Exeter Advocate, 1914-8-6, Page 3PALE AND SICKLY
BOYS AND GIRLS
.need All the Strength That
Good Red Blood Can'GIYe''
Youth is the time to lay the.
foundation for health, Every boy
and• erir1 should have ,plenty of pure,
red blood! and strong nerves. With
thin, impure blood they start life
with a. handicap too great to win.
success and .hairiness. Pure, red
Mood •'means healthful growtb,
strong nerves, a clear brain and a
bcod digestion. In'' a, word, pure
lood is the foundation of health.
The signs of thin, impure blood
are many and unmistakable. The
pale, irritable boy or girl, "who has
no o.ppetite or 'am'bition, is :always
tired out, melancholy, short of
breath, and who does not grow
strong. is the victim of anaemia, .or
bloodlessness—the greatest enemy
of youth.
There is just one thing to dofor
these' bons .and girls—build . up the
blood, with Dr. Williams' Pi nk Pills
for Pale People. You cant afford
to experiment with other remedies
for there must the no guesswork in
the tratm ent of anaemia. Through
e
neglect or 'wrong 'treatment anae
e
inia gradually develops into the
pernicious form which is pr
v aebicel-
1• incurable. Dr. Williams' Pink
Pills work directly on the blood,
giving it just the elements which
fit lack's, In this way these Pills
build up every organ and -nerve in
l
the thus 'd'evelopipg\strong,
rugged boys and girls. Miss Anna
Loseke, Grand Forks, B.C.., says :
"I think -that before taking Dr.
• Williams' Pink Pills I was one .of
the moat miserable :girls. live. I
was hardly ever free from awful
headaches, t es as pale as a ghost,
and could,eat
go upstairs without
stopping t
rest. Now since taking
the Pills the..headaches Have gone,.
my ;ap ,.rite is good and I am equal
to aleder,F algidany exertion, and you
may be sure, I will ,:alvays recoba
mendDr. Willians' Pink'Pills."
Sold by all medicine dealers or
en by mail, post paid, at 50 cents'
lu box or six boxes for $2.50 by
'writing direct to The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont,
POINTED PARAGRAPHS.
Ag ood"b•ook is an,excellent mend
tonic.
There are other pipe fiends be-
sides plumbers.
Beauty is nature's temporary' gift
to, the fair sex.
Revenge is sweet
small individual.
And. many... gems
Mout to be paste.,
only to 'the -Very
of ttihought turn
Fools who keep their mouths 'shut
may pass for wise mien.
When relatives do a 'favor they
neve allow the recipient to forget
it.
Success never comes to the man
who sits on a dry goods box and
whistles for ' it.
People are so much alike in this
world ,t'hat by finding fault with one
you hit a thousand.
Satan uses many different kinds
of bait, but he can . catch all the
loafers he wants with a bare hook.
Probably two-thirds of a woman's`
troubles ,come because.. she reasons
with 'her heart instead of her head.
If you would get a line on ' your
WONDERS OF RROA1HOO DOCS
GERMANY HAS T'HE LARGEST IN
THE WOHl-D.
Lifting » Capa lty'of 46,000 Tons—Two
Distinct Types of These
Craft.
However accurately planned and
carefully finished a vessel may be, the
time canes When she has to go on the
"sick list." The ailment may only
amount to the need of a fresh coating
of paint; or it may be desirable to re-
move the accumulation of barnacles
and marine weeds from the ship's bot-
toln,'whieh have perceptibly reduced
her speed. 'Or perhaps a storm has
handled her roughly, and a plate has
started far below her water -line; or
she has run foul of a rock and crashed
in a parte of her steel walls; and last,
but not lease, shot and shell may have
worked their wicked. will upon her,
says H. J. Shepstone, in Wonders of
Land and Sea.
These repairs cart only be effected
by placing the ship in a dry dock, of
which there are three distinct types--
the
ypes—the excavated, masonry -lined graving
dock, the slipway, and the floating'
dock. The first two are fixed struc-
tures, whilst the last-named can be
moved from place to place as occasion
demands. They are undoubtedly the
most interesting of all docks—huge,
floating cradles of steel, possessing a
mass : of delicate and wonderful ma-
chinery, and capable of picking up out
of the water the largest liner and the
heaviest battleship,
First Built 100 Years Ago.
