Loading...
Exeter Times, 1909-03-25, Page 6.o OO YOU Nr / FOLKS 0.0-00000 A RAINY-i)AY JOURNEY. "Why, dearies," said Aunt Ber- tha, as she came into the nursery and found the three children with solemn little faces pressed against the rain -spattered window -pane, "have you yet to learn that it can be sunny, within if it is rainy out- side 1" "If this was the last day of your vacation, and it had rained most every day, I guess you wouldn't say that," said i3obby, the eldest of the trio. "When I was ten years old, 1 presume I wouldn't have said so," replied Aunt Bertha, "but I have learned since that we can make the sun shine for us almost always if we are only willing to try. How would you like to go on a. pleasure trip?" She was smiling brightly. "In the rain?" asked the three, in surprise. "Why, Aunt Bertha! How could we go out?" "Oh, the rain won't affect us in the least. We shall not even need rubbers or umbrcillas," she an- swered, laughing. "You may put on your rubber boots, Bobby, and run over and ask your playmates to -come and travel with you, if you wish." Bobby looked rather doubtful, but he went and soon five children were watching aunty stitch up four long strips of brown paper on the machine. This she divided into five booklets. Next she brought a pile of old magazines, several pairs of scissors, and some paste and brushes. "Now," she said, "you may all travel just where you wish. These magazines are full of pictures taken in interesting countries all over the world. Wherever you decide to visit, just find all the pictures you can that have any connection with the place, and paste them in your little books, and you will havo much of the pleasure and excite- ment of a real journey, with none of its dangers and discomforts. 1 will leave you for a little while now, and when I come back I shall expect to find you all home again, safe and happy." How quickly tho next two hours passed, and how busy the little Lrains and fingers were! Bobby went to California. His first picture was of the "Sunset Limited," the train in which ho chose to cross t.lto continent. There were views of Western cities that he passed through; and when he reached the sunny land ho filled his booklet with scenes in tho great harbor on the Pacific coast, pic- ttures of wonderful flowers and fruits that grow only under south- ern skies, photographs taken at an ostrich -farm, and many other things of interest, until the last leaf of the journey -book was cov- ered. Elsa went to Japan, and she col- lected pictures of bamboo houses and Japanese children with cherry - blossoms and butterflies. Everybody journeyed somewhere. When Aunt Bertha came in again, she brought a big plate of sugar jumbles, and the way the cookies disappeared proved that each little traveller had returned in good health with a good appetite. — Youth's Companion. SENTENCE SERMONS. Practice is the one preservative of religion. Austerity to a thief is no evidence of honesty. flitting still is always the most trying situation in life. When love lies it is better than when hatred tells all the truth. Love has a language the deaf can hear and the dumb can speak. The hest evidence of a healthy soul is its hunger for work to do. Every man must buy the riches of experience with hie own coin. No pian can own any more than ho can carry in his own heart. No than can take iniquity into his creed and keep it out of his char- acter. No prayer meeting is long enough that does not reach to the market itlnce. The things you really stand for are revealed to those you run after. There never is room at the top for the man who thinks it was built only for one. The man who Hasn't the rigor to be vicious usually prides himself on his virtues. The welfnre cf the world may de- pend partly on whether you can whistle in the rain. Most users of sarcasm think more of its Pound than of the sonic. it might render. Some of the virtues of our friends grow out of the graves where we have hnried their faults. Too many when they attempt to leave their sins make the mistake 4f holding farewell meetings. Our example when we are on parade has no influence at all com- pared to the effect of our everyday living. You may hnve a right to your nen sorrows, but you have no right to throw their shadows in another's wad. THE REMINDERS OF RHEUMATISM Sold. Wit Weather Starts the Fain But the Trouble is in the Blood. Cold, damp weather brings on the twinges and pains of rheuma- tism, but is not the real cause of the