Clinton New Era, 1910-03-10, Page 7ICoperfoht, /PM by et-01We. lebellips4Co.
ismsammosmi,
4,,
1
• March xoth i9.te
Met Inman New Iitra
7
s The finest "first ate'
is ZatneStsk for many
reasons. It is antiseptic
—kills the poison in
any It ensures
any wound,or skin
injury, or disease
against poison -germs in
the air which are al-
ways ready to enter a
sore place and act up
poisoning and putrefac-
tive changc. Immed-
iately they enter Zam-
Buk they are instantly.killed.
While certain ingredientsin
Zam-Buk are thus protecting
you against external dangers,
the rich healing herbal essen-
ces in the balm penetrate the
tissue, stimulate the cells, and
bring about perfect healing.
Nothing like it! Watch it
work! •
••! ""'•••
PROOF FRO%t THE H0111C$.
Mrs. Halliday. of Wroxeter, Ont., says: -"I
have found Zam-Iluk a most reliablehousehold
remedy, I have used it for cute, sore% and
various skin diseases, and have found Ib an
effective cure in every case. 1 would not be
without a box of.Zam-kluk in the house in cases
of emergency, andI recommend all meant% to
keels a, box handy.' _
Mrs. R.B.Levy, of Hackett's Oeve.X.S.. says:
-"Eczema broke oat very badly behind my
baby's care, and, despite treatment, got worse
and worse. I was advised to try Zam-Buk. It
proved effective from the first, and In is very
Abort time it cured the eozema cOmpletely."
Equally good for all skin injuries sat dhows's,
piles, etc., 60e, druggists and stone overrIltlin
Zam-Buk Co., Toronto.
Make Each Animal Worth
25T0 Over Its Cost
On Y3. of a Cent a Day
Nobody ever heard of "stock. f000" curing the bots or colic. making
hensnlay in winter, increasing the yield of milk five pounds per cow a day.
or restoring run-down animals to plumpness and vigor.
When you feed "stock food" to your cow, horse., swine or poultry,
you are merely feeding them what you are growing on your own farm,
Your animals do need not more feed, buf something to help their
bodies get all the good out of the teed you. give them so they can get fat
and stay fat all year round; also to prevent disease, cure diSease and keep
them up to the bat possible condition. No "stock food" can do all these
things. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC can and does. It is
Note "Stock Food" But a "Conditioner"
"TEE
EEL"
2:02i
Largest Winner of
any p a cer on
Grand Circuit, 'olt
* His 40:
Courtship.
HELEN R. MARTIN,
luthor of "Tillie; A Mennonite Maid."
‘11.
•.••••
(contnu, a from last Week)
eerie may Imagine she's m rove vvIth
that fellow Abe, never having seen
any other sort of men. but of course a
few months in 'the world' will burs
her."
lie wondered whether he would do
well to tell her at once all that he
knew ot her or to wait until be had
seen Miss Wolcott and learned wheth-
er or not there was going to be dila-
culty about her coming into ber own.
It would be cruel to raise her hopes
before there was some assurance of
their being realized. He would do well
to put her oft when they met tomer.
row night in the haunted room with as
little as would satisfy her for the that
being. He would then communicate at
once with Miss Wolcott. If she was
spending this summer at ,her Newport
house he would run on to see her im-
mediately. If she "were abroad (she
frequently spent the summer In Swite
zerland) he would cable her to rettirii°
home at once on important financial
• besiness.
"A. good .ehing for Eunice that this
matter has fallen into my hands," he
thoGght, "one wholly disintereated and
with time, inclination and, I flatter
TaySelf, skill to Work the thing out for
her in the best possible way, not mere-
ly for the fun of the excitement of the'
case, though there's that side of it, too,
but for the spice that there is in see-
ing a beastly wrong righted." •
He fell to wondering whit bad be,
come of the husband of "Beatrice Dan-
iels," whether her death bad been a
suicide or a murder and whether if the
man could be found his presence
would lend any proof to the "confes-
sion." •
• The oil in his lamp was nearly burn-
ed .out as he: reached this point in his'
meditations,. and he rose, blew out the
flickering light and in the dawn of the
early morning flungeff ,hts clothes.
