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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1916-11-23, Page 3`Or cia4ara yowr, Baby's Health cheerful, chah. Citdren • ,Iftahe the Roin;e Pappir „ , euoy babiesare a• constant care ter tired mothers and. are sebject to many diseases that do not.effect healthy, children, Keep,yopr children in geed health. $eg that their bowel move reguierly --espeeially during the teething period. This is a distressing time id the life Of every child and 'the utmostpre-: caution Ahmed be taken to keep them well and strong, • e By the consistent use a - Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup it is possible to avoid many: childish ills now so prevalent., It h A corrective for diarrhcea, colic and other infantile ailinents. It soothes the fretting baby and. p ermi t s the • child to sleep well mid grow healthy. It brings comfort and relief to both • child and mother. Mrs. Wins ow s Soothing Syrup •' Makes Cheerful, ClaUbby Children To absolutely non-neireoti. It con- tains no opium, morphine nor any of theirderivetives. It is soothing, pleas- ant and harmless, Fat' generations mothers in all parts of the world him used it and millions of babies have been benefited by it. Due a bottle today and • have it bandy Relieve and ameba your chum. • Sold hy all deligglstt in Ca:1pda and throughout tho world MOST NAKED FORM OF PROFITEERING DAV' rometrous SOO-- TC0 P,O61, CiBliiilANY. Tricked bY Government Into Ruy• ing i7ood TbetiSickancd Pigs, PIOITAli of Roston titles his article on •German' condi.. tions publiShed in the London Times °The Potato Trick; Rich 'Against Poor." It, charges that the poor of GerraellY have bee ni sold \rotten pota- toes with,Government cohniVance. "The difficulties of. the cynical group who are the real rulers of Ger- many have increeisetV •he writes. One d the countless sources d unit". they has been the harvest of the veil' important potato crop, now an integ- ral part of the Austrian tind,Gerinan bread. • . ' "The handling of tine crop exhibits the most naked form a peofiteering tO which the poor have been subjected by •the rich, ' "Plowly the food situation' in Ger-. "Mane' has grown " woroe inenthby month. I would :ask my readers' not to build false holies. This is an accu- ,rate etatement; nothing, approaching actual staryation exists in any part of Germany, This far 1 have discov- ered no ehild without milk. I believe the infant death fate is less than • in time of peace. No German is without • a sufficiency of- eome kind of nouriehe ment:to carry on existence. Weak and Delicate Suffer, , • "The weak and delicate are suffer - bigoted there is a great amount of national irritability caused by low diet, but everybody is getting along somehow—thearmy and navy ex- - tremely, „ • I• "No people are more easily and continuously bluffed by their Govern- ' nient than the Germans. -Lincoln's dictum about not feeling all of • the , people a11, of the time does not apply to them. • "An abominable deception was practised Upon the public with the Arse potato suppli. For many months • potato tickets had been in use, when • suddenly official netices appeared saying that potatoes could be had for few days without tickets. , The.unsuspecting publie ordered great qoantities. And the • agrarians WILL BUY Standard Iteliancs Cockshutt Plough Pfd. Canada Machinery Pfd.• - Canadian Oil Companies. Dominion Power ee. Transmission: Canadian Consolidated Pelt Pfd. - ; Electrical Development Bondy. ' Ontario Pulp it Paper Bonds. . Spanieh River Bonds. . WILL SELL Peoples Loan. DOminion ExPloaives. Guelph & Ontario Loan. • • Rfordau"Paper 'Bonds. Rusalan Government Bonds. British Ercohequer 6% . Bonds. Ang10-Prench. Bonds to yield 61%. • We buy and sell all Unlisted Securi- ties. Correspondence Invited. ' • Macdonald,. bullock & Co. • 84 BAY , STREET • TORONTO -• ON. T. • THE LAWS OF WAR. • Are the Gentians Living UP TO These Rules? • • • • Even in,- war there is a method of "playing the game," and there are certairi things_ formulated by military law, . written or unwritten, amohg • civilized • nations which, • even - When • they are at daggers drawn, they must • .not doe • • .' •• These laws forbid the use of pois- oning the water source of the enemy; they prohibit, murder by 'treachery— that is to say; the assuining. ' of the. uniform or the displaying of. the flag • of the foe so .as to, .lure 'him into a • position from which heshas no. escape. • Equally, the slaughter of those who have surrendered is prohibited, whe- ther they have done •e� at discretion or upon conditions.