At first built of wood, they were
very primitive in character. What is
declared to be the . father of these
structures was the quaint, wooden,
barge -shaped edifice invented by one
C. Watson, of which type a print is
still extant, showing such a dock lift-
ing the brig Mercury at Rotherhithe,
justover a hundred years ago. Still,
it was not -until theend of: the nine-
teenth century that the advantages of
the floating dock became generally re-
cognized. Indeed, so late as the year
1897 there were only 143 floating docks
in existence, whereas to -day there are
over 400, with, it is estimated, a total
lifting capacity of half a million tons.
Half of the dry ,decks to be found in
the United States and also in Germany
and Holland, are of the floating type.
The most powerful we' have in Great
Britain is that built by Messrs. Swan,
Hunter • and Wigliam Richardson, of
Wallsend -on -Tyne, for the British Ad-
miralty, and, now stationed in the Med-
way. It has a lifting capacity of 33,000
tons.
popularity ars a public speaker go
hire a hall and charge 50 cents ,ad-
mis,sion. -
It'4 as difficult foe 'scree women
to get their 'hats on in the evening
as'it is for some men to get theirs
on the next morning.
A 'na.arried man never fully real-
izes the responsibility he has on his
hands -until he 'has to walk the floor
half the night with a fussy infant.
JOiuiS Quit
NeCVlne Drives0 rr:ll�pp�S
11ll
Y
NO MORE STIFFNESS, PAIN OR
MISERY IN YOUR RACK QR
SIDE OR LIMBS!,
Wonderful "Nerviline" is the Remedy.
A r, arvelous pain reliever.
Not an ordinary liniment --just about
five times more powerful, more pene-
trating, more -pain -subduing; than any
thick oily or ammonia liniment. Ner-
viline fairly eats up the pain and stiff-
ness in chronic rhelunatic joints, gives
quick relief to those throbbing pains,
and never burns or even stains the
skin: ointe swollen
`.Rheumatism kept my j
and sore for ten years. My right knee
joint was often too painful to allow me
to walk. In this crippled tortured con-
dition I found Nerviline a blessing. Its
Warm, soothing action brought relief I
had given up hoping for. I rubbed on
quantities of Nerviline and improved
steadily. 1 also •, ook Ferrozone at
mealtime In order ;to purify and en-
riol4 my blood. I ai :; seday well and
caen recomt'mend lily %t=ent most
conscientiously^,.'
/vanes.),C, eititS',
Prince Albert,
Not an ache' or paid ie. the muscles
or joints that Nerviline won't euro,
It's wonderful for lumbago and scia-
tica; for neuralgia, stiff neck, earache
and toothache Nerviline is simply a
wonder, Best family liniment known
and largely used for the past forty
years. Sold by, dealers .everywhere,
large family size' bottle 5013., small
1' trial size 25c. ' Itefiise a substitute,
• take, only "Nerviline."
are also special arrangements to feeila
tate the use of electric hand -lamps.
On each wall there Is a miniature rail-
way on which runs a travelling crane,
capable o$^ lifting a weight of several
tops. in the walls, 'too, are the living
and sleeping quarters of the crew
dwelling on the dock,
Over 12,000 tons: of steel were need-
ed
eeded in the'construoton ofthis dock,»
while another 2,000tons were requisi+
tioned for . her various • accessories,
This dock has raised battle cruisers et
the Orion and Lion class in two and
a half hours.
Necessity in War.
Good docking accommodation -for a
fleet in time of war is an absolute ne-
cessity. Here the foating dock bas a
great advantage. over the rival' mason-
ry edifice; for it can be moved from
Wave to :place as occasion May re-
quire. It can work in a harbor' or any
sheltered position, and as the time re-
quired to berth a ship only occupies a
few hours,'• quite a number of 'vessels
can be attended to in a comparatively
short space of time.