ER along to the field over end help your
-in,goin' to lay. Eunice *he cen go
"X 'need ber here, pop," Mrs. Irlora-
• image quickly objected, a jealous
anxiety -in her voice. "It aln't right.
Fo RyEARs-
s Ig):rthear4clvtuhrelArstievebesr out there:O.
trust of the girl which 'brought the
o
blood to Kinross' face and made
f NusERy Georgia= and Daisy cast their eyes
I upon their plates.
HAPTER XVII.
INBOSS rose .so late next morn-
ing that the early 11 o'clock
'dinner of the household served
for his breakfast. •
Miss 'Ellery and Miss Parks when
they Mirk their •places were eager to
hear of his adventhres of the night be-
fore. • .
ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC contains no grain, nor farm products. It increases
yield of milk from three to five pounds per cow per day before the Specific has been used two
weeks. It makes the milk richer and adds flesh faster than any other preparation known..
Young calves fed with RoleAre PURPLE are as large at six weeks old.as• they Would be When
fed with ordinammaterials at ten weeks.
ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC builds up run-down animals and restores them to
plumpness almost magically. Cures botsa colic, worms, skin•diseases and debilltypermanently,
Dan MdEsilati, the horseman, says: I have used ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SFECIF IC
persistently in the feeding of 'The Eel,' 2.021, largest winner of any pacer on Grand Circuit in.
1008, and 'Henry Winters,' 2.09i, brother of Allen Winters,' winner of $36,000 in trotting stakes
in 1938. These horses have never been off their feed since I commenced using Royal Purple
Specific almost a year ago. and 1 will always have it in my stables." •
•
STOCK AND POULTRY SPECIFICS
One 50c. package ofROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC will last one animal seventy
days, which is a little over two-thirds of a cent a day. Most stock fonds in fifty. cent packages
last but fifty days and are given three times a day. ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFIC
is given but once a day, and lasts half again as long. A$1.50 pail containing four times the
amount of the fifty cent package will last 280 days..ROYAL. PURPLE will increase the Valud
of your stock 25* It is an astonishingly quick fattener, stimulating.the appeOte and the
relish for food, assisting nature to digest and turn feed into flesh. As a beg fattener it is a leader.
It will save many times its cost in veterinary bills. ROYAL PURPLE Pon LTRY:SPECI-
FIC is our other Specific for poultry, not for stock. • One 50 cent package wall twenty.fiVe
hens 70 days, or a pail costing $1.50 will last twenty-five hens 280 dayS, which is four times more
material for only three times the cost. • It makes "laying machine" out of your hens
summer and winten_prevents fowls losing_ flesh at moulting time, and cures poultry diseases.
Every package of ROYAL PURPLE STOCK SPECIFICoe .POULTRY SPECIFIC is
guaranteed. .
Just use ROYAL PURPLE on one of your animals and any other preparation on another
animal in the same condition: after comparing results you will sayROYAL PURPLE has
them all beat to death, or else back comes your money: PREE-ASIt •
your merchant or write Us for our valuable 32 -page booklet on.cattle • • •
and poultry diseases, containing. also
cooking receipes and full particulars about
ROYAL PURPLE STOCK and POUL-
TRY SPECIFICS.
If you cannot get Royal Purple
Specifics from merchants or agents, we
will supply you direct, express prepaid,
on receipt of $1.50 a pail for either Poultry
or Stock Specifics.
Make money acting as our agent in.
your district. Write for terms. /
For sale by all up-to-date merchants.
W. A. Jenkins Mfg. Co London,Can
"Was there anything:doing the
• haunted teem last night?" Daisy ea-
gerly inquired. "And were you game,
Pete, or did you cut and run?"
