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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1925-9-3, Page 70 H Open 0 Evenings To 8 p,rn. TIcAt SZ EXTRAORDINARY .INYISIELE ,opuriax yisoN, ,IOSTS tlround to thepreseription you require ,te Geis clearly bottanedieehe faro DURING, EXIiI„EITION'W.EEKS: ONLY .R0001any 410,00to $18.00 SPECIAL. SALE PRICE. $7495 Z. T., BURCII ' Ontometrfet & OptIclen ,15 RICHIVIONO;ST, E,AEIT TOilON-rte, ONT. ' , Tivoli Theatre 131eg," , (South Side) WATCH YOUR—MENTAL STEPS! PICKING SHIPS' POCKETS 4... n Ozon bleat, Tho,,101; Of Living, . To.,. at agligsb peeple the Argata aelgt is ;let, A eroviem,,, it is: e eeek. ; title ,"1,. Oe';'!!lee ::Oliegy.., 'AA ,ethe ,elage, ;We. eleheteeave ' to lieelteeteeld .i't, W. , lieeenetee, feeeise, Meat ceinee • feerie" 1 bay4. ta . Bee it,. 0;orilaeali.001.17' these ..egye, a brmacin. .despatch.Cortaial$r .SitaRle 'toll 'VV1i0 Set ihernoelYee aboat . , -et-4;P, irezett-nleat: deleia'eutne rebel there. IMO living their days Ai tbeY ,ociate''..lxiiNe ' .,;, VVikea aegerie le in (lode afutlier Or W the Aigentineee reduces corn cettle, • "Miel' eerier viewaboat therneelYee et113,11- t.ehe:Peoer)ieftil;mai0%slah:0-aeralk,t4tittilter'elytjaaeta teAli: , ltli.ellea,P5.,,,6111911;i1043.0•1:iodle, Spian1w go:4#cotoo 4:oattts4:11141. ,;inwirlo..thei, world, than th, 0:: Philorere eh man. lie ,ia .in eherge ' et the W4ole it g,',r.O'We eaaUfai graPeS 40-Praalloe I Why 'should we 'Make ee.'reelYee 'e-te' . • elile, .an it' re ' hie' job . to see : tht no uP.0.-4`' ' 4 Pillt94 ga110123 'of wine a 114014Y Peer What is, news Of our busf, ainau.thorized pereeee come -aboard He Yeere ,_ . , . .e. '- ' , ne,see ., ' , ••, ' ' ' . is 'theee also to'111.-.0teet the ship froea fereeeeel.i.e.,elie eguntey was 'called La .:,,Lho meet who 'gets up eireerfelly in onittreaki of fire, and from. there . ''' • Pefita, wh:icli is •Spanish for eilver, the 'the inereing ancl go ee to bed reason- Useelle aileeld sailor ie the Watelt, irstnie 1,i,aViet .441,i given by the SPaille• able' c6elleatei ever'y night, ' tieel be - bet though . he Is ever on the tikove, Ards to the ,freat river—Rt° de la tamest the two caries out hie natural from deck to „deekelie cannetle.everY, --,Pl.atueeeeeauetaethe natieee.•,,ther seev inefincts, works ,eard plays heartily Who.° at carte: ,, , ,,, ' ' -on:it • 'Wore -M-tiele silver in their cos- think.s. honestly, 'feels' strongly wed Ordinarily, the ship berglar.ils. jest a, tunieS! .;..,... • . , deeply, and -who everY day tries to"do . Th 'commonpetty „thief, lie cannot- pasea 'ilia . ,OaPital ' of the Ilepablic la all. those thiags a little better—suCh a ,, e 1Viiracle. - the- policeman at thedock gates eerry- Bireecs Ayres', 'awes occupied in man flees, -• :The force of education is 040, great linin toaexercise and develep his brain ing anything bulky. Therefore he just be, a Beitisli feeee, hut the Spaniards-, , pos- 1 . . h ' e ' i ' room trifles, tools 'lied aSide by work- Evenitielly,.bowever th '1 i t Sometime! ho OfiANGE. Pg.K.Og ekto, , . :12 n, tr' , • Try 1806 A delightful etory comes from- the For life is an are, net a Science. It CInlittlliseti"lovelyecidica3tel-pYlaigi°grasrdiennsBaogidtalt is a trade, got ae'puzele. Yoe. leern t9 ' that, We may Mould, the minds 'and! aa hia Pedal to Ys do the muscles' Of his Snealre'ibOarcl to ,pick. up anything he. daring the' war with Spain,took matinera a our-ceildren aleag the lines we please and give them the briVrea-1, eione of such habits as shall ever after remain, With young children one of the erst things, tangible or ma.terial, that"form an impree.eion on their plastic minds, is their playthings and toy. ;•Wiselis the, parent weo selects these toyS'not only at Christmas season but thioughea, the yeer with an eye eto- ward the constructive develop,ment of the child'e mind, This does not" inean that parente sboald so' mold' their' . children's, mental peoces.ses that their own individual childish initiativeeemee smothered. Rather, that the parent, sun— . through wise and tactful direction of eel), of shingles and carpenter rare with which to make birdhouses the chitd's play and the selection,. of and other article. 