All kinds of repairs can be effected
upon it, for it is nothing less than a
moving hospital, where . the largest
and heaviest ships can be made sea-
worthy without either haying to be
sent home. or to some distant port.
Indeed, in any naval engagement, the
commander who possessed "such' a
handy means of docking disabled ships
would have a great advantage over a
rival who had to- send his ships to
their home ports or repair.
Travel Long Distances.
Floating docks are invariably built
complete at the yards, and then towed
to their destination. This, on account for pimples, blackheads, red, rough skins._
of the enormous distances they have itching, scalyscaips, dandruff, dry, thin and
to travel, and the storms they encoun-t , fallin hair, chapped hands and sbapeloss
g
nails, that it is almost criminal not to use
them. A single set is often sufficient. Outi
aura Soap and Outicura .Ointment are sold
by ,druggists and dealers everywhere, Fon
a liberal free sample of each, with 32-p.
book, ' send post -card to Potter Drug 81
Chem. Corp., Dept. D, Boston, U. 8. A. '
Can Lift Imperator. •
It is at the Vulcan shipyards, in
Germany, that we find the most power-
ful of these craft, the floating •dock
there having a lifting capacity of ,no,
less than 46,000 tons. We get an idea,
of her immense strength when it is
stated she raised the Imperator clean
out ' of the water, the , largest and
heaviest of liners. This vessel has- a
length of, 920 feet, a breadth: of, 98'.feet,
a height of 96 feet, and a displacement
of over 50,000 tons.
The comparatively recent sudden
rise in popularity of floating docks is
due to the rapidity with which they
can be built, their small cost compared
with a graving dock, and their wonder-
ful mobility. Whereas a floating dock
capable of lifting: a modern liner or
battleship would cost about $1,000,000,
a graving dock would demand an ex-
penditure of more than: double' this
sum. Then the former could be built
in a few . months, whereas a masonry
structure would takeat least three.', or
four years to construct.
At Wallsend a floating dock of 11,-
000 -ton lifting capacity was completed.,
within eight' months of signing' the
contract. Unlike the fixed structtire,
the floating dock has the whole world
before it, and should trade desert one
Pert for another, it can easily be trans-
ferred, while the graving dock wound
remain idle.
CCZE.MA ON FACE,
SCRIP AND HANDS
Came'Offia Scales, Itched Badly.
Had to Tie Hands, Little Watery
Pimples, ' Cuticura Soap, and
Ointment Completely Cured,
1307 Davenport Road, Toronto; Ont.—
'.
nt•. My, ee foma first started when 1 was a
baby, an my face Paid scall?: et seethed die,
and whoa 1 scretghed.it, It camp cif 1n scales.
It itched very badly and: x eves .obliged to
have my bands tied up so as to'prevenb
scratching my face. little white watery
pimples Came on my hands and face' and I
had to stay horpe from schggx for nearly two
weeks. It caused my face and hands to
look badly. The eczema took a very bad
form, appearing on my face In little watery.
ulcers so bad that I could hardly bear to be
touched. My hair being naturally very
thick 1 found to be getting thinner and won-
dered what could cause it to fall out.
"My mother tried and and
spent no end of looney trying to get mo het -
'tor but it did no good. At last a friend rec-
ommended Ontictira Soap and Ointment and;
my mother used them. We applied -the
c
qutIpura.Ointment .,to my.' face, head and
hands and washed with the Outicura Soap
and the eczema began to disappear. , Before
SIX =oaths had passed I was completely
cured." (Signed) Miss Constance Jane,
May 20, 1913.
Cuticura Soap and ointment do so much
ter en route, often proves exciting
work. Before now they have broken
loose from the tugs and only been re-
captured with great difficulty, while it
was but a year, or so ago that one be-
came a wreck on the South African
coast.
From Great .Britain huge floating
docks have been towed to Havana, in
Cuba; to Durban, in Natal; to the
West Indies, Brazil, Bermuda, and,
more recently, to Callao, in Peru, on
the West coast of South America. .