• - Then arms or prejudices ? which • cause unnecessary path or .suffering to . in enemy melee not ',13e used, neither must a flag of thice be abused to gale information concerning the strategical position of the enemy; and in the in- terests of . art and pesterity, there • must., be -no reckless destruction , of •valuable ..proPerty; Such as churches • or ancient buildhiga .whether • , public • or private. , • • The, laws of waralso declare, amotig Other thinge, that only lorti-• fled 'steles_ shell be, besieged. Open • cities, toWns,• or villages are not to be -subjected to siege or bombardment. , thus got rid Of all ,their bad potatoes, • selling them to the mass of the peo- • ple. In many cases they were -rot- ' ting so fast that the purchaser had to bury 'them, and it wee ,found that they produced. illness wheel given to . . swine. What other people in the world but the Qermans would have t^^ stood it? ° "Food Dictator Batocki has been un- able' to make the agrarians put • the • Potato ergo noW gaehered upon-, the 'market even at the- maximum •price allowed by the food comMission. They are h'olding back the supplies until they have forced up the maximum price, just as a year ago many agra- rians allowed the potatoes ...to rot rather than sell as millings to , City at the price fixed by law. • Won't Agree to Fair price. "In any other country in a state of 'siege the Government would_ com- • mandeer the supplies. As the indue- trial classes until recently resisted' the war taxes, 'so the Prussian Junk- ers snap their ,fingers at suggested fair laws for food distribution. What state of, mind does thialproduce among the people?, • • "Outside Germany there is en.idea that every derman is working -at top sawed the spirit of the fatherland leading him en like a flame. That was the spirit witnessed hi the early days of the war. Now there. isa great bluff in circulation throughout the World. • . "The revelation. that se .angers them is that it is a. he, that all is go- ing fairly well 'in permany and that , there is no longing for peace. In cer- tain mai districts there is an in- tense longing for peace, not Merely a , German peace, but any peace. This feeling arises not only from7military reasons but from the utter weariness of the rule of, the profiteers." . The writer declares that the last potato crop was poor, rye • was good, wheat was fair, oats and barley ex- eellent.- He° refers to the great ef- forts of the Germans to get. oil, nuta, berries and' poppths, but says•the peo- . ple are apathetic, as the Goverpment • has taken the crepe at prices ajready set. lie elide: •• "The conquest of Rumania may yield foodstuff's and oil, and smug- gling by neutrals will help the army and munition:Works' but if the block- ade is strengthenedGermany 'can be defeated." e., THE DOOR TO Is Through the Rich* Red Bleod Or, WilliaraFt. Ph* Pills Actually Make, • The blood is responsiblefar the health of the body. If it IS good, dia.; ease canna elthit* if, it is bad, the deer is that against good health, dis- ease 36 1/01114 to appear in one form or another. One person may be Seized With, rbetunaleeni or ecisitice, another with anaemia, indigestion, heart pal- pitation, headaches or backaches, un- strung nerves, or any of the Many other forms of ailment that comes when the blood is weak 'and watery, There is just one certain, Speedy cure e. -Dr. Williams Pink rina, They make new, strengthens r rick b 111 „we and thises ygspt eo ind le 1 ao no dd., brings goodhealth and happiness. ThousandaC,owe their present good health, some, life itself, to the, pills. Mies .Devina Lahiberti, St Jerome, Qua, says:—"Last year I seemed gradeelly to grow weak and run down. I dir not sleep, well, had a. poor:appe- tite, and grew pale and generally lan- guid. I /consulted a doctor who told Me I was anaemic, and gave me a tonic. This I took faithfully for some time,leut it did not help the, and I ap- peared to be griming worse, and final- ly I was hardly able to go about the house and almost.wholly incapacitated for Work. While :in this condition a friend advised me to try Dr. 