'TO' make such, pley his .playthings gives him tile oppor-. complete•give hint laa'anmer and nails tunity to discover himself and what he e suitable to his age. The tools should be well made and (hirable with white' he cat'. do his worle'well. Almost every little girl is. content to play'at 'aome with her playmates if she healthy toys that eveey chjid shoeld has a large piano box play holse: Such have his wise portion of;-' to develop a box may be made into a very at - himself phYsically and give his play spirit its, natural outlet. But attention must not be given to the physical with neglect to. the mental. Certain "men- tal toys" reallY give the child food for child's. originality. thought. It is. surprising. the initiative he will show in ivorking'outnew things in a formative way. , The constructive toys, the ;building' blocks, ' engines, trains,. mechanical sete,eand all the jointed, building toys, girls. y. The child is, a great imitator of his elders both in habit and action. If the youngster of the family is the possess- or of a tiny engine motor, wagon or , garden tools, the miniature dUplicate of "dacl'a." hie joy is complete. Such mechanical toys with a loug 11„,at of others tends to help in developing the initiatiye of both boys and girls to- - ward the mechanical Or other, lines. And every girl needs this sort of trainin_g to help her in solving the problems le her future home. The growine joy needs constructive toys to develop les powers as well as the yoengee cbild. Re will enjoy a would like to do. The sand pile, 'a trapese, w.agoue,. swings, slides, pedal tem, balls, and jumping. ropes are 'all exercising and tractive place when it is furnished witlia door, one Or two windows and a parch. Furnishing the playhouse is constructive play and 9 develops the - Then it is for parents not to starve, 'the Mental development of their claild-e ren to feed their physical development; for a fifty,fifty balance is essential for the normal growth of our boys and CHOLERA INFANTUIVI Cholera hafantuni is one of the fatal ailments of childhood. a -trouble that.comes on ,suddenly, esPecially dur- ing the summer menthe and unless prompt action is taken the little one fhay soon be beyond aid. Baby's Own Tablets are ark ideal medicine in ward- ing off"this trouble. They regulate the bowels aad sweeten the stomaeh and thee preveritthe dreaded summer com- plaints. They are an absolute safe medicine, being guaranteed to -contain neither opiates nor narcotics or other harmful drugs. They -cannot possibly do harm—they always do good. The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. <, The Cornet. • The cornet is a very ancient instru- ment, but: not the cornet as it. now known. It was aiiade of wood, usually covered with jeather—some were of horn—its mouthpiece was of ivory or hardwood and its tube and six holes for the fingers, with two anderneath for the thumbs. Its date is unknown, but mention of it is found in a Psalter of the year A.D., 1000; and, the Har- • leian manuscript gives a list oa Henry musical instruments, from whiost we learn that the cornet was known by the name of gitteroune. The metal cornet, or coniet-a-pistons, as we now know it, is very modern, and dates from about the year e825. It was never intended to_be a rival of the trumpet eta tolie g much coarser and less musical. The great classical and symphonic coxnposers have not in- cluded a in their orthestras. / 41' Kind oOld Squire—"Bless My soul, IVIirandy, where did. you get that awful bruise on your cheek?" handy—"We-all had a pahty last enenine and Ah was kicked in the face by a gentleman friend." The first white woman to enter the forbidden City a Lhasa, Tibet, has just returue,d to Paris. Thi e intrepid Frenchwoman made the journey to ,Lhasa on foot, dressed as a native beggar, eind accox.npanied only by -a young Tibetat. Not, until 1840 were watches 'suc- cessfully made by rnaehinery. WE WANT CHURNING We supply cans arid opay express charges, We pay daily by express money orders, which nail be caShed anyWhere withont any charge. To