"Ode" exclairned Mts. MOrningstar,
aghapt, -"now you didn't sleep over
"there, after all, did you? didn't hear
you make any, and you was in your
room till (when) we got up a'ready this
morning." , • •
• "yes," answered Pete, surreptiticius-.
Ty watehing Eunice's face opposite him,
• as he spoke: • Ile 'observed that: Abe,
at her side, was nearly dislocating his.
eyeballs trying to look at her without
betraying himself by turning his head.
Her habitual manner 'of utter With-
drawal from her surroundings. was une '
changed today, though he fancied he
detected' a quivering of .her 'lashes. as
he SPOke. " 1 - ' ' •.
"Yoe 'really did have the fine Our -
age to sleep in that room?" Georgia=
asked, • leaning: toward him' across the
table, With her smile and tone of htt,.
viting his'confidence.
Ididn'f• do so very much at sleep.
in'," he answered.
"Did the . spirits keep. you -aveake?"
she asked indulgently. •••
Morningstat. had dropped her
knife on her plate and. was staring at
him apprehensively, while Mr. Morn,
-ingstar suspended his onslaught upon
hie food as he awaited his story. Abe
and 011ie also fixed their eyes Upon
him vvonderingly. Eunice was the 011,
ly one who did not look at him.
• "Did you see it, Doc?" Mrs: Morn-
ingstar asked breathlessly, evidently
forgetting in her' anxious interest her
objections to Eunice's • hearing any-
thing of the story of the: room.
"I seen it, yes, ma'am."' Peter an
swered. ' ' •
• "Oh; tell: us about itr cried Daisy.
"What did it do? And What did you
do?",
"I ast it was ' it the spook, and it
erayed•it- was. Then I ast it would it
set, and it sot. Then I ast would it
hnve drink, and it, need it didn't
dristic. • -1A cigarette?' I net Didn't
smoke it sayed. Ain't up to date,
tole it.' Ladies where thinks anything
of-theirselis these days 'smokes ciga-
rettes, X says."
"Oh, a lady, was it?" exclaimed
Daisy. "Did you have a sympathetic
time with her? Go on; tell us."
"Want some more?" he inquired
ernia.bly. "Well, their, ast her would
She play 'solitaire with me. Didn't
gamble, neither,. she says."
"Oh, look here, Peter-skiddoor Cried
Daisy. "Now, stop joilying.ue and tell
. -
es what you did really see -please,".
she begged. "Were you up against
inythtng? You're so foxy I never
, know when you are jollying us."
"No use my tellin' you if you don't
blee' me," Peter returned, ostentatioUs-
ly holding a huge slice of bread on his
palm. and spreading butter all Over it.
"I shall Sleep there tonight!" Daisy
deelared. "i'm game! And I'll fix that
ghost! I Only wish it were a Inge!" she
sighed.
"kro. YOB. don't neither!" exclaimer'
Royal Purple Stock and- Poultry-Speelfies_and•Free.Booklets Are
kept iustock uyW. s. R Holmes.
Now.•
EN -YOU NEED NERVE
EARLY INDISCRETIONS AND
EXCESSES HAVE UNDER' -
MINED YOUR SYSTEM ••
The nerves control all actions of the body so that any-
thing that debilitates them will weaken all organs of
the system. Early Indiscretions and Excesses have
ruined thousands of promising young men. Unnatural
Drains sap their vigor and vitality and they never develop
to a proper condition of manhood. They remain weak-
lings, mentally, physically and sextially. How you feel?
Are you nervous and Weak, despondent arid gloomy,
specks before the eyes With dark circles under them,
weak back, kidneys irritable, palpitation of the heart,
bashful, debilitating dreams, sediment In urine, pimples
on the face, byes sunken, hollow cheeks, eareworn ex-
pression, poor memory, lifeless, distrustful, lack energy
and strength, tired mornings, restless nights, change-
able mood% prentatunblecay, bone paine, hair loose, etc.'