'Wil- liams Pink PiPs, and I got several boxes. It was not hong after I began their use when I could see an im- provement, which just manifested it- • self.in an improved appetite and bet- ter rest at night. From this on the improvement was rapid and I was not ong in regaining perfect health. I think Dr. Williams Pink pills are a real blessing for all weak girls." . you can get these pills through any medicine dealereor by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes'for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams Medicine co., Brock- ville, Ont. THE RUBBER MARKET. British- Government • Control • Has • Benefitted the Purchaser. Since the second year of the war dawned more every day men and wo- men have become familiar with the stock market -sits ups and downs, its ,short selling, its margins„ exdivi- demise etc., than ever 'before., • ,• To these people the real purpose of the market means something, where a few years ago it did not, bat to tell these people that a government, 'and above all, the British Government, had in- terested itself in the "pulling dr Of a corper would undoirbtedly.Open their eyes.' Nevertheless, this is true, . Great Britain , has accomplished one of the biggest corners evei known in ' the commercial world and there is every- thing bo indicate that this comer will continue for 'years to come. • The product affected is rubber—now the commonest of everyday articles— fled the cOrner, unlike those executed by private interests, is for the benefit i'of the masses, instead of,. a small • group' of capitalists: Great Britain could, if she wished,- make it,neet to impossible to get any article of rub- ber beeeepd those already manufactur- ed, but, instead, she has so. controlled the market that, to -day, it. is possible. to purchase rubber at about 67e. • a lamed,. in the crude, state, •• whereas, before the war, it' was $1.67 a pound, and in 1910, it sold for $3.00 se. pound. While other conditions have sent 'food and staple articles soaring in price, Britain, through heringenuity in this, affair, has steadily pushed the • price down, ' Rubber is 'to -day the commonest article for footwear, apart from leather; and when this is con- sidered the importance of Britain's ac- tion is feedily seen. Leather prices have increased, shoes have mounted in cost dollars -a pair at a time, and! still rubber has descended and the I cost of rubber footery has remained • .aboue the Sante, in sitethei • creased cost of fabrics and chemicals . that enter into their manufacture. • The average person may wonder 1111...10.410114 e CLIMATE LE SEVERE. fiSVERE, What Study of loner to lit Has Revealed, Pr. Charles 1). Walcott, secretary of the Smithsonian Institution and Mrs. Wolcott have Pet returned' to Wash- ington after several • months' .tiel4 work in Canada. Accomplished by billy a pecker and eook, they exiot Mt/lit of tie bummer and early fall on the continental divide, which forms the boundary line between Alberta and Withal Cteltintbia, iiinith of the Cana - ;Pan Pacific Railway! ;studying the cambrian rocks, contasning the boon remaina of the earliest animal Owing .to the heavy snowfall of the Previous winter,. and the fact bleat most of the geological formations which they wished to eXaMilitt were In the deep snow about the timber lines little progress was made in July, in August, however, sections were ex- amiped and measured in the 'Mount Ast3iniboine region, and from there northwest to the. celebrated Kicking Horse Pees, Where the Canadian Pam- fitheroRtirerge haniesunbtlrien-d 'cidr71110briet h190°11: - WA -a feasible grade on the Western side a the pass, Borne years. ago Dr. Walcott fpund remarkable fossil fauna in boulder 'which had been carried into Kitcking Three canyop by glaciers that, have long ethee disappeared, This peeson • he located the source of these boulders high up in the mountain cirque, ;where a Portion of what rnust have been a great hanging glacier is still active. Mrs. Walcott, formerly Mise Mary Vaux, of Philadelphia, who' has studied • glaciers for several yeare, and is well known as an Alpinist, visited • Glacier, British Columbia, Where she measured' the position of ewe large glaciers, and determined that the front ice foot in -each case had retreated at the rate of 100 feet a year during the past two years.. Steel plated' were placed on ithe ice