obtain the top price, Crearn tenet be free from bad .fitiVers and contain not less than 30 per ceet Butter' Fat • Bowes Company Limited, Toronto Pee refereeees---eiettd Office, Toresito, Batifof itootrOai font' local bankela stabliehee for over thirty years. - Where Skill Beats Strength. "-There are many examples in natural history of skill overcoming sheer'brute • strength, and there is on illustration of .edueated 4inctinet which combs very near to human skill. This is ,the collie deg, which by hereditary and acquired skill, is•capable. not only of controlling the meeements of flocks of sheep and herd e of cattle which, as regards brute strength, are infinitely superior. to itself, but is -further able to count theherd'or fiook"and discover if.on,e is missing from it. Cases are on record in which collies, missing one out of a flock of seeep, have gene beek, and either hunted it up ca. found it dead. This is certainly the. nearest approach to human skill exhibited in. the animal kingdom. In the jungles of India there are monkeys who are able by means or something like human skill to take hold of snakes which could easily kill or crush them, in such a fashion that the reptiles cannot strike with their fangs. The Monkeys then hit the snakes' heads -against stones Or trees until they are dead oe stunned. A still more curious fact is that the monkey.s only do,this when they know. they are 'within reach of a herb which frequently proves an antidote to the bite of the •particular snake they at- tack.„‘ ' Of marine animals the whale is phy- sically the most powerful. Its most determined enemy is the thrasher, 'a fish ofeanuch inferior strength, which, by superior skill in attack, freqnentlY comes off victor. There is also a kind of shark which arranges its attacks so skilfully that it will wound to death e • whale which could kill itwith a. single stroke of its flukes. The Longest Way Round, etc. "How is it you always slice over in- to the Wood.s from the ninth tee?"' "You don't know how to hold your .club yet." "No, that's ,not it. You 'dont know my partner." " He Had Grit. Intpector (t6e0rietable who has juist brotight in a prisoner)—"Soahis is the fellow who s,tele the wagon -load of sand. Did you get the sand?" - Policeintin—"No." , "Search him!" • notiee displayed in a Nvw- York restau,rant; "Do not look upon our kniVet and forks as medicine; they are' riot to be taken ,after vitals." Minard's Liniment tor Acheand Pains cae find lying about—clot e engine- sess on., men-ewhich les •can readily turn into cash at the 'stores of aa dockside "fence". •, • BUt te 'get his few quarters' worth of oacis and ends., he will ,wantonly des - trey 113.447 dollars' worth of' valuable • fittinga and locks. Rarer, but infinitely more dangerous, is the cracksMan'who,preys upon ships just as the city law -breakers' preymp- on jewellers' shops .and hotels. knows the "lay" of the vessel, and moreover, is pcssetised of a Pass _or master key which will open any lock on the ship. • He has- an almost eneanne know- ledge of the movements of the ship's °hiders, and, it doesn't take him Jong to' find the valuable papers and 'trin- kets they leave behind in their locked.. cabins. SOmetimes he has to be con- tent with jewellery, small sums of money, nautical instruments, and other portable articles. But now and again he secures a nice haul. But 'whether the thief be an expert burglar or a paltry pickpocket, his theft may mean the dismissal of the ship's wwatchina.n. So it isal surpris. ing, therefore, that when a crook does happen to step out of a cabin into the hands of a waiting watchman, he has a very rough aye minutes. .Probably the °greatest- difficulty which faces, the ship -s watchman and the dock detective is that of combat- ing Ithe rope thief, especiallY in an Enge lish harbor. • • Rop,e.is very valuable. 