank. She insisted. It was, possessed wealth and whose slight she said, a slight recognition of the suggestion to leaders of Canadian af- • obligation of her father for help by fairs would be most . potent. Sir Sir Charles in those long gone years. Charles loaned him the money with . The cheque was accepted, listed which to pay ship passage and live among the bank's assets, to help a while he had a look around for op- little in giving to the small deposi- portunity. Opportunity fairly stared tors a larger dividend from, the in - him in the face, beckoned to him , evitable wreck. with smiling face and led the way to I She head paid in 1 ful%ten thou - the rolling prairies and rugged ' sand times the original sum which mountains of Western Canada. Donald Smith, later yclept, My Lord Strathcona. deep with the old corms.. or separately. Cutting Blooms. -.,-Cut thou. with fairly long stems when two or three of the bottom flowers have opened, and put in water as soon as cut. If about half an inch - of the stem is cut off every day or two, the spikes Willi continue in flower for a long- time after being cut. The old spikes of flowers qot cut off should be cut when they are through flowering be- fore the seed forms on them. Storing for Winter. — Gladioli ' corms should be dug, and stored over winter. Dig the corms before severe frosts, about the middle of October. Cut off the tops a few inches above the ground, dig the corms, .and put them in a shed or room away from ' the frost for about two weeks to dry, then put them in a cool fairly dry room or cellar, where they will not freeze, temperature about 40 deg. F. In very damp cellars they may be hung up in baskets, or tied in bunches and hung up to the joists. Before planting the large corms for the next season's bloom, remove the remains of tops and the old corm -at the bottom. The small corms (or cormels) should also be removed. The small plants from the cormels should be dug and stored during winter much in -the sante way as for the large flowering -corms. Save cormels (small bulbs) front(' -the best 'varie- ties. It will take • tlerse or four years to grow flowerings; `edrme ' from the small cormels to The following naant► ear saes a gOetVedlitiet't6n garden:-- • Afterglow, paerlea Augusta. Blue might use them. ties than some of the apeah@rit ' he JayCardin oa� has to listen - 8 nein@ c . Peter- o ester White. ttgt►lierdl (�iM'y, natural resources, and, it was Donald b b££e en , to th ent aji: be-` n s269 deg. and ' :273 e�l reen lie an- nounced. at a mee • London y that he had attained .2 2 degree from •-the point w 6i'd the last vestige of heat.vanishes. This suc- cess probably cost several thousand pounds, and unless some new gas is discovered with.a lower critical tent- perture than helium it is scarcely possible for the zero point to be actu- ally reached. At present such exper- iments are mainly of scientific inter- est, but if 'a method is discovered of producing liquid helium in large quan- tities it would enable important re- searches to be carried out, particu- larly as to the conductivity` of metals at very low temperatures. Liquid air is now extensively used for indus- trial and medical purposes, and , the scientific investigation of the temper- ature region around the absolute zero will assuredly in a few years be of incalculable benefit to humanity. But if prohibition makes liquor flow so freely, how is it that all the liquor dealers are against it?—Ottawa Jour- nal. P The 'have already taxed our ex- penditures; now they are going to tax our receipts —Kincardine Re- view. LAWYERS AS MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT For the first time,in fifty years the legal profession is not the occupation of a•niajority of members of the Brit- ish noise of Commons. The ,new Commons will contain 88 members who make their living as trade union officials, while only eighty tum o .laehrs wyye s are les then the average for the last half century, and represents lees than .a third, of the number of members pf the profession who were candidates. The a un- ion, officials were more sue ��al in the' last 'election, electing :82 obit of 102 candidates The standing of the trades and pro- fessions in the new House of Com- mons is approximately: Ttiade union officials. 88; trade workers, 87; com- pany _directors, - 40; journalists and authors, 80; miscellaneous professions, 25; mercbaitg) 25; enngineers, 20; farm., ere 11 • ublishe 9; brewers mid distillers, '7; fiiswyg a, 0 army, a nay officers, 46; manufabturera $7; shipowners, 80; teachers, 25; landown- ers, 22; baiikets and brokers, 11; doc- tors, 9; contractors, if; hon sews , 2; clergymen, 1. • with sunken eyes. 6. All very short, stubby hens with . feitti rs extremely heavy - for their I brood, 7, Ail lets -hitched imniattire pul- lets and $hoil 'that are early hatched I but much it"deteised. . , 8. All hag that )holt before Aug- , ust 1. ► 9. The persisted ,eittet. i 10. All hens with solid; fat ab- domens. 11. All hens having" bad habits (cannibals, feather -pullers, egg -- eaters). 12. All cockerels not needed, for breeding purposes. Keep 1. Strong, healthy, vigorous hen" with short, neat heads and strong beaks., 2. The hens with long, deep, rect- angular eet angular bodies and parallel top and bottom lines. - 3. The hens with large, bright eyes, active appearance and short, well-worn toe nails. 