What is regarded as the most dar-
ing towing feat oil' record was ,"the
conveying of the 'floating: dock Dewey
from Baltimore; in the United States,-
to the Philippine Islands. This un-
wieldy craft made the journey via the
Suez Canal, thus covering a distance
of 14,000 miles. During a storm in the
Mediterranean she broke loose, and
for three days was tossed about at the
mercy of the waves.
GENERAL STOESSEL DYING.
Made Living Selling, Tea While Wife
Bred Chickens.
General Stoessel, the lemons' de-
fender'of Port Arthur in the Russo
Jipanese war of 1904, is dying in
obscurity and want in the little
town of Hmelnik. Podolia.
After hissurrender:: of the fort-
ress the General was court mar-
ttalled on -a charge of cowardice
and dereliction in duty. He was
sentenced: to ten years imprison-
ment in the fortress of Saints Peter
and Paul, - but alter twenty-five
months of confinement he was re-
leased. His condition 'was pathetic
in the extreme, for his. •sentence de-
prived him of rank, pay and pen-
sion. His private means were ex-
hausted so that he was glad to eke
out a, xtodest living by selling .tea
while his heroic -wife endeavored to
earn money by breeding 'chickens.
He is now living on the charity
of; his former Adjutant, Col. ICsidi,
who took .him' to his country estate
a, year ago. When in 1909 his peti-
tion to the Czar .asking for a, full
pardon' was rejected the• old Gener-
al was stricken with apoplexy and
his health has grown steadily worse,
NEW IDEA..
Two Distinct Types.
There are two distinct types of
these strange craft—the box dock and
the self -docking pattern. The first -
named is perfectly rigid. and there-
fore the stronger of the two. Should
it become necessary to clean or repair
the under -water portions, it has to be
placed in a dry dock. The self-lock-
ing type, on the other hand, is "so de-
signed that it can lift,portions of itself
out of the water, where they can be
cleaned or repaired.
These floating -cradles may be said
to resemble .a huge box, without ends
or top. The bottom consists of.a tank
or pontoon, or several pontoons, se-
curely fastened together; and it is by
flIliltg these pontoons with water that
the Book is, sunk: sufficiently to enable
a ship which requires docking to be
floated over the pontoons.
The vessel is then hauled in be-
tween the walls of the dock by caps -
WAS FIRST WOMAN PHYSICIAN
I'ranlicn von Siebold Obtained De-
gree 100 Years Ago.
TUE MOUSTACHE RAN NLD,
English Bishops and Judges With
Hirsute Lips Unknown.
Recent orders in continental anil..
itary services regarding hirsute de
Corutions have drawn attention tri
the prejudice aga nast.the moustache
which still survives in certain quar-
ters.
No moustache is allowed in the
British Navy, unless it is accompan-
ied by a beard, An English bishop
with a _moustache is a thing unheard'
of, and Dr. Watts-Ditchfield, when
he was appointed to the see of
Chelmsford, had to do away with a
companion of many years.
A anoustached English judge is a..
rarity, though Mr. Justice Philli-
more boldly defies, the prevailing
fashion. The moustache of the phy-
sician, though coznrnon now, 1s a
recent growth. G. W. E, Russell
never met a moustached ttoctor un-
til 1877. "Everyone," he writes,
"oondemned the hirsute appendage
as highly unprofessional, and wlhes'
some time after the poor man found
his way into the lunatic asylum,
neighboring doctors., of the older.
school •said they were not sur-
prised."
In clerical circles; says a. London
Chronical writer, "the possession
of a moustache is .a sort of party
badge, To have a moustache es de-
cidedly `Low.' The High' Church-
man shaves or grows a beard. I
know a High Church clergyman who
holds moustaches in abhorrence,
Once a junior: was invited to take
a mission at his church. He came.
His . upper Hp flew the offending.
flag. Indicating the 'bedroom
which the stranger was to sleep, his
host said to him,: `You will find
everything you require on the dres-
sing table." Everything you re -
claire proved to be a, razor, re brush
and .a stick of shaving soap. The
hint was taken.
Feminists should . oelebrate this
month as the centenary of the first
woman doctor, say$ the Frankfur-
ter (Germany) Zeitung. It was in.