61drope is eagerly bought for use in paper -mak ing, For a short length of thick hawse rope .an unscrupulous' dealer will give a thief ,eee much as seven dollars. The rope thief steals 'nothing -but shie's ropes. Tow ropes, lashings, feels—there is no laek af cordage on the deck of a vessel in dock. He works only at night. Under Fier of darkness he rows Out into the river. Little fisher boati pass so frequently that his small tub attracts no atten- tion. He draws...alongside his quarry. With a sharp knife he cuts lengths from any rope hanging eyer the ship's side. He has his 9wn monkey methods of getting on deck. And he will steal rope even if he has to ell* • anchoi• chain!—W. J. H. A Fear That Does a Lot of Harm. A doctor deolared recently that if he wiehed to be literally accurate when he filled up a death certificate he should, in scores of cases, put the "Muse ge Death" as "Fear of Death." He had in mind not so much those who were ill as those who were well. So many people, when they reach, middle age, begin,to feel afraid. They ought to be quite happy really, for they have passed the "danger period," and, accidents and the like barred. there 'Ls no reasott why they shouldn't live for another thirty years or more, But this type of feareernentally esti- mating the years ahead, and so bia— seizes them, and then their days are munb ered--s elf -numb ered. - • Push fear from you. • Refuse it ad- mission to your mind. Be cheerful. Remember that we are all living ever so much longer nowadays. ees a mere matter -of rtrithmetic you may be getting older, but what does that matter so long as you keep young in epirit, and inhope? • • You'll. be -just as old as you allow yourself to be. And you'll be very old, and quickie, if you permit fear, to get a Meting. Keep it away. • Surgeone have repeatedly told us that the will to live has pulled hun- dreds through the after-effects �f a severe opera -lion. And ifethe will to live is so effective then-, it should be a hundred Ulnas more effeetive when there is nothing the matter with us. Most of us have met the type -of cheerful oia ,country dame who at GO declares she's going to see 70 ell right, aad at 70 laughs and says she's going on to 80 and at 80 braces herself for 00—and wins! She doesn't know what "fear" is. Nor need you. , Take care of youfself and the years will take care of thernselv s. • Ring for-Sedelal German Service, • The "German , Ring, . has been erea,ted, as a new distinetiOn by the Foreign German Institute. Thia fingee- ring is to be acce,rded every year to Buell a person, who has Merited the (las, tinction by rens,* of having served the German cause abrOad in some_ ape - dal form. ; 4• Cloeks are responsthle for a great, dea ef ThatrittIQ al info1ieity. What this country needs is it ebock that will gO very, very goVe afOr 9 p.m., and, then catch up with the right time' an hout or so after the alleged head of the family comes home from the lodge. e co ori s s foundee a proviteial government, and after many ware, the independence or the ceuntry was Acknowledged by Spain. But for fifty year,s after that Argen- tina, was toastantly disturbed by revo- lutions, civil wars, and riots. These disturbances,' ihough, came to an end smile forty years ago, and now Argen- tina is politicelly settled and commer- cially prosperous. • The visit ef the Prince coincides, with .the Centenary of the first, and eon_ exitink Comeneecial Treaty made between Great Britain and the "United Provinces of the River Plate," as the Argentina, was called. a hundred years age.• • The" Treaty confirmed Britain's, 'm- et:ignition of theyoung republic as a sovereign state, and for this Argen- tina has always respected Great Bri- tain. Consequently the Prince re- ceived a righebroyal reception. , Star:Gazers' G.H.Q. The twb hundred and fiftieth' anni- versary of the founding of the Royal Obseaatory in Greenwich Park will shortly be celebrated. It was not 'founded for astronomical work in the breathlessness, that afflict women and usual sense of that term, but for the make her daily life a torture. To get new health and strength the blood must be enriched. What Dr. Williams' Pink Pills do in cases of this kind is told by Mrs. Augusta Emery, Wool - ford Station, Alta., who says: "Living on the prairie, inel knowing that there are thousands of women like myself miles away from a doctor, I want to tell them what Dr. Williams' Pink Pills live as you -would