on the present sufveyed boun- dary lines. The plates will' be buried beneade'the winter's snows, bat, since their -positions are relatively low as to altitude, the snow will be melted off next auminer, and their :locations then 'will indicate the amount of fore ward flow of. ice during the year. Mrs. Walcott'e. studies prove that the ice has been steadily retreating during the past six yeare. Her measure- ments agree" with observations made in Alaska, and indicate that the climate is not as severe as on the Paci- fic side of the continent as it. was a decade ago. •• --During the field work a large npm- ber of photographs were taken, in-, eluding a dozen or more panoramic views, exposures being made on -con- tinuous filins eight feet in lepgth. Besides being of great scenic interest, these photographs form valuable pic- torial records showing the general localities visited and definite locations of certain strata and fossil beds. • The , party brokecamp at Banff, Alberta, September 30, which proved a fortunate move, as the next deer a ;ratty falj of,esnow covered the entire r• , • 'T ' I 4 For:, Neuralgia *nil 4'ick ileadache Usc • 'Awn gives relief. Sold in bandY tin.ttlbes,At Clielniete and Relleral stores everywhere. • • Refuse substitutes. Illustrated booklet mailed, on request. . .• ClIf..SEBROUGH MFO. CO. • isaaCkall2Ingra4.htentreal," OASOLINE,LOCOMOTIVES. TiscRgasianti Me New Vsbog Theo ik The ra' obili:ythe rofadrrat'neing troops •tTcdcestlisfeiruilVdrietYpentdos upon e"brinadti; • • ing up of suppliew from bases heYond the reaeh of enemy shells, The tasic is still More difficult when sudden aSe molts call for heavy reinforcements • of ilghting trson and munitions at scattered- pmts. The motor truek has answered admirably upon, many occasions„, but • railways, when avail- able, are still better, Stoara traCtiOns hcreY:evseirre, Wet Pratetienble where •odd and water are not readily' at • hand, and, 'besides,. the eeel-burning •engine not ecoriethical as might; • be •froTrinleR aoueefeialenar ymeaoliehlavane d suffered rleod:, comotives;but they have Made great use of small; light, gasoline locoino- tives are easily and cheaply builte These .stordY little tractors are ter, locomotives what • the arMY mule is to the horse. -They are levet* worthy and heed-vet:irking,and. :need little care. AU they ask is narrow- gauge tracks laid upon • alzhost any kind Of roadbed and enough gapoline to feed their 'motors. The Russians use them not only to carry, 'forward supplies to the advancing troops but to haul ammunition and food to the trenches Each *emotive weighei about seven tons, but it can draw' ever a rough readbed at least thirty tons of load. The rtractors. operate on high and low gears. • On low gear they dp`four miles an hour, and at full speed about eight miles. They can run with equal facility forward or backward. One of their good points is that the exhaust can be muffled, so that they thake very little noise—and of course they make no smoke. • -41/OLD/ERS eilleno sit 44frealto COMFORTe• res°11"" th• ;tali infilliebt ::14fOaar ollu9r7pTivnieleiiarfle"h°LtigSlinto•ro4111EA11517 • 'XMAS BOXES From $2.00 to $5.00 '• • Some recent orders.: Westinount ste- Wi ' League, 1,506 bo • '73rd elegiment, 960 boxes, Ac., 40? Quickest ! Surest I Cheapest! • We Can fisml Anything 1 • r an.. Soldiers'.• Simply, Ass'n Drummond Building. Montreal. UNIFORMED RAT:eATCHERS. Profession Once Prominent and Hon- • erable in Eeglaed. The death of the oldest rat catcher in England reminds one that this profession is not so .prominent to -day.' •as it Once was, • says the 'tendon elite:Miele. 'Many boroughs at one time kept their municipal rat catcher, and 'at the head of the profession stood the Royal Kat Catcher, "an honorable office," as a newspaper of. 1741 called it • in recordipg the atie pointment of a Mr. Gower to -the post.. And this royal functionary had a uni- form befitting his office, scerlet op- hroidered in yellow with rodents de- stroying 'wheat sheaves. • BEST HUN ARMY ON SeIVIME., German Soldiers Object to Belittling of British Troops. ...German vies about you are chang- ing, writes D. Themes Curtin, an: American, who' .spent ten months in Germany; in an article .to The London Times. The "eontempt in which the "What they gave. me was a Die - English were held. hefore the etrice Court Martial :for