June, 1814, that a' Fraulien van•:
$iebold, after studying at Goat-
fingen •and Darmstadt, obtained her
degree'and passed the State exam-
ination in medicine and surgery.
In a short time hetefame' spread
throughout the land, seed inel877 the-
University of : Glie s•ep conferred
upon her the degree Of •doctor, hon
oris, eausa. The next year she was
called to assists the Duchess Louise
Qf ,Coburg-Gothae at the birth, of
her .first sone Duke. Ernest II.'
Fraurlien' von 'Siebe d, afterwards,
married • Staff `Ser"geon ' Heidren
veioh-• 'She died in 1859.
This, the 'German paper says, dis-
posed,. el the :claim ;that the first
femalie ephysioi•-an •eve„e an" English
woman, ' Elizabeth , Blackrw•ell who
graduated` in 1849 at Geneva,' N. Y.
She , died a few years ;ago at Hast-
ings, :Engfeeid, aged -90.
helped Western Couple.
It doesn't pay to stick too closely
to old notions of things,. New ideas
often lead to better health, success
and happiness.
This couple examined an idea
new to them and stepped up several
rounds on the health ladder. The
husband, writes ,
"Several years ago we suffered
from coffee drinking, were - sleep-
less, nervous, sallow, weak, and
irritable. My wife and I !both 1ov;
ed coffee and thought it' was a
bracer." (Delusion --stand tea is
just as harmful as coffee, because
they both contain the drug, caf-
feine).
"Finally, after years of suffering,..
we read of Postiim and the harm-
fulness of coffee, and believing that
to grow we should give some atten-
tion to new ideas, we. decided to
tans fitted on the tops of the walls. test •Posta=,
By powerful pumping machinery, lo- "When we made it right we liked :
Gated in the dock walls,. the water is
removed "froin thepontoons, and, as it curl Were free of ills caused by
` .
they are emptied, the dock rises gra- coffee. Our friends noticed the
dually until the ship is lifted clear of change—fresher skin; 'sturdier
the water. While In the dock the ship
rests on keel blocks, and is further
supported by mechanical side -shores,
Certainty Not.
"1 don't. waste any time on any-
thing I don't •understand."`
"Then you never eat hash."
3.
CITY .COUNCIL DOINGS
To put through the license reduction
will require some tall Bustling. Mean.
time lots of corns will be tramped on.
The cure is "Putnam's:" the old reliable
corn extractor that has been curing corns
and warts for years. "Putnam's" never
fails, 25e. at all dealers.
Got His Answer.
Counsel—I insist on an answer to
my question. You have not told. rue
all the conversation,: I want to
knowall that passed -between you
and. Mjr.Jones on the occasion to
which you refer.
Reluctant Witness—I've told you
everything. of any consequence.
"You have told me you said to
him, `Jones, this case will get into
the court some day.' Now, I want
to know what he said in reply."
"Well, he. said : . `Brown, there
isn't anything in this 'business I'm
ashamed of, and if .anysnooping,
little,yee-hawing, four -by -six, ginl-
let-e9ed lawyer, with half a pound
of brains and sixteen ounces of
jaw, ever wants t6 know what I've
been talking about, just tell him.'
8sinard'a X4nlxnent Cures Distemper.
A description of the Admiralty dock
in the 1VIedway, which is of the box
type, will give an idea of the wonders
andcapabilities of these floating con-
trivances. It has a total length of 680
feet, and consists of five parts, name-
ly, three large pontoons and two side
walls. These latter are 157/2 feet
thick, and have a heightof over 60
feet. The dock has an entrance width
of 113 feet, and a total width of 144
feet. The pontoons are divided into
no less than sixty
Running
into each of these is a pipe and a
valve; controhcent
ed from a ralosi-
posi-
tion, known as the valve house. Stand-
ing
ni er kms exact-
h o
cic est ws
,h
ere t e d
ilr t
nerves better temper, etc. •
"These changes were not sudden,
but increased as we continued to
drink and enjoy Posttim, and we
lost the desire for coffee.