learn to lay bricks or carve statues or manage a farm. But at bettom life is not so much a city a .thief was die-coverecl,. not long ago, robbiug on.e of the trees of its luscious eruit. The owner, a hasty, task ite it is art opportunity. We are Passionate man, promptly shot him, full of forces. Nature ineans us to and the man fell from the top of 4 In I(YftY palm to the ground. He was tar- clie'tateathem; the functimihig of ried away to the Christian hospital, these forces we end pleasure, - with a, bullet in .his body, a broken arm It is not enough, however, to say that we are merely to, follow and a shattered leg. Cin his way he our own ha 'stincts. We have something else be- begged to be put beneath a Moslem ides instincts. We 'have brains. Rea - roof, even if it were a erison, rather son riticises and constantly improves ;s than be left iii the clutches of dogs of c the quality of lee. Thus the natural infidels. Bet as he was it criminal, forces in us become refined and pro- his eiptors paid 320 attention to his 'duce sepleasure we calrhigher because wiehes, It is most lasting and wider in its A t utnild,elransP iataniae shtic,ac ttheeysPeeexclitlrypl scopehimunder an Frank Crane. ' teidt the bullet, eet his broken limbs, and • - • - before long he was comfortably settled THE ONE SURE WAYon a palm -fabric cot, trussed up with dressings, butaelive and likely to get 11 For along time he was yea- TO:GOOD HEALTH wsueSpiOuS And surly and would -has: Is Keeping the Blood Pure by Using Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Impure, weak blood is the cause of most of the troubles that afflict people. This is the cause of the wretched, led - Ing of languor and fainteess, pains in the back -and side, headaches and _practical business of enabling seamen to have correct 'tables for the purpose of finding their longitude or angular distances -east or west from a standard meridian (as that of Greenveich to the meridian ofay place, reckoned to 180 -degrees, East or West. In 1675 a French scientist devised tables based on the movement of the moon, • but King Charles` II. decided have done for me. After my first baby that English seamen should -have their was born I seemed to have little - energy. I felt weaaY a'nd, run-down and unable to do even the, ordinary hoiesee hold duties. ' I felt I needed a tonic and as I had long seen Dr. Williams' Pink Pills advertised I `decided try them. I got a supply and "carefully foe lowee the, directions and beeere yery long the Jesuit was wonderful. Day by day I regained my fernier .strength and energy. The pills seemed to give me a keen appetite and I gained in weight. and soon was able not only- to basis, and indulgence in both produce do my work about the house but to marked ill-effects on the body, says e I help with many chores on the farm. writer in "The Times." Sir James For this reason I would advise women, Paget and Dr. Marchison, for example, particularly those on the prairie or the considered that Protracted grief and : farm, to keep a supply of these tells anxiety were the 'cause of cancer in I always on hand. One trial will eon - certain organs of the body. Farther vince you of their worth. I have re- investigations into this subject tend to I commended them to many of my prove the truth Of their assumptions. Anger, which likeagrief, is a mental quality, is known to provoke indiges- tion, headaches, and neuralgia. Seek- ing relief in tears, therefore, when the feeling of anger is sought to be over- come. would be tantamount to jimping from the frying -pan into the fire. Both anger and grief, therefore,. ought to be shunned by all right-thinking peo- ple, aad this modern applied psychol- ogy teaches one how to do it. - oivn tables, and John Flamsteed was appointed' Astrciaomer Royal at £100 a year. Sir Cliristopeer Wren pro- posed Greenwich Castle as a suitable site for the observatory. The founda- time seine wee laid on August 10th, 167e,,and " theehuilcling was first occu- "pielleby'FlatneetiedienTely 10the 167e. Perils of 'Anger. Beth anger and grief have a mental The Latest -Bulletin. "Sorry to say' my sester has had rather