Exeter Advocate, 1914-12-24, Page 3PALE AND SIG KLY
BOYS AND R,T'S
Feed Alt the Strength That
Good lied Blood Can Give
Youth is the: time to lay the foun-
dation for health. Every boy and
girl 5h4
uId have plenty pure,ofred
bho‘pd and strong nerves. With hin,
impure blood they start life with a
handicap too great to win success
and happiness. Pure, red blood
means healthful g>ow,th, strong
"*nerves, si .clear brain ,and: a good
digestion, Ina word, pure blood is
the foundation of health,
The signs of thin, impure blood
are .many ,and unmistakable. The
pale, irritable boy or girl, who has
no 'appetite or ,anlbi,td•on, 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 do for
these boys and girls—build up the
blood with Dr.• Williams' Pink'Pilis
- for Pale People., You esan't afford
to experiment with other remedies
.for there must be no guesswork in
the treatment of anaemia. Through
negleot or wrong treatment anae-
mia gradually develops into the per-
nicious form which is practically in-
curable. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
work directly on the blood, giving
it just the elements whioh it lacks.
In this way these Pills build up
every organ and nerve in the_body,
thus developing 's•tron•g, rugged
boys and girls, Miss Anna Loseke,
Grund Forks, B. -C., says : "I think
that before taking Dr. Williams'
Pink Pills I was one of the most
miserable girls alive. I was hardly
ever free from .awful headaches, was
as pale as a ghost, and could not go.
upstairs without stopping fe rest.
Now since taking. the Pills the hexad -
aches have gone, my appetite is
good and I am equal to almost any
exertion,
and you
maylr
be si e I
will' always rcommenDr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills,':'•
Sold by all medicine dealers or
sent by mail, post paid, at 50 cents
a box or •six boxes for $2.50. by
writing direct to the Dr. Will'iants'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.,
LIFE IN THE TRENCHES..
Shells Fly Overhead by Day, and.
•
Alarms and Rills Fire by Night.
The so-called Battle of the Aisne
l was a siege rather than a battle.
For weeks the soldiers of both
Armies lived in the cleverly con-
structed trenches -they had dig
,.,arnoag the hills and stone quarries.
"-easere is a graphic picture of the life
they led there, taken from an Eng-
lishofficer's letter in the London
Times :
7 Ten days ago we bad arrived
within sound orf the firing, and were
about to take our places in the
trenches. That night we marched
seven miles through the mud over
roads that had been soaked by four
days" rain and torn by ceaseless
traffic. . The sound of grins and
rifles grew louder as we approach-
ed the front, and.dead horses mark-
ed the passage of the armies. We
teamed the river Aisne, and halt-
ed near the village beneath the
heights..' The brigade split into
regiments, and ours went off up
the hill, slippery with mud,. to the
trenches. We relieved a company
of Irishman almost incoherent in
their speech from their long orcleal,•
who had begun with the retreat
from Mons, and had been fighting
without ceasing ever since. Many
had been killed, but with, their
weakened numbers they had taken
these heights, and clung to them un-
til our arrival.
We posted sentries; and the com-
pany took up its allotted line, find-
ing cover •behind the embankment
of a. quarry. The next day food ar-
rived ; we cooked our tinned beef
and boiled tea, cleaned our rifles,
and began to feel more at home.
Then we started to dig. No one
knew how long we should etay, but
.the cover was bad, and gave no
protection from the . enemy's guns.
And this we learned to our cost,,for
soon we had our first lesson: about
shrapnel. Our own artillery open-
ed fire, and the shells passed over
our heads into the enemy's 'lines,
Then they replied, first at our guns
and then' at our trenches. Bung !