This is the conditienciur New Method T;eatment
GUARANTEED TO CURE •
We have treated Diseases of Men for almeet a life-
time, and do net have to experiment. Consult ne
FREE OF' CHARGE•
and we will tell you whether you are curable or not.
We guarantee curable Cases of
NERVOUS DEBILITY, VARICOSE VEINS, BLOOD
AND SKIN DISEASES, 01 PM BLADDER
URINARY AND \ 1GDNEY COMPLAINTS
Free toolllet on Diseases of Men. If unable to ten
write for
QUESTION LIST FOR HOME TREATMENT
Wonderful Nervous System
ris. Y&KENNEDY
Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St.f. :Detroit, Mich,
NOTICEt?o• erttgasn fargiti C&trirardeaspritounsle bnecregeepsastee
ainemeseneetaime meet iE Windsor, Ont. If you desire to
see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat
no patients in our Windsor offices whieli are for, Correspondence and
Laboratory for Canadian bieshiess only, Address all letters as i011OWS1
DRS. KENNEDY & KENNE1Dy, Windsor, Ont.
Write fee ett titivate retard&
Cured by Lydia E. Pink-
banfsVegetableCompound
Baltimoree ,-"FOr four years
my life was a misery to me. I suffered
from irregulari-
ties, terrible drag-
ging sensations,
extreme nervous -
nese, and that all
gone feeling in my
given up hope of
ever being well
when I began to
take Lydia ].Pink -
ham's Vegetable
Compound. Then
I felt as, though
new life had been
given me, and I am recommending it
1.988 Lansdowne St, Baltimore, IlId,
The most successful remedy in this
`country for the cure of all forms of
female complaints in Lydia E. Pink.
ham's Vegetable Compound. It has
stood the test of years and to -day is
more widely and successfully used than
any other female remedy. It has cured
thousands of women who have been
troubled with displacements, inflam-'
mation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, ir-
regularities, periodic pains, backache,
that bearing -down feeling, flatulency,
indigestion, and nervous prostration,
after all other means had failed.
If you are suffering from any of these
ailments, don't eve up hope until you
have given Lydia E..Pinkliam's Vege-
table Compounda trial.
If you would like special advice
write to Pinkhani, Lynne
Mass., for it. She has guided
thousands to health, free of
charge.
o.all my friends."—Mre. N'tr. S. FORIP,
• •
Mrs. Morningstar. "I'll wenture down
that there hall myself and make the
door locked before I'll leave no more
Kinross glanced across the table at
Eunice. Not even a quiver of her'
lashes betrayed any effect upon her of
the wonian's iusinuntions. Her self
control' or- indIfference. whichever it
was, seemed to hint passing strange.
almost blameworthy.
"It% market tomorrow," Mrs. Morn-
ingstar went on querulously, • "and
there's all the churnin' to be did. It
comes wonderfully- onhandy, pop: your
gittin' cold just before market day.
And the yeller COW gives emelt poor
milk still this while past It'll hardly
churn fue a body. Doe he mei feed
per chop feed and it'll hearten. her up,
he says, and make the milk better."
!Me says, does her sneered Mr.
Morningstar in a tone freighted with
sarcasm. "Yes, I guess a feller would
feed his vows chop feed yet! That
would pay, ain't it? it takes towners
to leave the clumrn ideas about a cow!"
"Teeterrers?" Georgia= questioned,
With a lift of her fine eyebrows.
"Och, I mean a body'd think Pete he
was a towner, reeommendin' such n
denim thing like that there!"
Mr. 'Morningstar received a dollar a
week extra oriDr. Kinross' board for
aiding and abetting his disguise.
"Ain't you leavin' Eunice stay and
belp us" Mrs. Morningstar persisted.
"Her and. Abe needn't be together,"
Her husband obstinately stuck to his
will. "She.can work Ip the upper field
and him in the lower, Do you hear.