complaint. The trouble is root- ed in the blood and can only be cured by enriching the blood and driving the poisonous acid nut of the system. This is a great, medi- cal truth, which every rheumatic sufferer should realize. Linimedts and outward applications can't cure the trouble—they can't reacn the blood. The sufferer is only wasting valuable time and good money in experimenting with this sort of treatment—and all the time the trouble is becoming more firmly rooted, --harder to cure. There is just one sure way to cure sheuma- tism—Dr. Williams' Pink Pi113 They act directly on tho impure-, weak blood. They purify and strengthen it, and so root out the cause of rheumatism. Mrs. S. Bailey, Newcastle Creek N.B., says :—"In the summer of 1900 I became lame in my ankles, but thinking I would soon get eve: the attack I did not seek medi eat aid. but used liniments to ally t'ie pain and swelling. Instead of get- ting better the trouble increased and I then consulted a doctor wh pronounced it articular rheuma- tism, and treated me for this trou• ble. Instead of getting better the pain and tho swelling became worse until I was hardly able to hobote about the house. On rising in the morning I was unable to bear ins weight, except with extreme pain. Having tried so much medicine without benefit I began to think I was doomed to be a cripple. One day a cousin advised ine to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. She said, 'I take them every spring as a tonic for my blood, and they make a new person of inc.' After somo persuasion I decided to try them. I had taken three or four boxes before I noticed any chau e, and then it seethed my ankles were less painful. By the time i hats used a few more boxes there was a wonderful improvement in my eel- dition. Not only did my ankles get well, but I felt like a different woman and had not, been as well in years. In speaking of this t-' a doctor afterward he said that no doubt 1)r. Williams' Pink Pills had enriched the blood thus driv- ing out the painful disease." Not only rheumatic sufferers, but all who have any trouble due to weak, watery blood or impure blood can find a cure through the fair use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Sold by all medicine dealers shows this young Canadian Com - or by mail at 50 cents abox or 'i:c pang to be in an exceptionally boxes for 82.50 from Tho Dr. Wil- strong position at the close of the liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, year's business. The management of the Company its to be heartily congratulated on the progress made in the past year and the growth and splendid standing of the Com- pany maintains its previous praise- worthy traditions. It is a very noteworthy fact that the death rate in the past year was 44 per cent. less than expected, and 9 per cent. less than the previ- ous year, which shows very care- ful selection of risks. Expenses have also decreased 6% per cent., illustrating watchful management. ,,umber of her friends determined The increase of insurance in SET A VITROL TRAP. French I'atr's Cruel Scheme Catch a Thier. Owing to the shortcomings clings of French servants, numeraus fa:u.lies in Pais are giving up housekeep- ing and adopting the plan of tak- ing apartments in residential ho- tels. Conflicts between servants and their mistresses make ever-increas- ing demands on the time of the Judges of the Civil and Criminal Courts in Paris. A few days ago a man and his wife living in the Rue de la Grosse Ilorloge, in Rouen, suspecting their domestic of dishonesty, laid an abominab'e trap. In a metal cash- box they phued a shallow vessel containing vide'. They then fixed n spiral spring inside the box and locked it. Next Morning the ser- vant, seeing no one about, opened urinary troubles is the glad news the box with a duplicate key. The that Joseph Pelrine, a well-known lid sprang open and she was cruelly burned by the vitrol. Her employers had her arrested, and in her rooni the police found to1Need no Longer Fear the Knife Gravel Easily and Naturally Cured by Dodd's Kidney Pills. Joseph Pekin* who Suffered th. Tortures of thls Terrible Complaint for Nine Months tells how the old Reliable Kid- ney Remedy Cured Him. Port helix East, Guysboro Co., N.S., March 22 (Special). — That you need no longer fear the knife if troubled with gravel or other young fisherman here is telling his friends. "I suffered intense pain from gravel and other urinary troubles over £70 in cash, a superb