Smash l and a shower of pellets and
earth, that was all. ' A horrid, una t
pleasant sound, typical of destruc-
tion. Yet, if men will remain under ,e
cover, no harm can befall. But they t
won't: Nothing -on earth will pre- ti
vent the British soldier fromlight-c
ing a' fire to cook his tea, or from s'
hging round to barrow a light for t
is cigarette. Then the shrapnel' li
catches him, It is not bravery or g
any ether virtue. It is . just his D
Madill habit: Some men must go y
.r•�LI;c3'1!'oourse, on duty, and so there ce
have been the casualties that' yeti.
;ee in the papers. l But ;with aloe, `G
,hese losses should. be. slight' while ; be
ve remain in' the trenches, And' K
we begin to think we shall be there co
orever, he
Ten days I Aeroplanes watching q
is, and •shells .flying overhead . by 'b
ay, alarms and rifle fire by n}giit. e1
We live-the,lifeof a rabbit—digging Se
Se
t ourselves deepen and deeper into w
the earth, until •we are completely C
sheltered from above, corking out
now and then, when. things are
it
moves that 'nay he necessary tinder � t(). 4c I ••. l,f
cover of darkness, aurounttioa,
Il eS
food o l and drinking . favater are
brought in by night ; the wounded.
•are sent away. to the hospital. We
o.
d not at wash, we da• no�t,ohange our
clothes; s, we sleep at odd intervals.
whenever we can get the chance,
and daily we get more accustomed
to' our lot. Little holes are dug be•
neath the parapet just big enough
to sitin t11 dl'0
'our homes, with straw
,
t v
and perhaps a sack or two for
warmth. The cold is intense ' at
night, .and those good ladies who
have made us,woollencaps and corn"
totters have earned our thanks.
The coldest moments are those
when there is 'an alarm of a night
attack, and we spring from our
the parapet, peering over the wall.
to see our enemies, and firing at the
flashes of their rifles
KICA.ii I LINE of JEITItoES'.
'Their Achievement Never ,
�euleni Has Been
Equalled.
An officer a in the Army Service
Corps writes :es
You know, reading the home pa-
pers—I could,, almost' wish that. a
horde of these gentry could deseend
on old E•ngland's shores. !: don't
think anything but that will ever
arouse them to the awfulness of
the: thing that 'the thin (very, very
thin in ..some :plaee's•), khaki cine in
the trenches out here is fighting
hard to keep from them; and that
very thin line is doing each 'day
something that hale never been
of
equalled even by_ the thin red line
'bygone days: ,..I am noir patting
myself on the .'back, for. my work
lies' behind the trendies, and. I take
off my hat to every mother's ran
that is there: I Should have thought
that the. recruits to the new Arany
would have exceeded the second
million by now, and yet theY don't
seem to have got the first com-
pleted yet. If they could only take
the. youth of England en a per,s�on-
ally-oo.ndu•cted tour along our lines
here so that they could realize what
we are up •against, I think theY'd.
join in a body; • bili, failing .that;
the best:way to buck 'them up would
be a. hundred thousand Gerrnans
'
landing.: iiia ,England. I don't sup-
pose they'd get very. far,- still they
would bring home to the smug,arm-
ch•ai'r brigade as nothing a�1�se '`ever
will something at beast of the awful
way in which Belgium. and part of
France has suffered. Those who.
are out here are doing miracles.
In the ' meanitrim:e, hem -
ever confident one. may be of the
result, we are still a long way off
that salvation, and the present bat-
tle is still raging backwards and
forwards' as, fiercel as` ever.-
yAs
you said in your other letter, the
old Scottish have done •splendidly,
and I am afraid, have lost rather
heavily, but there isn't one regi-
ment in the firing Iine that is doing
better than one another; they are
all doing their. best, and a •splendid
best, too,
DOMINION skTLA\TIC R. R.
Great • Improvements JEave Been
Made on It by the C.P.R.