4. The hens with dusty, worn feathers, especially worn tail feath- ers, but having 'a bright, healthy look. 6. The hens that molt late. 6. The noisy, happy, friendly hens. 7. The early risers and those late to roost. . 8. The vigorous hens with the fad- ed beaks and shanks. 9. The hens with the soft, pli abdomens. 10. The hens with' the thin pe is bones spread wide apart. 11. The early -hatched, well -grown pullets. 12. Large, strong, active, quick maturing cockerels of desired - var- iety type and high -producing Mothers. ,There are five major factors in profitable poultry produgtion—breed- ing, culling, feeding, housing, and care. These are the essentials; com- bined they will put the poultry busi- ness on a practical business basis. Onions once frosen Should remain • frozen until time to use them. If you want stocky, healthy plants in your hotbeds or greenhouse, ven- tilate well. Tqo much water and heat make tall, spindling, weak plants. Have you organized a farmers' club or a. reading circle in your commun- itd? Lots bit enjoyment., as well as wont, may be obtained from an or- ganization' of this sort. Women see* to be decided into two classed now—the high -brow and the low-neck,--gingstoit Standard. Tobacco of' %a LISTING and in packages N Sir Charles McGregor had sold to Donald Smith the fundamentals of wealth -getting and of social neces- sity—two elements which, when in- telligently joined, have always estab- lished fortune in query land and in sometimes they are left.—Kingston er well. every age. They were, first, the Standard. a few of the basic essentials—land, minerals, and Aid will make the sources of industrial power; sec- ' i ti . "Doubtless SirHenry Thornton if an aihatear s one, the means of getting thesethat the Canadian ' things to the places where society hopes i1 - Railways have better to itA I $aoili- Many girls think there is no man in the world good enough for them, and often they are right. Yep, and Jai Dawn Bo- annus had in abundance these t ' Prince is 'Feleo,�'Panama, h a Lunne�, ' Smith and others who organized and oro N1 ten pe'ldlcton• initial -a, Sul- ' developed the agencies of getti s --'--' g, fdchrebeil- r , Wm. • theni to where men and rolnen t The vpooice have looked in vain 'for t, • • ' eve them in their ' i cera (';(;taps, the escaped murderess. realist �. Ixving ne- S e ntgy fifes hidden flu a store that ons 8� hybrid i#iadiolt will , cessities. ,does not advertise.—Los Angeles re, UP Fal co tN1 good results and are I Donald Smith got into lands, ' efisapel' Mata aamed: Varieties it a mines, banking and railways; con - large number is required. This I)_st , ceived measures of development; be - does notnclude many of the quite came a power in the land, a build - new iar(eUel. F,Oir aotf, salaam • er of Empire. He became rich be - Safi be bought for one to .two yond even the dreams he had dollars per &sen, an even cheaper. dreamed when, with Sir Charles It pays ie buy good varieties for di McGregor's "grub stake" in his pock - start, as they can be increased rapid- ets, he fared forth from England to ly from the pmall corllaels. ; conquer fortune in the New Yorld. i essentially British institution will Note, _ Whell cutting flower spikes No longer was he a young man ob- ( surely be looked upon with disfavor fon' decorative pur$csaidgot cut the , tanning- largess at the hands of a . in many quarters. For example the Stem toe low down. Lentis IWO OL , tiirerry81g-. �Scotsmanj who mayhap 1 messengers- still wear selmotl-colored three le!>dvfsist below where they af3 saw the true metal of Which hid , Mallow -tailed coats, scarlet waist- I ` gut to assfie corm to grow and fellow Scotsmali, Donald Smith, ' coats, black trousers and silk hats.. develop. Cutting off all the foliage was made, and who advanced that ' The porters are garbed in crimson Prevents the corm from developing. ' relatively insignificant sum of - and gold lace, Every night since 1780 L O r=t'he late Wm. Hunt,O. A. College, ' stake money. He grew into the sta- t thirty-six soldiers eau guard. This Guelph. 1 ture of a world figure. His name was probably brought about by the was familiar in the bourses, marts ' Gordon. riots, so admirably described About Asparagus. j aid treasure houses of many lands. ' in "Barnaby Budge:" A modern bank - At the b,�ginri!be of ,July all cul- ' i.ts had transmuted into substance ing structure will take the place of ting of asparagus s!f�jpId cease, the •the wealth of advice with which the present inner buildings. The beds should be yeavily tp dressed Sir Charles McGre'gar had amplified Bank of England was built by Sir with 'manure, and the lentil . the few score pounds he handed Times. THE BANK OF ENGLAND The Bank of England is being mod- ernized, and the interior being rebuilt to four or five storielk Will wonders never cease? Any dieruption of this FOR BABY mo "Safety FirerP Four generations of babe have been kept clean, ill,. fragrant, and free it troubles by the use ei BABTSo�wx �,r Pseaby SOAP iita boa ALBERT SOAPS LIMITED - segt tes'' MORSE A of many Made quickly remailieti �vitil► POLi91''A E -d P'ft AN LINI.M-ENT. PREVEENTS PS BLOOD- IBO conEs 'muss. VISTU SPRAINS AND S immen. T e beet an around Liniment for the stable as well so for household use, KEEP IT HANDY. At all })jlars and Drassi> . Maaulaetnred only by - DOUGLAS & CO., NAPANEU.Oat John Sonne fn 17$$, and occupies three 0 O pp 0 to grow during the reihainder .of the 'him and which had long Since been i acres of ground in three separate par, O season. Careful spraying of this crop repaid. fishes. Sir John Soane left his house O with peason Bordeaux is necessary • Then the late King Edwards and collection intact at No. 13 Lin - if the beetles are very active. Keep knighted him for that which nowa- . Coln's InFields, and proof of having O the wheel hoe going during the early days wins most of the British titles r visited this interesting collection is 0 morning, so that weeds will be killed acquired and not inherited—con- • regarded as the acid test of the true during the heat of the sun. Apply spicuous achievement in the realm •Londoner. 