a bad accident. She's been bit- ten' by an adder." "Good gracious! An adder? Where was this?" • "Well, perhaps, not, exactly an add. er, but she got her fingers mixed up in the machinery of the cash register." "Dear, dear! Is she getting better?" "Well, the latest report is 'no change'." • Mohair goods in the dress line are made from goatee hair. • friends end never have they fallee to produce good results:" You can get these pills from your druggiet, or by mail at,50 cents a box from The Dr. Williams,' Medicine Co„ Brockville, Ont. A Dire Threat. e • Fly Lover—"Refuse me and I will alight on yonbald pate, and permit nieself to be crushed by a slap!" "I didn't mind her calling me ill- egible, Mrs. rown," said the irate woman, "but when she starting cast- ing asparagus on my eisband's char- 'acter I 'ad to take notice." • Tlig'...MEREpANTS' CORNER little' to say to the missionary when- ever ee attempted to converse with him. But gradually he yielded to the kind treatment he received and one day he astonished the miesionary with the rernarkee'This is a miracle! It's a place of miracles!" "We, deal," replied the missionary, "with much more difficult cases than youre, Ibrahim. You. should see S03220 of them." "Ah! That is not my meaning," re- , plied the man. "As I have been leing , here 1 have seen rick men come to the door of this hospital and offer jewee3 even to half 'their wealtlh to the sur- geon to •CO/Ili3 and attend their wives and children; but always he says, 'The poor must eome fine; and he who _might be ,So rich slaves here in the heat night and day for wretches like ma who canegive him nothing. That a miracle!" Indeed, se touched. was Ibrahim by the loiringisacrifice of his new friends tkat he simply lia,d to be turned away from the hospital when he was re- covered. But what can I do for you,sir?" he, begged. "Is there nothing I can do? " "Yes," replied the surgeon, "send me some more patients." "Allah!" cried Ibrahim. !Slere is a man who might have all the world if he asked for it, and all he wants is more work. You are a miracle, sir! But I will do something for you. Do you like dates, sir?" "Yes, ,I like the dates," said the sur- geo,Then,szirilsing; let me know when you ,feoricila _ you!" want some, and always steal them or and the surgeon ,shook- their' heads over their patient, as he ltft them, and one remarked to the cithee, "Another miracle is wanted there, but evidently we've made some impression. Let us have hope that the rest will come in time." Minard's Liniment for Corns and Warta • Some Consolation. "Well, Mrs, John -sing," announced the colored physician, after taking her husband's temperature, "Ah has knock- ed de fever out of him. Dat's one good there' "Sho 'nuff," was ,the excited reply. "Does dat mean dat he's' gwirie git well, den?". "No," replied the doctor, "dey's rio hope fo' him; but you has de saliefrac- tion ob knewin' that he died cured." Silk probably is the most precious commodity, weight for weight, except- ing gold and silver bullion; that is carried on a large scale by commerce. It is Usually sent on a special train, which will -carry $5,000;000 worth. The ugly little silk -worm is treated with respect in the Orient, for it brings to the eastern people a fortune every year. The Advertising Appropriation. • 5eAvaitte The advertising .appropriation is a portant as making many Sales. Mak-, Ing Many Sales quickly is maximum percentage of annu.al eale. Logically asp. djustly then it ehould be expended merchandising success. ieThen we. speak of a Sale we mean throughout tho entire year. And the a transaction with e profit. 