The record of .unpr•oveme:ntts ef-
fected on the Dominion Atlantic
Railway, which -the- Canadian Paci-
fic .Railway leased in 1911 for c99
years shows that new Wharves• have
been built; 45 miles of new.track
have been ballasted; 30• miles of
new 85 -pound rails have been laid
down ; .1.20 cattle -guards have been
filled' 'ootid i epla,eed by surface
guards, while dozens of bridges
have been either improved •or re-
built. Tn round figures, 6,000 feet
of wooden. bridges hale' been re-
placed, or will be replaced very
shortly, by steel bridges, concrete
arches, and rail top culverts. New
brick stations have been built; a
general renovation has taken place,
costing many •thousands. of dollars.
The new stations include those at
Wolfville and Annapolis, Royal, ' Mo-
sherville, Patterson and Iberville..
During the past two years 35 ate,
tions have been repaired and Paint-
ed, and platforms have been erect-
ed, A new line from Centreville td
Weston, 14 miles in extent, liar been
built in the most substantial lean-
net, Both perma'ne'nt work and the
lighter things which needed' atten-
tian have been•carried out and to-
day the old Dominion Atlantic looks
spick and span --looks as . if it had
taken on a,new lease of life.
Sea Dogs of Many Years.
Lord Fisher, who it only 'seventy-
lhres, breaks no age records in re-
irning to active • service. ' In the
antler half of last century, when
here was no regular system of ee-
rement in the British navy, many
apibains well over that age • were
till •anxiously waiting for promno••
ion, In 1840 every captain on the
at had heist post rank 'since Trafal-
ar, Admiral Bowles took up chis
evenp'ort commatndl in his eightieth
Ye Lord Dund'on,qld—whe, just a
a'eury ago was stripped of his hon -
.'s and putin the pillory on a fal�s'e.
h .r',ge-•wags seventy -owe when he
came "Admiral :..of the United
ingdom." In itthose days naval
mimanders were often abeueed:of
ing `too feeble to syalk to their.
uarte�r-decks: Dundonald .was ,a
rillianit •exception. In .185.0, in:hfs
;htieth year, this "last of the eld
a kings"' 'offered to blow up time
alibs of Sebastopol. -- 1' ond�i'tti
hr'oriiel.e.
You may whitetva•slh a man'•s char.
Islet, to eook and eat,- making any /tater without washing it white.
1T RELJEVE8 gVERY EXTERNAL.
Cures Colds, Coughs; Sore Throat
Tight Chest and Hoarseness,
it's when i
llnsek
ne e es night
ss om ,,pt 1 g t
wZien'you are far flora tho truggis
or the doctor, that's •when you need
Nerviline most. Experienced mothers
are never without it. One of the chil
dren may have toothache.. Without
Nerviline-a sleepless night'. for the
entire .household. With Nerviline the
pain is relieved quickly. It may be
earache, perhaps a stiff neck, or one
of the kiddies coughing with ; a bad
chest cold. Nothing' can give quicker
results than vigorous rubbing with
this old-time family remedy.
Nerviline is too useful, too valuable
to be ti:; ithout. For lumbago, lame
back, sciatica or neuralgia there is no
liniment with half of Nervi:ine's pow-
er to penetrate and, ease the pain.
As a family safeguard, as some-
thing to ward off sickness and to cure
the minor ills that will' occur in every
family, to pure pain anywhere, you
can find nothing to compare with old-
time Nerviline, which for forty years
has been the most widely used family
remedy. in the Domi:. ion. The most
economical size is the large 50c, -fam-
ily size' bottle, small trial:size 25c, AU
dealers sell Nerviline.
AXE GD0TTES OF LORD FISItElle
IN GREAT DISTRESS
FROM ECZEMA
Suffered Over Two Years, GrewThTn
and Lost Appetite. Itching, Burn-
ing, Sore Eruption, Cuticura Soap
r and Ointment Completely .Beale ,
A: "pian 1Wio • Sileeeeds in Gettin
His Own 1V.ay.
g.