ser has ' now, been teansferred to my • own ,nit_ . • pinchin' time Good propaganda work for Eng- chicken!" land is being 'done, if very. slowly, by • ACHINTEETH the returned German soldiers, .either G wounded .or leave from the west- ern front... -,It .is to. the efforts of ' • RE/1E1,ED AT HomE these soldiers. and their offieers that the 'pictures of the long-legged• Eng- V heirsoldier—usually e Highlander— running for: dear life; or saying that he' won't fight another battle Meese he gets an extra fiye shillings, are. disappearing from the •comic papers. The editors • of - these newspapers have received protests. from German soldiers in the trenches saying that suchpictures' are enteue, and do, . in fact 'belie!! the German' :soldiers, who have to fight suelnexpectedry 'worthy enemies. Frit is the flower of German infantry that are sent to face you on the Somme. • It was the best available German • troops that were destroyed :in *eve after wave in the great German defeat •at Verdun. They are now systematically sending their best against the. British, AUS - trawl, and Canadians That .wess ad- mitted to me repeatedly. • 1 • • • Lost. • . • • "Can you -direct me (hie) th'ether. shi-de?" ; • - • "Over there, �f course."• "Jersht been over there (hie). they tol' me it wash over here." It was not • the • intention of the weaver, about whom London Tit -Bits tells, to pose as a hero. He joined the army at. the optbreak of the war. From "some -Where in • France" he wrote home that among other things he had had a When he came home on a short fur - laugh, to hie surprise the mayor, councillors and town band met him at the station and conveyed him to the town hall for a banquet. Speechless, he went through everything. During the course of his Speech the mayor said how proud they all were of him, and that be fully deserved the Distinguished Conduct Medal. ' Then a light appeared in the. "hero's" eyes. "Distinguished Conduct Medal!" . how this all happened. The answer • is simple. In 1893 the bulk of the world's supply of rubber came from Brazil—from the wild tree or South America. That same year, Great Britain, appreciating the irnportapee • of the industry and ibs possibilities of increase, conceived the plan of en- • couraging tubber plantations in , •the Malay States, Sumatra, Ceylon .and 'Java. The success of the project is now apParent. In 1893 the. rubber preduced •in South America was sufficient for the world's use. This year, the rubber supply will be 202,000 tons and the South American contribution to the s;vhole 'is only 23 per cent, in spite of the fact that the South Arrierican pro- duction is fully' as large' as it was hi • 1893. • • These figures make evident at once the importance v. the rubber industry, • the wisdom of Britain's control of the market, and also bring forcibly to the mind ef the averAge persoh the sane- ness. Of the use of 'rubber as a sab- stituTe7 Tor leather, part-WM-arcs -IP footwear—or at least as a means of sav•ing the more expensive footgear. • Locomotive and Elephant. To Strieleyville, 600, miles" beyond Bukama, a . good steamer serviee ie operated, says the Christian Herald. From that point to Mahagi, on the west shore of Like Albert, no work has been done, but the survey gives a • distance of 548 miles. • From Alahagi the llgdnda GeeernMeet steamer; ply on the Nile as fir ae railhead Smith of Khartethe where the Sudan -C4oVernr, • runt trellis and steamer and the- tgyptian Railway telte the traveller • through to Cairo and Alexandria. Thie pee, When eontpleted., %vitt 'be, morethan (1,000 mites long: The tra- veller iitty be forced to wilt now and then, while the creW "shoos" a lion or, e belligerent- elephant offthe track; end sometimes the engine and ole - Wart mey mece head on, • tanarava thument Cores pialitheria, ' Certainly Fast. • '. "Maud's • husband and Kate's are fast friends, aren't they?" "Miid and Kate think they are. They tith get home about 2 in , the morning,' .r °C..s VP' Think of It-==• People cut out tea or coffee ,before retiring when these beverages interfere with sleep. In the morninethey drink freely of tharn, strangely overlooking the fact' that at Whatever time of. day the cup is drunetht drug, eattedne, 111 tea and coffee is 'imitating ,to !Ile' nerve,* r Mom 'and more people are turning •- ..1 Instant Postuni s the