Abe?" he sharply questionedhis son.
Abe growled an affirmative under his
breath. He was afraid of his father,
"Yes," cried Mr. Morningstar sar.
eastically, "they'll both mind you, too,
when they're out of eyesight in the
• fields oyer."
be strollin' over there some time
this after," Mr. Morningstar said
• warningly, "to see how things is goin'."
Georgiana, with a queenly lift of ber
dark head and a :look of disgust, rose
boarders sleep in there! I'm all wor- from the table
rled up with thinkin' Doe was in there "ektnrOSS '9d -thoroughly shared the
last night. I get it in my berves. So
ugly if I'm worried up!" She said • Peelings which her 'manner and • look
, plalfltively .
•'Peter felt a leit."woiried up" himself.
at the thought of his prOspective 'visit
with Eimice that •night being interfered
with either by the locking or. the .door
or, worse still, by the Irrepressible
Daisy Parks coming le 'on -them. • •
• "What's the matter, pop?"' he •asked,
thinking. to divert attention from 'the
discussion of. the room to the grotesiine
appearance of the head of the family,
-
whose neck was wreathed in red' gunnel
'and :Who wan mixing' hfineeffer-dote.of-
whisky and water: •'. . • '
"I ain't so geed," Mr. Morningstar
answered hoarsely. "1 took . the , cold
gone to town. yeateeday in the rain to •
gitethe money off the. bank with them
Checks you gey me, Pete," he said rile,
fully. "Don't. yen .be payin' me: .agin
Wood' 11103110abe;
The Great Theta& -Remedy.
Tones and invIgorateethe whole
nervous system makes now
Blood in old Vein. Cures leery,
ons Debilits,Mentat and Brain. Worry, Des.
ponatney, ftenat Weakness, Mass* rea, Sims.
matorrhaa, and Rad* 0f41n188 or Atmore&
Ptieti el PerboX, Mxfor8. One 'Will Pleaeo
Mt& Sold by an ts or mefiellIn
plautpk On temper)! ore Murex/op/We
'Mile& Th. woog 111001100110 00.
ireettiorty knitter) • , eeTosemietee Os*
expressed and be felt such strong dis-
approvalof Eunice's apparent lack of
sensitiveness 'to the shame of this talk
that a sudden warm liking for. George
ana stirred in hitn. Forgettine his role,
he rose instinctively to stand while she -
passed from the room' But the act
was se entirely out ofecharacter that
'neither of 'the young ladies recognized
it forewhat it was, thntifitt Geergitiert'.4_
,
glance did fOr an instant rest upon him
eincertainly -with a vague surprise
whichaquickly to himself
and to his chair. • • •
A. little While later as he eingered in
• the kitchen after dinnerto get a word
alerie with Mrs. Morningstar end (as
Providence favoi•ee him by keetang old
Mordingetar inelbors) with Mr. elern-
ingstar 'aswell he -saw Eunice and
in no such cheeks!" lre growled. Abe start out together forthe fields.
'Gimme straight,. pie in cash! I offered While Mre. Morningstar and 011ie
that there dude checle of yearn to •the cleared off the etble hti bated himself
like what you sa •ed fur bv the 'kitchen window arid watched
bank a y ni
clO and tole the feller' at the little win-
der to pay up. Ile says,"You. must in.
dorse it' - and give it beat: 'How's that
One?' 1 ast him. 'I ain't .on to theSe
here dude ways!' • I says. elndorse it
on the. back," he SaYe, SO I wrote.,
'I indorse this. 'Jere check .11reartilye
and geve it to him agin Ne, that.
wouldn't de, neither, l Mast Write Oft
my name, he says1ow writin cicuit
come so wonderful handy to and
I was: gittin' mad by:that time! 'But
he sayed he couldn't pay ale till 1 got.