Here are some good sitoriea
Lord Fisher, recently appointe
First Lord` of the British Admiralty
A c•omma,nder whose reputatio
for discipline has made him .almost
as much feared as be its admired,
Lord Fisher's devotion to duty is
such thtat•h,e will brook shirking
from any mean under him, and woe
'betide the unfortunate officer or
handy m,an who 'dares to question
his authority. A certain captain
o e sent ent word••that it was impos-
sible to get hits -ship to such-and-
sucih a place on a. given day.
"Umpli !" replied Lord- Fisher;
"tell -Captain — that if he is not
X. reedyt,o leave on the day named,
T,'will have -hie towed there."
'Another story illu•stretive of -Lord
Fisher's determination to get what
he wants refers to an occasion when
he conceived the idea, of putting up
a.. wireless installation on the cu-
pola of the Admiralty .at Whitehall,
Fnr some reason, however, the
Post Office refused permission. One
.day, therefore, half a dozen sea
men ,swarmed up the cupola and ran
up the "wirede.ss" in the face of
outraged'.authoriity. 'fHew is this?"
asked the Post' Office; "by whose
authority?' "Oh," said Lord Fish-
er, "it its only run up tentatively to
seehow it will : work in erase permis-
sion is given:" And there it 're-
mained.
• typical sea -dog, bluff 'and
hearty, Lord Fisher has practically
reorganized our navy. He is a self-
made man in the. sense that he owes
nothing to birth, social influence, or
Wealth, in a service in whioh all
three counted for much when he
first entered the navy, and the
story .of that entry is typical of the
man. At the age of: thirteen he
scrambled saboard the acliniral'ts
ship .at Plymouth, marched up to a
splendid figure in •blue • and gold,
and, handing him a letter, said,
"Here, my man, `give this to the
'The mean in blue and gold smiled, -
took the letter, and opened it. "Are
you the admiral 7"-• said the boy.
"Yee, I'm the admiral." He read
the letter and, patting the boy on
the head, .•said, "You must stop and
take. dinner with me." • "I think,"
said the boy, "I should like to be
getting on to any ship," 'speaking as
though the• British navy had fallen
to his charge. The achnaral laughed
and took hint down to dinner.
Like Kitchener, Lord Fisher's
motto hays' always been. "Deeds,
Not Words," and it is a remarkable
Fact that for many years the ships
he commanded ,always had the mot-
to "Silence—Deeds, nob Words,
displayed in a prominent position
for the edification of the officers,
It was at an Academy banquet
some years ago that Load Fisher
told how he found another motto.
When ooanxn,ander-in-chief"' in the
14 ledite•rrane•an, he one day: went to
inspect to small destroyer, only 260
tons; "but such was her pride and
swagger," said Sir 3o.h'n, "that she
'might have been 16,000. The lieu-
tenant in'eta- m•and took me around•.
She was beautifully in order, and I
came ,aft to tihe whbeeland saw there
`Ut Veniant'Omn,es,' `Here,' I s'ald,
`what the denee is final?' Saluting
Hole, the lieutenant replied, "Let
'em .all came!' "
It was at this banquet also that
233 George St-, Sarnia, Ont,—'t I suffered
for over two years with eczema which first
appeared in small pimples and broke into.
red inflamed sores. They were very ltohing
and when my clothing rubbed against them
I was' in great distress. I lost my rest at
night'and was much disfigured by the orae
tion, The eczemawas so bad that I grew
thin and lost my appetite. My hands,
aims, face and various parts of my body
were covered with an itching, burning erup-
tion of sores and though I took many com-
mon and much recommended remedies they
failed to do any good.
I used Cuticura Soap and Ointment and
after about three weeks I was completely
healed. I take pleasure in recommending
them to any other needy sufferers from
eczema or other eruptions of the skin."
(Signed) miss Bertha Allan, May 23, 1914.
Samples Free .by Mail.
A generation of mothers has found no soap
so well suited for cleansing and purifying
the skin and hair of infants and children as.