"Many of our friends did not like
Posture at first, because they did
not make it right.: But when they
made I?ostum according to dirge-
tions on pkg., they liked. it better
than coffee and were benefited by
the change,"
Name given by 'Canadian Posture
Oib., Windsor', Ont. .Read `'The
Road to Wellville," in pkgs.
rms:
to
:Postern.':Postern.'no�v come�s intwo
well
Regular rostuni--anus- pcg
boiled. 15e ,and gee packages.
Instant Postutn—is a salable pow-
n and hick area-
oe w1 htw
ly what valves are p der, Made in the cup with o
shut, and can regulate the descent and ter._ -no boiling. 30e. anti tee, eine.
The Cost per otip of both kinds is
about the same.
"There's a Reatsoti•" for Posture'.
—sold by : Grocers.
aseent of his craft accordingly.
The dock is lighted througbout with
electricity, It possesses several pow-
erful arc lamps foruse when docking,
or working 01i a ship at night. There
No Variety.
The little girl was paying a call
with her mother. The hostess, old-
fashioned and child loving, offered
the youthful guest a slice of bread
and butter, which was declined with
thanks.
"Why don't'you want the nice
bread •end butterl" asked the lady,
possessed of the belief that all ehil-
dren are hungry always.
"We have some at home just like
it," said The child:
Death Nett I CI i ed
.N' l i sv �` k Lady
I� t.0 qac ad
l
Was Restored to Her Anxious.. Family
When'Hope•Had. Gone. .
St. John,. N.B., Dec. 15th.—At one
time it.was feared that Mrs. J. Grant,
of 3 White St:, would succumb. to- the
deadly ravages of advanced kidney
trouble. "My first attacks 'of backache
and kidney trouble- began years ago.
For six years that dull gnawing pain
has been present. When I exerted my-
self it was terribly intensified, If 1
caught cold the pain: was. unendurable.
3 used most everything, but nothing
gave that certain grateful relief that
came from Dr. Hamilton's Pills. of Man-
drake and Butternut. Instead of being
bowed down with pain, to -day: I ant;
strong, enjoy splendid. appetite, sleep
soundly.: Lost properties have been
instilled into niy blood—cheeks, ;are
rosy with color, and I thank that day
that I heard of so grand a medicine as
Dr. Hamilton's Pills." . /
Every woman should use these Pills
regularly because good health pays,
and it's good, vigorous health that
comes to all who use Dr. Hamilton's
Mandrake and Butternut Pills.
The dealer in antiques was show-
ing an old violin to a probable buy-
er. "Yes," he said, "that is of his
-
thrice' interest; that is the identi-
cal fiddle Nero played while Rome
was burning!" "Oh, . that is a
xnyth." The dealer agreed, say-
ing : "Yes, it is and Myth's name
was on it, but it has got worn off."
Highest grade beans kept whole
and mealy by perfect baking,
retaining their full strength,
itlavored with delicious sauces.
They iu*v, no equal. x
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen,—In June, 98,' I had my baud:
and wrist bitten and badly mangled by m.
vicious Horse. I suffered greatly - for se-
veral days and the tooth ante refused to
veal until your agent gave one a ;"porde
of MMIi3ARD'S LINIMENT, which I :,vegan
using. The effect was magical; in live,
hours the pain had ceased andin two
weeks .-She wounds had completely Healed
and any hand and arm were as well as
ever.
Yours truly,
A. E. ROY,
Carriage' Maker.
St. Antoine. RC/.
Why Ala Was Glad.
hostess' child)-,
see me again,
Mrs. Kawler (to
A're you glad to
Edith
Edith—Yes'ne
glad. too, .
Mrs. Kawier— Is
Edith—Yes she
you'd come to -day.
with.
E.E
A horse in the field is worth two
in the barn, You can't prevent
Spavin, itingbone, Splint, or Curb from
putting your horse in the barn but you
can prevent these troubles from keeping
horses An the barn very long. You can get
KENDALL'S
SPAVIN CURE
at any druggists at $1. a bottle 6 for 35, and
xendall's will cure. 'Thousands of fanners
and horsemen will say so_ Our book
"Treatise on the horse" free. ei
Dr.B. J. KENDALL Ce. Enosbuse Faris; i't.
and mamma's
she 1
said she hoped
and have it over
?dinars?* Liniment Cures target in Cows.”