0 water as often as necessary, so that . of trapspoi'tJtion. commerce or the plants will make a constant growth. Never work among plants while they are wet, as this spreads diseased. When to Cut Wheat. Wheat may be cut with safety when the straw has lost nearly all its green color and the grains are not entirely hardened. If cut sooner than this, which he was the head was top- shriteled kernels will result. If left piing. It was honey combed with standing until fully ripe, s bleached useless assets, with ruinously over - appearance, due to the action of the drawn accounts, with bills receivable elements, often results, and loss from in some instances twenty yearS old shattering may ensue. Wheat that int and worthless, with obligations of fully ripe is also more difficult to persons; and companies who had handle. Where the area of wheat is finance. lie became My Lord ' Strathcona. • P Now, on this beto'bei' day of 1922, Lord Strathcona gone to his reward, the man who started him on his way toward fame, fortune and high achievement—the canny Scots- man, Sir Charles McGregor—was in trouble. The banking house of large, cutting should begin as early as it can be done safely. Poultry Increase Income. Produce infertile eggs by remov- ing the roosters from the fleck in the summer time. Provide clean nests and keep eggs clean. (Sather the eggs twice daily dur- ing the summer, to prevent them from heir e heated by the hen. Keep them in a cool dry place away from the flies. • Market them at least twice each week. Insist that they bo bought on quality basis. Producers are admonished not to wash eggs. The man who will do as much to- day as he is to do to -morrow will get things done—Maritime Merchant been given accommodation, it may be, by special favor, rather than by the sound rule of credit. And these things leaked out. Ru- mor percolated the reign around - about. "The Old Lady of Thread- needle Street"—in "The City"—in the Wall Street of London. Other bankers sheok their heads. The McGregor financial ship was driving on to the rocks. Wreckage. they feared, was inevitable. The London County and Westminster Bank, al- most as strong- as the Bank of Eng- land, in August had informed Sir Charles that no more funds would be advanced. Bread Cast' on the Waters. September passed and October came.. Rumor by that time had whispered in the London drawing - rooms. And rumor, got into time centres of social life the more surely becgiuse the McGregor Bank was the depository of funds by many army officers. e O O O O a 0 0 ©O C. G. THOMPSON 4' All Kinds of Grusin bought. Milverton Flour, Bran annd Short* Grain Buyer. Custom Chopping. Phone 25 OATMEAL MILLS, o Seaforth, Ont. r y ao0or>oiooasti 0 O 0 0 O b O "I Was Run Down" "Body was coiitipietely covered with ;Boils" "If you have ever had boils, yon keow how painful and annoying ewes one or two can be: But imagine having your whole body almost en- tire! r covered 'with them I I am a maker by trade, mailing a spe- cialty of repairing the highest grade movements. This is probably the most trying of any mechanical work, particularly fora nervous individual likeme. Working under great strain both day and night for three months, bronglitmealmost toagrate ofco;lapse. ('was so irritable and neri'ousthat the slightest thing would 'send the rip in the air.' If- rmanaged to get a few hours of sleep at night i was lucky. I had noappett'teforfood. I certainly was miserable. During this time boils began to appear on different parts of my body and the pain from them made life a misery. lily suffering was so great at times that I felt there was nothing left for me to do but to end it all. I consulted doctors but they all told me that if I didn't give tip my work and live out of doors, I would ,aointo a decline. -As I hadao money I couldn't do this. In fact Paying doctors' bills and buying medicines used up all the money 'made. in desperation, I decided that I either kill or care myself, so I to study my case. I realized the t was ascoin pistely nin down as anyone could possibly!,bsstilhIt -bad Claim) nerves. What I heeded was buiidfn up. After reading descriptions different preparations, the one able% appeared to be the best for me iMp Carnol. It has simply performed miracles for the. Pour bottles have done more than months of travel abroad. I feel like a two-ytar old. I sleep eight bon=a every night and eat three id meals a day. Ply skint is like a baby's, free from blemishes of any kind and I have tion, lmoit forgotten that I have ever had ;midi- things as metres:' I want everybody who is ailing to know about Canal because I;have such faith in ft i bee" neve it will cure any lumen ill." ," Mr. f H. )Rico; i,.,,* Car'isol ib sold our d a and if you can Jour sifter u have tried it, Oita, bottle doneyet i to him sed he 'For gale by, E. Ute, P'bin. .rte^ ,;r�'"��3�.'1�•"w /t