pair of for nine months," Mr. Pelrine earrings, a gold watch and chain, and a handsome necklace. The jewellery is supposed to have been stolen from previous employers. —4. SUDAN AI{ -ABS' DUELS. Pastoral Life Doesn't Always Lead to Peace and Quiet. The ccuntry to the southeast of Tekar is the home of the Hasas; the Hadendoas occupy the khors to the southwest. Both of these aro black Arabs, speaking different langu- ages. The Hasas live almost, entirely on sour milk, while the Iladendoas are agricultural as well as pastoral. Their dokhn and durra, milletliko grains, were ripening in February and being protected from count- less swarms of small birds by men who stood on elevated platfor►n%, from which they cracked loudly large whips with palm leaf lashes twenty feet long. The dress cf these Arabs is a cot- ton sheet hell in by a belt in which they carry crooked knives. For other weapons they use sticks, spears and swords. Firearms are prohibited. Judging by the many scars borne by the men the pas- toral life is by no means so peace- ful as the poets would lead us to think. Many of the scars come from duels, in which the inen stand face to face and cut each other al- ternately in the back till one cries "Enough r" CONSERVATIVE PROGRESS Annual Report of the Excelsior Insurance Conipany. The annual statement of the Ex- celsior Life Insurance Company. which is published in this paper, Ont. d•— THE ENGLISH COMPLEXION. The Despair of the Smart Ladies In Paris. Outdoor exercise and the "sim- ple Iifo" are for the nionient the fad of the fashionable Parisienne. A leading French actress when recently in London so greatly ad- mired the complexions of the Eng- lishwomen she saw that she and a to cultivate, by moans of walking force amounting to 10 per cent., and plain living, "English cons- and the addition of 10 per cent to Flexions." assets and 17 per cent to income The experiment is declared to undoubtedly show a most commend - have had wonderful effects, and able activity coupled with a wise now every fine morning one may conservatism. deo quite a number of ladies, both of the theatrical and social worlds, indulging in "footing" round tho lakes in the Bois de Bout gas.. Seine of the more athletic have adopted a practical costume resembling that worn by lady mountaineers. Stout, square -toed boots are con- sidered necessary for "footing," and veils are discarded. Together with the morning walk, the morning cold "tub" is an Eng- lish custom more and more widely! practised. If it rains, seekers af- ter a "Driesti complexion" indulge in gymnastics at home. The de- votees of the new fall dispense with the now more than ever fash- ionable corset during their morn- ing exercise. 4-0-4-0404-04-0+0+04-(s+0+040 DOES NOT NEED A DOCTOR Mrs. 1'. Posies, Valieyrield, • Que., says:— "I always use I3ahy's Own Tablets for my little one, and therefore never need a doctor. When my baby is feverish or rest- less I give her a Tablet and in a couple of hours she is all right. They have been of the greatest benefit to her when teething, and are just • the thing in all emergencies. ' These Tablets promptly cure colic, indigestion, constipa- • tion. diarrhoea, destroy worms, break up colds, and make teething easy. (load for children of all ages. Mold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cent% a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine (.'o., liroekville, (int. 44'4ot 434044>400a+e40 +,4.', e says. "But seven boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills cured ins completely. 1 heartily recommend Dodd's Kid- ney Pills to anyone wha is suffer- ing from gravel or urinary trou- bles." Dodd's Kidney Pills cure gravel by curing the kidneys. The urin- ary organs are entirely dependent on the kidneys. if the kidneys are not in good working order they cannot filter out the uric acid and it combines with other products of the body and causes gravel. Heal- thy kidneys dissolve the stones and they pass off in the urine. That's why Dodd's Kidney Pills always cure gravel. d: "Your dead husband wor a good man," declared the sympathetic Mrs. Casey to the bereaved widow. "He wor !" exctaiined Mrs. Mur- phy, dashing the tears from her eyes. "No two policetnin cud handle him." Repeat it:-•'Bhiloh's Cure will always cure my coughs and colda." "And now that you are of age," said tho anxious father, "I want to give you a few pointers on how to keep money." "Say, dad," re- joined the son of his father, "hadn't you better begin by giv- ing me a few pointers on how to get it 1" Pills That Have Benefitted Thou- sands.