Cuticura Soap. Its absolute purity: and re-
freshing fragrance alone are enough to rec-
ommend it above ordinary skin soaps, but
there: are added to these qualities 1olieate
yet 'effective emollient properties, derived
from Cuticura Ointment,which render it
most valuable in overcoming a tendency to
distressing eruptions and promoting skin
and hair health. Cuticura Soap and Oint-
dlment sold by druggists and dealers through -
out the world, ,Liberal sample of each
mailed free, with 32-p. book: Address post.
n card "Onticura, Dept. D, Boston, U. 9. A.'S
ED. 4.
Lord Fisher used a phrase which. is
particularly appropriate :at the mo-
ment. "No soldier of ours- can go.
anywhere," he said, $u'nless asail-
or carries him on his back." 'twee
aaophrase which brought down the
huse but the cheers were partially
due to the fact that Lord Fisher, in
the whirl of his excitement, emptied
a decanter of claret over the shirt
front of Lord:.Midleton, who was.
then Secretary for War, and who
was sitting next to him.
•
.RUSSL•i'S AIRSHIPS,
•
Sikorsky Biplanes. Arc'Able to Cars
ry'1'wen.ty Passengers.
A good deal has been heard con-
cerning the British - and German
aeroplanes, but the great Sikorsky
biplanes used by the troops of the
Czar have been oveslooked...These
maehines, invented by a famous
RUSSitnn named Sikorsky, are by
far the bdggest aeroplanes being
flown in the war—in facet, they are
the largest in the world. They stand
16 feet high and are about 100 feet
wide.
The. Sikorsky can carry almost as
many passengers as a Zeppelin air-
ship. Twenty men con be accom-
modated in the, large passenger ca-
bin, which is constructed of metal
and:co•ntains numerous windows,
In this Machine three engines are
fitted, which give a total of nearly
1,000 horsepower, fee, owing to the
Sikorsky biplane weighing in itself
one and a half tons, and having so
large ,a crew to• carry, it demands
-high power to pull it off the ground
and keep it in the air. •
The weight of theana•chine has
necessitated an elab•onate landing
chassis oompoaed .'of numerous
springs and pneumatic tubes, so
that the huge biplane can alight
safely on rough ground at a speed
of sixty miles an hour.
Manslaughter in Second Degree
Cutting corns with a razor is danger-
ous and useless. The only remedy is Put
-
nazi's Corm Extractor, ' whioh removes
Borne and warts in one day: Beeause
painless and .safe, use only "Putnam's,"
25e. per bottle at all dealers. .
The Scene Was Funny,
Paddy has a, great power of en-
joyment after all. One day as he
was walking he .saw .a •bull attack a
man, and he had to hold his sides
with both 'hands, the scene was so
funny. After a time the animal
turned his attention. to himand
poor Pat, .after exploring the'up-
per regions, 'came down • with a
bump on the other side of the fence.
He rubbed his wounds as he said
to himself : Faith, I'm glad I had
my laugh when I did or I wouldn't
have had it at all,"
INFORMATION FOR INVENTORS
Messrs.. Pigeon, Pigeon & Davis,
patent 'solicitors, Montreal, report
that 105 Canadian patents were is-
sued for the week ending Dee. let,
1914, 70 of which were granted to
Americans, 21 to Canadians, 8 to.
residents. of Great Britain and oolo-
nies and 6 to reside'nit•s of foreign
Countries',
01 the Canadians who received
patents 13 were residents of On-
tario, 3 of Quebec, •7 of Alberta, 1
of Nova Scotia, 1 of Manitoba, 1 of
British Columbia, 1 of New :Bruns-
wick and 1 of Saskatehe van:
Explorations within recent years
have indlicetecl that China has coal
fields containing snore fuel than ' all
the rest of the world'combined,
Minard's, Liniment... Curds Colds, ad.
Happiness cannot be counterfeit;;
the real thing is too easily rreeog-
ISSUE 52—'14, nixed.