drug-free, nourishing,' comfortable cereal drink. --.."There's a Reason"- ° '• Oanadlan Posture Cereal 00.y Ltd., Windsor, Ont, • Willing the Calve* All• sorts of excuses are offered for the higlvprice of • beef, the most plausible *1* ing the alleged demand for veal—Pthe killing of calves which° should be ,allowed to grow into regular beef." You cannot have beef if you pat it as "veal," but you =have • Shredded 'Wheat 'Biscuit • whicb contains more real nutrinient than beef 'and costs much less. Shredded wheat biscu# is the ithole wheat steani-cookede shred. ded and baked, Make it your "meat" for.ten 4:14Y$ and see how much better you feel. Wholesome and strengthen, ing for any Meg, With IniM1/4. or cream or in. corpbinatiQxi. with fruits. • . Made' in Canada ' PEEP !TWA:79M6 ' BED rovrAT040. C00^" • Deieware, .Carman. Weir at once. Supply limited, Write for 440'• teflon.. If. W. Dawson; Brampton. . 'VVviTAPAPEli111 TO:1 MAP* . 11AROPIT.,MANING MaS AND. jou • CifIcea for pale In good Ontarie • towel. , The msit useful and intereetion ° ee alt busineases. formation ors . application to WilSon P Wishing Cians.,. Vany. 73 West ,Adelalde treet, Toronto.. • IITISCELTAITE0 ANCEN, T11111011S,s'Lilli , RTC,. Internal and ^external, c.red with- . out Pain by our home treatnit, Write net befOre too late.. Dr. Liellme Medical Co„ L.imited, Collingwood. Ont. . The Germans Are Overtaken. The British and French have gotten so far ahead of the Gernians in artil- lery that the Krupp works will • add .20,000 employes to increase their out- put. It is hardly likely that this will meet the emergency, Prance • and England have far More hen establish- ments than Germany and ' they • are now completely organized for the Manufacture of arms, and their 'out- put .must be much greater, tha-n any- thing that Germany's single establish- ment can produce. It is said. that the glens on the Allied. front in France arese close together that k. there is hardly room to walk between them. s When buying your Piano insist on having an OTTO H1GEL" NANO ACTiON vs.), Asiatics's. Pio= ' Dog Remedios Deux. oAr ; • biaG. DISEAES .Aod How to Feeci Mailed free to any address by •thb Author / • H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, New York ----. ILLIARDS • • Those long winter mei:di yea will need indoor recrea- tion. Why: notenstal a Home Billiard Table? JUST 411E, THING FOR LITTLE ONES 'Baby's Own Tablets are the best medicine a mother:can give her little ones. • They regulate • the • bowels; sweeten the, stomach; banish consti- pation and indigestion; relieve colds and .simple fevers and make teething easy. • Coneerning them Mrse-Herbert Johnston, MaYthont, Sask., writes:— "I have used Baby's Oven Tablets for the past four years and *Leh= just the .thing for bahthe and young chil- dren." They are ,sold by medicine dealers or by mail -at '25 cents a bees from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. • "I'eurpriseohear dMaud be- . Faster.m t.• of ing engaged to Mr. Gayman. Ile's sp awfully fast, you know:tee. "Oh, I aon't know; apparently bel;• wasn't fast enough tb get away from Maud." Write for particulars of our famous . Maisonette Table, for cash or on easy terms. Surroughes & Watts, Ltd. • Makers tr.> IL M. the King. 34 Church St.,.I.oronto TOE CAN'T cvr 011T A • Bog Spavin or Thorouglipm but you Can clean them off -pretnpay with 75:51eS 11\11 S TRADE MARK GU.ti'J1Z 0F. and you work the horse same time. • Does not. blister or remove!the hair. $2.00 per bottle, delivered. • Will tell you more if you write. Book 4 M free. ABSORBIN'E, the antiseptic liniment for mankled, reduces Varicose:Veins, Rupturedmaciar or Ligaments, !blamed Glands, wens. Cysts. Allays pain stqlckly. Prise SI arid El. abordeat dames, or delivered. Made in the17. S. A. W F dun, P. D. v, S1 Lyman& 8Idg., Montreal, Can, Obsorblue and Ablorbine, .1r.. are made In Catiaduk Sloon's ' Liniment Robs Tooth- • ache of Its -Terrors., Pain • Vanishes in a yew Minutes. - , No nem] to pacethe flocrr all night with the agony of a throbbing ;tooth. Sloan'a Liniment will quickly relieve .the pain and give You real.. • A single application' and the pain usually .disappears. Sloan's .Liniment 'gets eight-toethe-rootof the troete Like a warming' balm it relteyea, con- • gestion, and in a few, minutes tooth- ache is reduced.. • To,seothe, the throb of a.todth