—Known far and near as a sure' remedy in the treatment of indigestion and all derangements of the stomach, liver and kidneys, Parinelee's Vegetable Pills have brought relief to thousands when other specifics have failed. In- numerable testimonials can be produced to establish the truth of this assertion. Once tried they will be found superior to all other pills in tho treatment of the ail- ments for which they are pre- scribed. Lady—"Do you know where Johnny Tucker lives, my little boy 1" Little Boy—"Ho ain't home, but if you give me a penny I'll find him for you." Lady --"All right. Now, where is he?" Little Boy—"Thanks. I'mn him." Repeat it:-'M',lloh'e Cure will always cure my eon gill and colda." COMING DOWN. Mrs. Parvenu—"Oh, yes—we can trace our ancestry back--to—to— well, I don't know who, but we've been descending centuries." Repeat it; Shiloh 'a Cure will always ours my coughs and colds." "What a grasping fellow you are, Hawkins! You've bothered me about this hill fifty times in ten days." "You wrong nte, Jarley. Um not grasping. I've bothered you about the bill, I admit, but I haven't been able to grasp anything yet." --- If a cough snakes your nights sleepless and weary, it will worry you a geed deal, and with good cause. To dispel the worry and give yourself rest try L'icklu's Anti - Consumptive Syrup. It exerts a soothing influence on the air pas- sages and allays the irritation that leads to inflammation. It will sub- due the most stubborn cough or cold, and eventually eradicate it from the system, as a trial of it will prove to you. Mrs. Gramercy—"What do we need for dinner?" Bridget—"Shure mum, I tripped over the rug an' we need a new set of dishes." Shildren wilt Co Sleighing. They came bum Slavered with snow.a temp ninjul of Pahl. killer in hot awe tens lawater will prevent any 111 effects. Aveid suhditut+, there is but one 'Painkiller "-ferry Las is -25c. and 50o. Many a man who knows what not to say hasn't sense enough not to say it. Repeat it:-"Shtloh's rare will always cure my coughs and colds." EASY. Mrs. Flynn—An' phat's yer son Moike doin' now, Mrs. Casey? Mrs. Casey—Shure, Moike ain't doin' anything, Mrs. Flynn. He's got a Government job! A Woman's Sympathy Aro you discouraged? Is your doctor's bill a heavy Enancial load? Is your pain a heavy physical burden? I know what theso mean to delicate women—I have been discouraged. too: but learned how to cure myself. I want to relieve your bur- dens. Wti not end the pain and stop the doctor's bill? I can do this for you and will 1f you will assist me. All you need do 1s to write for a free ioi of the remedy which has been placed In my hands to11be given away. Perhaps Th. Excelsior LifeInsurance Comeau HSaOOiil:! IXORLSIORLI/e BUILD1NO, TORONTO Business for 1908 Most Satlsfautory Insuranoe In force, - Iuerease 91.079, 43.3 RAI New insurance Written, Increav 93 9,7211.00. Assets for Security of Policyholders, t r.C. CLAM 9217,(26.7/. lr. ro..+e 185,291.041. Cash lne)me Res:rvo Funds Ever Experienz $12 230,OSs.10 2.453 008.03 • 2,020,'02.72 ..464,790.84 - - 1,485,664.03 1n siding SVecisl Ke.erre 559 997.66. Surplu3 on Pouoyholders' Acco.int, - - 189 418.55 INOar.AN to - lesurance in force iu per rent . Assets 18 per cent., Income 27 per ,ens . Ile•.' Is par co_rt., Not ,iurp.ui t.3 pa: ce it. O!ORtA$Z$ -Dellis Rote 44 per rest le.+ (taut ospe_to I, 9per cent. less t.:+n prrcr•iiu; • aspenie nti , 6 s par cent. EIT[RIST IKO14s.--11,,e than sulhcisnt 1. pay Death Losses and .11 ei,,anees of a.copp• ly ss.c.ptin Aso lie 1t:arc 11(i/6nte. Intare.t earns on wain Net As et. 6.71 per cent. A Cosa Oomaany to Insure with, Oesseq.ently a Good Oampany for Argenta to !twos. lawaszati WHY DO So many Institutions devoted to the higher Edu- cation select Bell pianos? The fact that they do ad prefe1r the Bell is evidence of distinct merit 1 One IolLow'f profrsswnal advice in acguirin7 on education. why not iJ 1, w ,.micas:.,cal .uelom in buyt..,l reit pianos? l he only panes with the llicnitable C�tck fir peattng Ausoa. j4 E?; LL*14416 Least for (free) C';ttal,gtte \u. 73. The EELL PIANO WOrganCo., larnired GUE.LPH.ONTARlOs 1 AO ,Nrite for Weekly Price Lists. JOHN HaLLAM - HAW Shipments Solicited. TORONTO, ONT. r -e TOO MUCH ROOM. At first sight it would seem it must be an unreasonable who would find fault w•it.t a. house because it had one more room than was mentioned in the