The Exeter Times, 1919-4-17, Page 7A Cure ger
Bad reek
F5
tt
WiL1-tELMa'S JOKE.
Typical of Ex-Ketiser's "Humor" and
of His Courtiers' Servility.
Writing in the German review, Welt-
buechne, Johannes Fiechart reveals
somn.,interesting facts regarding the
sycophantic courtiers with formed the
circle of William .IL's favorites].
. While watching the yacht races at
the Kiel Regatta in 1901 the Kaiser
heed to sign Snaith State paper:a,
To an udeniral standing near the
Kaieor remarked: "Tirpite is a bore
with his documents. I shuttle prefer
a glass of champagne." "At your Ser.
4.. ' ice, Majesty," replied the admiral,
vlto rushes] headlong to get a ];lass of
champagne,. which he handed to his
monarch with -a low bow. '
SViliaelm drank half the glass, Hien
went out on the bridge, beneath
which wero Gen. von Hallnko ,and
the officers of his brilliant suite.
"Rebuke," shouted the. Emperor,
"you would like some champagne,
too," and as tho general turned his
. face upwards to reply, Wilhelm° pour..
ed the remainder of his glass over
him.
"Your Majesty' is too'hgracious," was
General Hal:like's manly retort to this
insult, while the rest of the suite
roared with laughter, ••
Wilhelm returned in boisterously
good humor to the deck cabin and de-
manded soumetlting' to eat The at-
tentive admiral rushed to fetch sonic
caviar sandwiches.
Wilhelm removed the butter and
the caviar from ono, and, emerging
once snore on the bridge, shouted:
" Ilulin]ce, you would like some caviar
sandwiches. I ani sure."
.As General Malinke looked up to
nturmnur his thanks Wilhelm threw the
remnant of bread in his face. Again
General H:Ihnl.b, with a courtly bow,
replied ---"Your Majesty is too grac-
ious."
•' This was a typical scene, says Fifa
chart
THE VALUE OF DIAMONDS.
Gems Are Occasionally' Discovered of
a Yellow or Deep Orange color:
The 358 -carat diamond which has re-
cently been found in the Jagersfon-
Ll Mine in South Africa promises to
worth an enormous sum of money,.
The reason is that its color is the rare
and beautiful blue -white.
The Hope Diamond, most famous of
blue stones, weighs, only 45 carats,
yet has changed hands at $300,000.
Of all the South African nines the
Jagersfontein is the only one that
yields. the blue -white stones. Before
:+ham diainonds were found in South Africa
it was only in India that these blue
stones were found.
South African diamonds are apt to
be yellowish or "off color," and these
stones are far less valuable than pure
white diamonds. Canary yellow
stones are often found, and some that
are quite brown.
Kimberley yields good white stones;
those found at Dutoitspan are usually
yellowish, while the Buitfontein is
known for its curious spotted gems:
The Premier or Wesselton Mine
gives large and very beautiful cry-
stals of a deep orange color. These
are so flawless that in spite of their
color they often fetch large prices.
Borneo yields the most remarkable
range of colored diamonds found any-
where in the world. From thence come
not only yellow stones, but rose red,
. bluish, smoky and pure black stones.
The Borneo diamonds, like the Aus-
tralian, are extremely hard. •
There is no example known of a
large red diamond. Red is, indeed,
the rarest color of all. and proportion-
ately valuable. But all diamonds, even
the black sort,. are valuable. If they
cannot be made into ornaments they
can be used for edging boring tools.
The Secret of the Dress Bill.
I remember, says -.a writer in the
Methodist Times, the indignation ex-
pressed in a certain circuit because
the minister's wife . looked so well
dressed. Tltey were sure she couldn't
afford it, On lady said—"She looks
like a duchess"—and she did. I knew
the exact amount she spent on her
1 lies. It was incredibly little. Her
ecyct was—"Few things, as well cut
as I can afford: styles that won't
`date;' and a central color scheme for
my whole wardrobe, so that every-
thing tones." The "fancy counter" at
sales, with its tumbled laces and
rather faded ribbons, never, inveigled
her. "I won't look like a jumble sale,"
she said.