Storyby Lord
Ml . '
t
►
A capital story which Lord ¥in
used to delight in telling' was of.a
experience ence h
e had whileil
e he w
Viceroy of India. One morning i
Simla he wanted to speak to •t
Commander -in -Chief of the India
Army ,before the latter' started wor
for the day,. so he set ofE una•tten •
ed to pay all early eall,; When h
arrived ed t t
theCoral n nde u to 1'= �
Chief's official residence he foun
his way barred by a sentry, wh
apparently did not recognize th.
visitor. Lord Minto explained tha
he wanted to see the Cummander
in -Chief, but the sentry deelined t
allow him to pass. "But I am th
Viceroy," protested his. Lordship
The sentry looked at him with
pitying smile, "Ah," he said
thoughtfully, "we gets all sort
ere. Last week we 'ad a cove who
kidded '.isself 'e was Queen Vic
toria's grandfather; We 'ad
put in a strait-waistenat, s
you'd
d better push on,"
3.-
25 .German Shells to kill a Man.
One of the. things . frequently
noted by soldiers at the front in
writing to relatives and friends i.
the extraordinary expenditure o
bullets required to kill a man, .-
German report states that niany
German soldiers -fired: 4,000 cart-
ridges apiece during the first month
of the war. An English observer
estimated that 25 Germain shells are
wasted for every man killed by
them. In 1870 it was calculated that
the Germans fired 150 bullets and
six sihrapnelshells for every wound-
ed Frenchman. In the .Russo-Japa-
nese War it is said 3,000 bullets
were fired for every life lost,
'
Death Nearly Claimed
l c►v Brtitlslvit It tidy.
�i: t
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 back-
ache and kidney trouble began years
agb. For six years that dull, gnawing
pain.has been present. When I exert=
ed 'myself it was terribly intensified.
If I caught told the.. pain was unendur-
able. I used most everything, but
nothing gave that certain grateful re-
lief that came from ' Din- Hamilton's
Pills of Mandrake and Butternut. In-
stead of being bowed down with pain,
to -day I am strong, enjoy splendid ap-
petite, sleep soundly. Lost properties
have teen instilled into my blood—
cheeks are rcsy with color, and. I
thank that day that 1 heard of so
grand a medicine' as Dr. Hamilton's
Pins."
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.
And Food at War Prices.
He—Be mine, l cannot, live with-
out you.
She—Ob„ go 'long; you've said
that to many girls before.
He—Yes, but not : when eggs were
fifty cents a dozen.
Granuiatted Eyelid%t
re eyes ` inflamed by expo-
sure to Sun, Dustand Wind
Eyesquicklyrelievedby t11ur1tiG'
Eye Rernedy, No Stnartrng,
just Eye Comfort. At.
Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Murine Ile
SalveinTubes 25c. .For Booked. the Eye Free ask
Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
Reckless Waste.
"They say that that young
rounder Spenditt has committed
i uicide."
"Yes. The doctor says he swal-
lowed enough poison to kill fifty
men."
"Just like him' Extravagant to
the last.''
I was cured of Rheumatic Gent by
MINA:nD'S LINIMENT.
Halifax. ANDREW KING.
I 'was cured of Acute Bronchitis by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
LT. -COL. C. CIi1WE' READ.
Sussex.
I was cured of Acute. nheumatism by
MI•iTARD•S LINIMENT.
Markham, Ont. C. S. BILLING.
Lakefleld, Que., Ott. 9. 1907.
Ready For Him Both Ways.
Tailor --"This hill has been run-
ning for a long time. I'll have to
begin charging you interest."
Owens—"It's against my prin-
ciple to spay interest on only ,bills."
Tailor—"Well, pay the principal
then,"
Owens—"No; it's against my in-,
terest to pay the principal,"
Minard's Liniment Cures Olphtheria,
Two Irishmen shovelling sand on
a hot day stopped to rest and to
exchange views on the labor 'ques-
tion. "Pat, this is mighty hard
work we are at." "It is indeed,
jimmy, :but what kind of work is
if, you'd ,loike if you could get it?"