advertise- ment; but first sight is not always this one box w•f cure )-ou— t ns oneeo, tor othrre if so I I ... I be h•tppy and i best. sight. An estate agent sent that man you will ho cured for 2c (the cost of a i a customer to look at a five -roomed 'postage stamp). Your letters held conn-' denttallyy. Write to -day for my free tre-'t- I house, that being just the size he wont. AIRS. F. 10 CURRAli. Windsor. Ont. I professed to want. The house — 1proved to be sadly out of repair, "Tho house that you finished a, and the prospective tenant went few week3 ago is the biggest of the back to the agent's office. lot," said the real-estate agent. "Perhaps that's why it's so hard to find a tenant." "Yes," cd the builder; "it's last leased." answer - but not Its Power Grows with Age. — How many medicines loudly blaz- oned as panaceas for all human ills have come and gone since Dr. Thomas' Ecleetric Oil was first put upon the market 1 Yet it rennins, doing more good to humanity than many a preparation more highly vaunted and extending its virtues wider and wider and in a larger circle every year. It, is the medi- cine of the masses. The fellow who begs a girl for a lock of her hair doesn't necessar- ily turn thief just because he picks a luck. Run over the list of your friends There is No Such Thing as a harmless cough. and you will be surprised at the Tho trouble g• e. fr it had t•' war.•. unte.a eherl,. f e . Aflen'a fuug Ital•atn tole, Rha wont ut number you could dispense with. - suite. 11 allays iuilainwstlun and clean the alt __ —— — - , passage+. A Nagging Cough drltee sleep ant *confer, Brown—"I hear you are the hap - the chewer, \on can amgner 0 with Alen's'tams which relieves h.r l bre.0 Ling, pain la „ shut and irritative ill the throat. (lite lb py father of twins?" Jones—"You emelt tuthe chilliest. aro mistaken. I am the father of twins." .H The successful man is the fiat to People who are too old to learn recognize his own mistakes. have outlived their usefulness. -- A Pill That is Prized.—There Reheat it. - "phtloh'a r'urew111 always have been many pills put upon the market and pressed upon public at- tention, but none has endured so We have our opportunities. but long or met with so much favor as most of us manage to dredge them. Par►nelee's Vegetable Pills. Wide- spread use of them has attested Ns Suhetttute n, "The 11 & t." Menthol Plater, their great value, and they need 0100,10some unscrupulous deater.may say there tin further advertisement than to It, c,,mtnnde 1 by dnctore, te.spitals, clergy gad everybody fur pleurlar, ahffnsa, eta. this. Having firmly established themselves in public esteem, they Sonic people make a specialty of now rank without a peer in the list killing time for others. of standard vegetable preparations. cure my coughs and colds. The never failing medicine, Hol- loway's Corn Cure, removes all kinds of corns, warts, etc. ; even the most difficult to remove cannot tt ithstand this wonderful remedy. "BY ALL MEANS!" SAID PAPA. "Yes, sir," said the pale, youth- ful suitor; "1 have come to ask you for your daughter's hand. She is fair as lilies, sweet as honey- suckle, tender as a violet, charm- ing--" is that Mary you are talking about 1" asked papa. "Yes. sir. It is a mere formal- ity, I know, this asking for your daughter's hnnd ; hut we thought it would be pleasing to you if it were observed." Mary's pupa stiffened. "And may i inquire," he asked, "who suggested that asking my consent to Mary's marriage was a mere formality!" "You may, sir." replied the young mon. simply. "1t inns Mary's mother." Your ort hography is tssi't4vl, Ali,nyo. A woman is not padded eell. -- The Jew is not more particular about the preparation of his food than the high -caste Indian. In September last. his Highness Shen) Repeat it:-"Rhlloh'e Cure will always cure my coughs and bolds Even the people who want the earth may bo weighed and found wanting. • Mother Graves' Worm Extermin- ator dues not require the help of any purgative medicine to complete the cure. Give it a trial and be convinced. Till•; i' N h i N l) E:' T CUT. fl he German Emperor tIust Now I'ay an income Tax. By a vote of fourteen to thirteen, the Finance Bill Commission of ttio Reichstag has decided to abrogate Jung, Prime Minister of Nepaul, the privilege of exemption from came to England, and two COWS taxation hitherto enjoyed by the bad to be procured from a farm, ,Kaiser and members of other Ger- and milked by a member of the prince's own suite, before their plaster could enjoy a meal. ACIDNtf- �PILL51'� • >+ 4E KnEOhs• . Rita ISE c1(. '`ttr` T'S t% con uitr cr ilr r it* T}le pu lie tool M . c tstians. s.ld e^ly iSSt'E N9. 