Ambition is usually the voice that
invites opportunity to call.
Occasionally a girl accepts the
hand of an aged suitor .because of
what there is in it.
al
FARMS POR SALE.
tai
W. DAWSON. Ninety Colborne Street»
Toronto: •
# {
IF YOU 'PANT TO BUY OR SELL A,
Fruit, Stock.. Grain or Dairy E'ar?, .{
write H. W. Dawson. Brampton. or oil`
Colborne St.. Toronto.• ;
o
H. '4P: ?lAW £OY, Colboruo St,, Toroat ,i;Y
i &WEP21PE} S. FOR S. LE. 44
OOD, WIOISKLt- I�1 LIVE TOTN.3P7• i
'..Y •.Fork `County„ -Stationery and Boo,
Business In connection, hrtae only,
$4.000. Terms ltberaL ; Wilson Publish•- •:
ins Company.. 71 West 'Adelaide' street,
Toronto.
xsomx.LANEOUS.,
OR SALE.—TEN PAIRS BREEDIN(
Foxes. Corneeuondence solicited. Reid?
Bros. Nothwell, Ont.
t,ryry ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC.*
— internal and external, cured with:
out pain by our home treatment. '1Vrite
us before toe late, .vr, Eellman Medical'
Cn•, 7,.fmlted, 14'1 13r Ont
MMinard'r &influent Cares Diphtheria.
A Mild Accusation.
Uncle Henry 1wa,s one of the mild-
est of men. No tone 'had ever been
him angry or impatient, but wlheo
his old-time neighbor and s'uppoged
friend, Jahn Ragland, deliberately
ohea'ted him out of $900, even 1'1is.
kindly spirit was ruffled,
`t,Soreetinie," he 'remarked to his
wife) "I'an' going to tell that men
what 1 thin of 'him,"
One �ay
e bc1,4
16
Jame
m
e
h
l ly
sabi e Wit hh! isc1
Ra.aada day, snt
l'Aolele' M
r . i lit otl. ' alLtt I. 't'h it of
Alii , he mud, �i aF
,£»that dad"you suty f Nitta !iris
wile, ,
"I told 'him I'thought he Was a
very unreasonable sans::-,
The Best. Ever
issued: Guns, Rifles,
Ammunition, Fishing,
Tackle, Baseball, "Golf,
Tennis, .Lacrosse,,
Camping Outfits, all
Summer and Winter
Sports. We want.
Every .Malt
who Hunts, Fishes, or
plays any Outdoor
Game to get our large
freeCatalogue. Prices
right, satisfaction
guaranteed. Immense
stock, prompt shipment
You save money by getting
Catalogue to -day.
T. Vii. Boyd & Sons,
22 IiotreDameSt.Wert, Mortised
�- mtR7i,
The Usual 'Coinplimeuts.
Mr. Fogarty (in proposing the
bride's health)—An' it's- nieself is
proud to say I 'Ave knowed the •
bride this forty year."
Tete Bride—It's a thonderin' liar
you are, Fogarty ; me beiu' o lyf
just turned thirty -wan ars' a hal
Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, L"to.
She (to late -homing husband.) --
Any man who spends his evening
and his hard-earned money drink-
ing in barrooms must be a lunatic;
He—Sure, ='clear saloonitic !
YOUR OWN DRUGGIST WILL TELL 'SOU
Try Marine nye Remedy for hied, Weak, Waters'
Eyee and Granel tett Eyelids; No Suaa:rting—
just Eye Comfort, write for13001t of the nye
by'mail1Yree. Limine E.yeitemedy Co,, CLica pa.
Aged.
"Why, look ;here," said the mer-
chant who was in need of a boy,
"aren't you the same boy who was
in here a week ago 7"
"Yes, sir," said the applicant,.
"1 thought so. And didn't T tell
you then that I wanted an older
boy '
Yes, sir. That's why I'm back.
I'm, older "now."
J'
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Ante, stings *ono
tent, A skin food ±-.
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