'Orlerwise sounest business reasons justify a merchant in advertising regularly each week. gesulta prove the profit of it. -Sales are made every clay—in season and out of season—in good times an,d Itt ba thneo The Wee in businese is to make Sales, The idea in Advertis- ing is to increase. the number- of Sales. TheSale is the CRUtt of the whole basine,ss, Everything else that j done Is merele leediekup to The Sale- Until the Sele 15 made there is no profit— no money in rtumirig a husinees. Up to that point everything is expense -- money laid ,,put la Order to make tacit money make money. The longer the'Sale is in coming, the greater the eXpense. Every da3r chandise Tdmains in the. store adds to , its coat, The carrying charge can easily become a wcirni that blights profit. Making Sales qdielrtyis as nu - it is a gift Yee don't have your profit from d Salel until you get the- money for the merchandise fropi the cue - tomer. T.Intil the money is in hand, yonhave your profit to cellect, Are made in the store:, The ,eristemer unripe in, picks out the. mer- chantlie,„ Tau •aWrap..lt np, take hie meney, hand it to hint Or deliver the Merchandise. :flirt!' then the' trane- action With a prOfit is not complete. Obviously then yore must get people • into, tee -store itt order to sell them. • Advertising' geti• peopile Tete the store---givez Yeti,' OpPOitimity to Mae° a ate. 119ire oppOrtttnitlea and better ()nee. That is wily" you adVertise. • eetiven• tising brings meee people intb the store—and more of them oftener, Ana Adeertieleg works all tlie timo 1 you let it. Say "Bayer" - Insist! For Colds Headache Neuralgia Rheumatism Lumbago Pain • Accept only ,a ay er package Inew.otalooneto vozo. which contaitis. proven drrections Handy "Bitye' boxes Of 12 tablets .A.Iso bottles of 24 and 100-1)raggiats I Asplrla iix 'Ma trade mark (reglaterml lrt (xnettatk) of' Boos ainikeexttere of mace acetloaciaosier el Salferlicacki. •, Classified Advertiseme• , INGOMPARABLE SILVER PDXR$ L°Trzuffro 01:J1111,1"Z rorrularguntlera4.VA8TIla inall rig' ram, Stualturakta, Prime, idmard raw). Sentence Sermons. Woe Unto—The Man who thinks God Is not wetching him, —The youth who has never learned from old age. —The boy who thinks his troubles ell arise from crank e teachers. .—The girl who comes to know more than her mother, --The friend- who tbinke friendship must be proved by constant catidor. —The teaclier who judges his werle by what he does for 'Itis brightest pupil. • The first daily paper published in England was the ".`Dally Courant," the first number of which appeared on March 11.th, 1702. It was "printed by E. Mallet, against the Ditch at Fleet leridge." Use 'UMW EYES ILTUTATED BY SUN,WIND,DUST s&CINDEkS ANOMENDED G. SOLD BY DRUgGtSTS &OPTIMUM WAITS VOA MEI, EY6 CAV.Z HOOK NIVAINS CO.CISICAOCSV# For Warts Apply Minard's freely and often and wat•ch them -disappear. Have You Pimples Or A Clear Smooth Shin? If you wish a skin clear of pim- ples, blackheads and other an- noying eruptions begin today the regular use of Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment. No other method is so agreeable, so often effec- tive and so economical. Sample Simi Pres by 73faiL Address Collodion Depoti, 'Stegaboose, Ltd, Montreal." ?me, Sop 25e, Oartment 25 and 50e. Talcum 25e. OW— Cuticura Shaving Stick 28c. BETTEWIN EVERY WAY After Taking Lydia E. Pink. ham's Vegetable Compound Ingomar, N. S.—"I took your medi- cine for a run-down condition and inward troubles. 1 had pains in my right side so bad at times that I could not walk any .distance. I saw about Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound in tho newspapers and have teken five bottles of it. I am better in every way and you can use thy' letter to help._ other women," — Mrs. ALVITA M. VERRY. Iagomar, N. S. Nervous Brea.kdown Relieved Toronto, Ontario. —"It is pretty hard to explain. or feelings in nervous troubles. I felt low spirited, had pains in my head and eyes, always cryinv and did not want to go anywhere. I do knitting and fancy work, and I would get imtable aftor few minutes of work. t have been ia Canada five yeare and have been, this, war ever since I came. I ani taking 'Lydia E. Pinkliam'a Vegetabledorimo.drikand I sleep hotter and it seems 'be melee rile oat, and I must say I am feelingreore jolly1, -have great faith in' in your medicine because of what it has done for My husband's sister and she recommended 4 to me."' —14rs. A. 8urrH, 10 ureigh Avenue, Todmorden, Toronto, Ontario. , ' All druggiate sell this dbxdnh1omod- idine, and women sufforiNt from these troubles so corninon to there eels tillotrie give it a trial ua,r.3 ISSUtt No. tri --;...01