12 01. man rcijning houses. These august- personages, pro- vided the Reichstag confirms the corilmissio 1's action, will hence- forth be obliged to pay exactly the same direct taxes as are collected from private citizens, including the income tax, inheritance duties, real estate imposts and taxes on income-producing property. Herr Sydow, Imperial Secretary 1e the. Treasury pleaded in vain that exemption from taxes was an historical privilege of crowned heads. and also that the constitu- tion made it optional for royal per- sons t,' avail themselves of cxemp• tion. The argument that the civil lists, nhich would be taxable under the new conditions, are freely used for public purposes also carried no t•onviction with the majority, which consisted of Radicals, Socialists, National -Liberals, Poles and Cath- olics. "I didn't want a six -roomed house," he said. "That isn't a six -roomed house," answered the agent. "Yes it is." "But I say it is not," and the agent began counting. "There's the kitchen, dining -room, parlor, and two bedrooms. That's five, isn't it 1" "Yes, but, there's room for im- provement, and that's bigger than any of the others," said the faceti- ous customer. "Can't you show Die something else?" Tourist—"What are those bells ringing for 1" Urchin — " 'Cos somebody's pulling 'em!" CALVES Rolle TA -m without milk. RuotIet Free. Steele Briggs Betel Co.. Ltd.. Tweets LOCAL AGENTS WANTED Enlarged Futllts. Frame. luatru tions. and Art C to Specialties guean i Rit profits. free. PORI BAIT SD P?LY CO., 74 DYNDAS ST, TORONTO FEATHER DYEIN') Cleauing and t'ur,in. and [Id Glom clr.n.d They eau be .•nt b, post, le per os Rte trot place la BRITISH AMERICAN DYEING C.O. MONTREAL. Every Individual Automobile [iwizer in United States and abroad should join International Automo- bile League. Pamphlet showing dealers' prices of automobile tires, also application blank, mailed up- on request. Honio Office, Buffalo, N. Y. Departing Guest—"We've had a simply delightful time!" Hostess— "I'm so glad. At the sante time, I regret that the rain kept all our hest people away." xcitin,g Adventures WHAT HE OWES TO ZAM-BUK. Mr. Frank Scadamore, the prcat. :` •-� W rr correspondent, who seas many 0 the C..nadian despatches doling t se late hose War, owes his dealt.'► to Zam-Ruk. He has passed unscathed throngs 29 battbss,, but, a scratch which t.urne1 Go blood - poisoning nearly ended his days. Zam-Dik saved him and he writs as foflowi: "1 have proved Zuni -Bak such a b:csstng that, 1 want others Lo know of itis merits. The poisonous dye in some underclothing I was wearing got. into a scrat,ch I hal ustained and blood -poisoning set up. Intlam:naLion was followei by great. pain and swelling, and then ulcers broke out, on my legs. For some Lime I czu1d not walk a few steps nor even put. ray feat, to the ground. On my left. leg below the knee I had seventeen u:core which cursed holes, Into which 1 could put, my thumb. 01 the right leg 1 had fourteea ukeri. Med;esl treab-nsnt failed to raieve, homely remedies were applied to vain. %Veek followed week and I gradual'y got. worse until 1 was worn out with pain and lock of sleep. On Lhe ad Aloe of a friend t obtained some Zara-B.tk and left, off everything else while I tried It. I .. s •ernel to give me. al•no;t Insta n . relief from the pain, and in a few days I noticed that it was hon:Ing soma of the ulcers. This was cyeetina I.id-ei, and gladly persevered wit. i Lhe Za:n-Bilk t reat+nent,. Bit, by bit the poZanotis matter was drawn out.. Th. ulcers were hostel, end new healthy skin grew over the previously diseased places. I ain now juke cured, and in gratitude, 1 menton these facts that other sufferers from skin disease may know of something which will cure them. 4 Gln -But &"n, rn'lreiy !rem Ordlrvtry atsosvoit. not .sitra as fAe shoot 'Jit, a:early t.o,e. For an skin dyes,,, u torrs ah.rrtsri, aralp ,ori,, rfvuo•m. children's roar head* ear, burns Mawr. .le. It is e ,wady cure. 11 else curs n.uart ueh. Alin, stool-yof.only, fou-blenlshea baiNer't etc. oo:J sorra, chapped Aanla and ko.t bite. 7.ubbcd ora Into the tar's a:'ee4l. It tors r,eun.rtisea eerrai$i, ani w itillo,t, Ail druggists and 'torr, wit at fab a Eat r yvsf hn from Zen duh Cin, Toronto for pets boars he $ is. T $ ORIAT SKIN -CURB.