�, The Business Instinct.
0%`' Americans are generally supposed, to
"lick creation" in the readiness with
which they turn the affairs of the
moment to business account,,. but they
have no monopoly of that characteris-
tic. Here is an advertisement from
the agony column of the London
Times, which shows that at least one
Frenchman has a keen eye for pos-
sibilities of money -malting which the
war has left in its: train: -
"Ypres. --The Belgian Government
having decided to preserve the ruins of
Ypres intact, I wish to dispose of land
situated near the town, on Ypres-
Hooge Road, suitable for hotels—For
full information write 40 Julien Donii-
Cent, &o,"
Giant Itusian sunflowers at the Col.
of Agriculture, Saskatoon, pro.
deuced two and , he-La'I thele he
fi;<luch fodder to the afire as corn, and
was in every way as satisfact y a
Cern for making •silage, 'Foreseer
Bracken is ret
omrnendi.g in the
1 l
i
� sunflower for planting an the
drier areas of Western Canada. The
r •lint is Well, S^ 464...44; 111.0,nflaale,.
Eiga
4n,
Do you aave
with a i, aw u^'
1`"'74,00LI.
l g.,c citiueet_on
rl I 'Melte.
IsIi: ' But coni" .re' for a
moment the illestretieaa
above They she ar pretiy
well what were dri. ng at;
that is, unless a blade is
stropped regularly it develops
an edge very like a saw, and
causes that, "pulling" and
after -smarting of which you
complain.
Not so with the AutoStrop
.Razor. . For the self -strop-
, ping featuge, you see, reforms
the saw -litre edge that results
from shaving, and provides
you with a sharp blade for
every shave. The beauty of
it is' you dsrn't have to re-
move the 'blade. from the
razor to sharpen it, nor do
you have to take the
AutoStrop Razor apart to
clean it. From first to last—
stropping, shaving, and clean-
ing—the blade remains in the
razor.
(Razor — Strop — 12 blades — $5
Stmp
:A $Y�r 5.
Gam ,
AtJTOSTROP SAFETY RAZOR CO„ Limited
AutoStrop Building, Toronto, Canada
7
�F
THE
SITTIBEMES2 POWER
ER
SOLAR MOTOR INVENTED BY A
CANADIAN SCIENTIST.
New Gift to Humanity Has Enormous
Possibilities in Medical and
Industrial Fields.
When Jules Verne wrote his great
book "Twenty Thousand Leagues 'Un-
der the Sea" it was deemed to be the
greatest piece of imaginary fiction
ever produced, but now all that was
contained in that book, and more, has
conte to pass and is being takeneas a
matter of course. So much is it a
matter of course that the next genera-
tion will not remember the time when
meat knew not the floor of the sea.
When Hans Anderson wrote his
tale ,9f a fairy riding a sunbeam he
little thought that the time would
come when the power of sunbeams
would heat our homes, do our cooking,
run our factories and drive horseless
carriages to and fro over the face of
the earth; and yet the, time is com-
ing,' and that soon, when all these
wonders and many more shall be ac-
complished, and the next generation
will be as familiar with the power of
concentrated sunbeams as' we of the
present generation _are with the power
of steam, gasoline and water.
However, there is nothing new un-
der the sun. Coal from which we pro„
duce heat and steam is just -the stored -
up, concentrated energy of sunbeams.
It is the power of the sun that evapo-
rates the water of low level and car-
ries it back to the highlands so that
it may furnish us with power as it
again seeks the low levels. It has
long been recognized that the sun is
the source of all energy, and it is by
the proper harnessing of this known
power that the problem of the world's
supply of fuel and mechanical energy
is to be solved.
The supply is as free as air and as ,
plentiful. It is estimated that on every
four square feet of surface -between
the equator and the 45th parallel there
is a wastage of the equivalent of one
horsepower of energy. It is stated
that the power of the sunbeams failing
on the deck of a steamship is greater
than the steam. power required to
drive her.