"Well," • said the other, leaning re
tleetively' upon his thovel,'' "fol a
nice, airy; ;oiarie business, I think
:C would bike to ,'be, 8 l3ishop:Y'
Don't epec't a medal for being a
rneddler.
Millard', Liniment gores Caroni In Cows,,
• . _,
he
o
e
a
t
to
o
S•
f
.-toot..-.,.,e
e
t\)
. ,/• Highest grade h,ealis
and mealy by perfect
retaining their full
Flavored with deliciorts
They luitvie no
3 it -. ,,,
�., ...
Parc&
kept whole
baking,
strength.
sauces,
enuitl. r
Easy lexes.
to Please.
New Girl—"What
ther like for 'breakfast?"
Little Mabel—"He
most anything we hasn't
does your fa.
always likes
got."
Distemper;
Error.
to me that
cause of most
isn't he a war
general.
Minard's Liniment Cures
A. Technical
Husband-lG seems
shrapnel has been the
of the casualties.
Wife -But, George,
correspondent, nota
FARMS FOR SALE.
H. W. DAWSON, :Ninety, Colborne Street,
Toronto.
I1! YOU WANT' TO BUY OR SELL - A
Prait, Stock, Grain or Dairy Farm,
'wr'ite H.' W. Dawson, Brampton, or 90 Col-
borne St.. Tcronto.
H. W. DAWSON, Colborne St, Toronto.
MISCELLANEOUS.
(`l Ailcnit, TUMORS, LUMPS,- ETC,
NJ internal and external, cured• with.
out pain by our home treatment. Writ.:
as before too /ate Dr. Belltnan Medical
Co., Limited, Cnllinrwood, Ont.
OP INVENTIONS
i�
1
PIOBON, PIOEO`1 & ,DAVIS.
gut St. James St., - Montreal
Write for information
-
BOILERS
New and Second-hand, for heating,
and power parpoees. Water
S'lmnee, TANKS AND SMOKE
STACKS.
PZ1:1. Q�1RL MITER sTaR3NT0,
Engineers and S8ip)'uildsrt,
Machinery For a,$
"p� � Csii
Ergine, shafting, belting. plles•=,
etc. from large factory for sale.
Wheelock engine, 1S by 42, connplete
with cylinder frame, fly wheel, bear-
ings, eta., all in good condition.
Shafting from one inch to three
inches, pulleys thirty,incites to
fifty .inches, belting siinches -too
twelve inches. Will sell entire or
in part.
N0. REAS0Y..tlBLE
OFFER REFUSED.
S. Frank Wilson d> Sons,
73 Adelaide Street West, Toronto.
That's the way to keep your
Muscles—Supple and Strong.
British Aran
•
Liment
Stands in a class by itself as
a remedy for Stiffness,
Rheumatism, Swellings,'
Wounds,Sprains,
Neuralgia, &c., &c.
You should always keep
a battle of British Army
Liniment in the house.
11 your Storekeeper hasn't got
it. write to
The Turner Co. Limited
Toronto
9
Marshmallow Filling.
and Pliable Icing ,
Taking the plate of whites of eggs;,
it works easily and is very eco•
• nettle/Al. The icing will not crumble,,
and preak and the lddrshtnailow is
finer and more eaelly prepared If
25c,package flaa
okes tela to fifteere
two -layer cakes,_
c 4
1
=law o
W as pure es s0 nw- as toholeseitid as•
- aitgar rind is an addition •to yotir
pastry work that yon wilt weibbme.••
Your friends • will •be loud• in their
iirkise. xf you take pride in .year •
Aditry send • 21e. itf •'stamps or coin
• end we wit[; mail A:beckage, post -
pats]; with . cm
oplete workinn lustre
- tions
TIM W, T. •OTT• at>., T1mtC
• '8244 front • dt. 'W., A
TOR NTO, OitN,
I l i1 iiOT
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