it right done. So I, done it fur hien.,
But I don't want to ,have no more such
bother gittin' my ineney! I don't be.:
Hove, in . banks and I never deal • et
'em! And here I. had to ketch this
here cold yet! I got It so bad 1 can't
make very loud 'no Mere:. But mom
she clapt sueh a tar plaster on me ands
tied fiannen on, so now I kin make a
little kinder yet. I conceited a little
whisky would help -fur all L'airet no
'drinker, though oncet I did have it so
bad in ray insides it went two months
I got better ag'in. eAnd," he related
with evident pride in the'laets, "I had
to.take a *We' gallon of whiskye A
whole gallon in .tiv.o,montlis! Indeed,
yes. You'll think I'm a: drunkard.: yet!
Ain't? • But," he boasted, "when a man
is a man he kin teemerance Mester. Ile
'don't have :to leave it be altogether!
Abe," he added, turning to his son, "I
don't feel fur : workin' this after..
You'll have to git alone • Withont me.
the youth and the maiden as long ns.
they were in sight.. The incongruity of
a Wolcott working in the fields like a
peasant and aiong with a : fellow like •
-Abe Morningstarstruck him It fresh.
• "Now„ yea see" --Mrs: •Morningettie
tursul to. him as her husband stretched
himself out on the' eetteeand 011ie de..
parted with a pile of 'clishee to the
er kitchen-"tiow• 'crazy that there -girl.
is .after • our Abe-hcr not aVin'
, Word to say agin .workin e teethe fields
out eech re hot 'afternoon." , •• - ••
You can know the Mason and
Risch piano inside and out,'
before you buy it.
THE more you know about pianos and piano eon-
struction the more you will appreciate the Mason
and Risch.
That is our reason for telling you all about Our in-
strument—inside and out, We want you -to know ex-
actly why -it remains in tune so -long, what gives the
entire register the deep, rich, pure tone that is not •
equalled in any other.piano.
arSO n and Risch
•
The pian? with a soul.
Some makers put nitost of their work on the case
in the hope that a brilliant finish will sell it for them.
Such pianos are merely handsome, but useless pieces'
of furniture.
It's the -inside of the piano that makes the musk,
so we put our best skill and workmanship on the
hidden parts. During. our thirty-six years of
piano making we have discovered many im-
provements in construction which are ex- -
elusive to the Mason and Risch piano. We
would like to tell you all about these. im-
prov,ements which add so to the life
and beauty of tone of the instrument. .
Fill out and mail this coupon to us
to -day and we'll send you Inside
Information."
. •••
The Mason . and • Risch
Piano Co., Limited, ' .
Street
32 West King St., ' . ,
Toronto. • • / city
• / ' Province
• -11.r.........„
"But she never does say a word
against, anything she's asked •to do,
does she?" questioted Kinroas, averse
to this interpretation of Eunice's F31-
'16400 and acquieseence. '
"Well, I'd like *) see her oncet! What
right would she have, I'd like to know?
Pop he won't even leave 011ie and Abe
speak back. What fur would he leave
'her?" . •
"Well, I guess anyhow!". hoarsely
echoed lioreingstar from the settee.
Kinross saw that his opportunity had ,
come.
"But it's different with Eunice," he
began. "She's not your own child and
does not owe you a daughter's respect
'and obedience."
Mrs. Morningstar set down the plat --
ter she was scraping and stared at
him, and Mr.. Morningstar sat upright-
' on the settee and fixed him aggressive-
ly with his little sharp eyes. •
ItSfie owes us more'n what our own
" t latter affirmed
• . children owes ust he •
• "us ralein' her like bur own and 1et
SOLUTE ---
SECURITY.
• Genuine
arter'i
Little Liver Pills.
'RUM Betir Signature of
300 PateStmlle Wrapper Belo%
Vary usual ona.us east
to litiokaa'sna0014
FON lITAAMIII.
FOR OOZINESS.
RVI 1111.10OSNEtt
FOR, TOOPID,LIVEIL
FOR CONSTIHMOK
FOR OAELOW SKIN:
FOII 111ECOMPLEXION
ems' lizete sitorat
OUR tICKs IlltADACIM
not bein' ourn:" -se • • .