that, pains with neuralgia, • apply Sloan's • Liniment, externally, Aching muscles, rheumatism, gout, • bruises, sprains, lumbago, chilblains, sprains and stiff neek can also be most effectively • treated with Sloa,e's Liniment., dean- ' er than mussy plasters er poultices. I.' Sloan's Liniment at all drug steres in 25c., 50e. and $1.00 bottles. • Hie Basic Thought. . Victim — What . has happened? Where am I? , ' • - • I Doctor—You have been . seriously1 injured in a trolley accident. But Cheer up—you will :iecover. Vktirn:---How much? - ' Men 4 Girls ,For All Depertments. • Minard's Liniment Co., Limited. Gentlemen, ---/east winterTreceive great benefit from the use of MINe ARb'S LINIMENT in a severe attack of LaGrippe'and I have • frequently proved it to be very effective in cases of Inflammation. •, • . • Yours, • W. A. HTCHINSON. Steady Employment -Gbod-Wates APPLY Iglovolidellt Afillbtr Co • 11d.ERRITTON, ONT. =nerd's Liniment Cures .tusteauper • On the Border. 'Watch yourself, man! /Be more careful with that ride!" the range ofe, fieer exclaimed angrily. • "You. just missed Me that shot?" "Did I, sir?" the badly rattled re- cruit reeponded: • "I'm aerfully •sorry, sir --I'll try in de better next time!': End of Friendship.: She—Hew.' did they pt et: come etc; .marry!? Hee-Oh, it's the same •old story. • Started out to be gbed friends, you • know, and later on I changed their • Minds. ' ,W hy Nati . Jimmie-, giggled when • the te.acher read the etery of the nein who ewtim • *throes the •Tiber three tiniest before . 'breakfast. . . ! • "You dn.- not elo,ulif thee a trained . swimmer could- do that, de yoe I "No, sir," answeeed. Jimmie, "but I Iwonder Wily he did' not make it Tolhe liandget back to the sidewhere his clothes weee." to preserve her complexion, and she finds this an easy task, ifehe uses Zam-Buk. This herbal balm not•only keeps the surface skin smooth and soft, but penetrates to and feeds the underlying tissues. It stimulates the cells to healthy lotion. and produces vleorcais -which by carrying ILWaY all impurities 'creates a Pernian- ently clear complexion. How ranch more satisfying than temporary complexion produced be powders and cosnieties1 50e. box, all dreteists or Zane. Buk Co., Toronto:). Sor Oriflutedfyelld. Eyes inflamed -1Y expo- aure to Sun, Oustand Wind Eyes • just Eye Comfort. At , iiyuiecilielyaireedlyiejslodIstyneartiernInge. • Your Druggist's 50c per Tiottl'e. Mur1ii4) 8. • Salve i nT ube s 25e. For800k 011 heEyirreeask Druggists or MatineltyeRemedyCo..Chlop Minartna .X.LItiment_Extreit_Colda-Ite She Had: , • Lady (engaging nurse)—Have you had any experience With children? child myself. !ft 'A. RARE XMAS GIFT 13y ,ritillirc now for tiu rice • .: .. met of • .- . „ Beautifui Musk Ox sinearterereininientecurereeaarstetetn•-nows-- ' Couldn't Stand Them. • • A.well-knoivn Clyde shipbuilder tells the folthwing steer—. . "Whenever I see a toothpick 'think of a dineet that was given hi Rome in honor of. two Turkish nob- lemen. I sat near the .youriger el the noblemen. He glittered with gold -embroidery -and geteat ediemonds, -but nevertheless I, pitied .him sinc.erely,,for he was strange to our table manners and some eif this errorewere both'in- diereue end paipful. "Toward the end. of the dinner a servant 'brought to the young' men a Plate of toethpieles. Ile waved the Plate' away: ••• ^ • • " 'Ne, thank eourhe said. 'I have already eaten two of the esefej I want no marc'" egoo•••• • Ton will have nice drub to lord. .11 over for your Christinas buy- - ing. A -fortunate. purchase en- ables us to offer •these HARR and REST "6TYLE.4. !lobes a t prices less than half their penal o They are a r air own- • wilh beautiful rettre and per- . fectly tanned, ansurpesscd for warmth and apPearanee. The ery thing' foe . Auto, Carriage. dr Sleigh Mattes also a. luxtrelow Floor Rug' for the, Nome • Purchasers are advised to ' maim an. early selection as the Musk tlx is beeoming exreeding- ly Scarce ; the skins therefore' . • Will soon be unobtainable. ° • Write to -day for -price • list —train einreleeteseteettealtes. trr • ete.natia. 11,AMONTAGNE, LIMITED P.O.• /11101t 1416 855 Notre taut° St. West •" MONTREAL. Mattufaetttreto Af citutlity • IC:truest, Trunks, /latest, Etc. • Eatatalliluarl '1809, ....mil. • I*mi.*. wilaws.1.1,1;6•0+,..**Wasammt : . ED.. 4 r47-4.16. • 1 / "Sass • 5 •