"But you have not 'raised' her as
your own. She was taken out of
school at a younger age than 011ie was,
and she has never been clothed as
your daughter has been. leer years
.she has been doing the work of twe
women and has got nothing for it but
board."
"Who's • been teilin' you them
things?" Mr. Morningstar asked, veith•
repressed venom. "And what's it your
business, anyhow?'
"Eunice she has • the right to work
fur Our keepin' her when she was a
child yet." Mrs. Morningstar repeated
'her Oft 'reiterated argument. •• -
This brought Kinross to the point
which he had been driving.
, "To pay you for keeping her when
she was a ehild? • But you told me you
had, been paid for that -the ,money
found pinned to her dress. And then,
you know, after a very few years the
ehilde work more than paid for the
expense of bearding her, to that real-
ly, as 1 heard her tell you, you ewe het
back pay; also you owe her, now that
• she is of age, that Wee sum of money
you found pinned to her dress which
you did not 13.1e for her."
He had tnrned from the window and
sat facing them Itoth, epeaking with n
.cool preeision and in a tone of outlier-
ity whleh bewildered them.
(To be continued next week.
Phildren -Cry
FOR FLETCHEWS
OASTORIA
MASON
and RISCH
PIANO COe
Limited,
• TORONTO
Send zee yens: Ingo.
trated booklet explain-
ing the reasons why 1
should own a Mason and
Risch piano. This In ne way
obligates me to purchase.'
Name
•
• amommeamenamollnimPummlommor
You Can Even
Do Your Toronto Shopping
Through The Star"
The Star's "In. Toronto Shops" Depart-
ment describes new anctattractiveofferihgsseen
in City Shops day by day, with the Toronto
Daily Star's oar to purchase any of these
articles for ont-of-town subscribers who send
the mobey. Many are taking advantage of
. this Department. • • . • '
"OfInteresttoWornenkt istheweil-deserved
heading of a special page in the Toronto Daily
Star. It is one of two end sometimes three pages devoted particularly to •
women's tastes and is independent of the ef,Social and Pasguar ' and
• "Madge Merton's" pages, for yearrpopular features of the Star.
• “Of Interest to Women" includes scores of little hints on health
and beauty; the newest fashions in dress and house farnishings; talks on
ethical matters of particular interest to women; points of etiquette;
suggestions for home entertainment; recipes; daily menus; advice and
. suggestions•onall the matters that lie close to a w.pman's heart They
will help solve household problons,_ and better. still, stimulate and
interest the mind. • •-"e • - • . '
• ' On the Womah's page, and throughout the paper, current topics`
• are treated in a bright, newsy way that appeals to the wide-awake
woman. You'd thoroughly enjoy the
Toronto Daily Star
. •
$1.50 A -Year . 9
This paper and the "Toronto Daily Star" together for one year, $2.20.
Guaranteed Fountain Pen g,v.n for 500added to above subscription uric?.
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KEEP POSTED ON FARM _NEWS t
Its
The Canadian Farm
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All subscribers det The Canadian. Farm
from now to the 1st of Jan., 1911. akt)
‘11
Our Clubbing rate is $140 for, the two papers. Subscribe- k
at once and get the benefit of the full term. "
Saikala Geula at 1101 Canadian Tarte to Ins on Willi dike.
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For $1.50 1)
THE CANADIAN VARM% published in Toronto, is the National 14.
Weekly Agricultural Paper of the Dominion. The work and
money spent on its production makes it incomparably superior
to anything of the kind. Special writers for special depart- k
ments. All original matter in every issue.' Splendid and Ni
reliable crop and Market reports. Everything up-to-date. k
Finely illustrated. Choice and instructive reading for the it
farmer and his fatnily. No farmer can afford to be without `41
it. • Every farmer will make mare money who reads it.
' •
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