Long a Puzzle to Scientists.
Many scientific minds have dreamed
and studied and striven to construct
a harness that would sit the elusive
sunbeam and compel It to serve man
directly instead of indirectly.
In 1893, John uric on, a, Swedish
scientist, constructed on apparatus
which. demonstrated the possibilities
of the use of the power of •sunbeams
for mechanical purposes, Re secured
the power in the area of his apparatus,
but failed to concentrate it.
In 1913, the Shuman Brother's es-
tabliehod a "San Plant" in Egypt, by
which' they succeeded In developing
mechanical power at the ratio of sixty-
three horsepower per acreeof reflector
exposed: that ratio; however, was not
sufficient for practiced purposes, and,
like Ericsson, tho Shuman Brothers
had failed to concentrate the -power
sufficiently to make their scheme prac-
tIcable.
For many, many years scientists
have failed in thein' efforts to make
the sunbeams do practical work, al-
though they fully succeeded in de-
monstrating that the power is there
in abundance. They have all said
that some day one would accomplish
definite results, and now Dr. W. J.
Harvey, eye specialist and member of
the Royal College- of Science, Toronto,
leas succeeded in_ doing that which
will carry his name down through the
ages as One of the great benefactors
of the raoe. Dr. Harvey has succeed-
ed where others had failed. By a
combination of small mirrors he has
succeeded in gathering the sunbeams
and concentrating their heat at one
point. So thoroughly has he done his
work that apparently there is no Limit
to the intensity of the heat that may
be obtained at the point of concentra-
tion.
Great Benefit to Mankind.
In practice, this new servant will do
wonders for its masters. We have
only to think of the uses that unlimit-
ed heat at a nominal cost can be put
to. It enters into every phase of human
effort, comfort and convenience.
Let us consider one, the automo-
bile. Think of everya, garage in the
•country with a battery of mirrors on
its roof as part of its regular equip-
ment inste:lt1 of a gasoline outfit.
During every 'hour of sunshine they
'would store up free power in storage
batteries. Standard batteries for
standard cars. Think of the cleanli-
•nesss the absense of "smell" and the
low cost of transportation.
The automobile is only one item.
The mind cannot grasp the changes
that are coming to the world through
Dr. Harvey's success. Zlnlimjted heat
without fuel! Heat tliat by boiling
Water will make steam to turn dyna-
mos and store up energy! Heat so°
intense that it will break rocks and
melt metals! Truly science has never
presented humanity with a greater
gift. It is a perpetual gift, for so long
as the sun shines and the earth con-
tinues to revolve on its axis will this
source of heat and power be avail-
able to the generations.
'4'4 ollderful are the provisions made
by nature for man's comfort! These
wonders lie dormant until the brain
of man searches them out and fits
them to his use. The primitive mart
who invented the bent bow with which
to drive an arrow at his enemy was
drawing on the stores of Nature for
his well-being. It is a long cry from
that weapon to modern gunnery, but
at the time the bow was invented;
Nature held in her secret places the i
material needed for the manufacture
of the modern gun and. the high ex-
plosive; and so, when man was pro -
deicing fire and heat by rubbing two
sticks together, the sun was pouring
unlimited heat on all about him. Truly
there is nothing new, but all honor
to the man who, by untiring effort and
years of study, has succeeded in har-
nessing the source of all heat and
energy and making of it the untiring
and perpetual servant of man.
Trail of the Caribou.
The latest postage stamps to reach!
the Victory War and Stamp Exhibi- I
tion at 110 Strand,' London, are a pia.
turesque and historic series from New-'
foundland, entitled "The Trail of the 1
Caribou," while on each stamp is the
finely engraved head of a caribou, the
badge, of the Royal Newfoundland
Regiment. The different values and
the names of the great engagements
in the war in which the Newfound-
landers took part—Suvla Bay, Beau-
mont Hamel, M'onchy, Guedercourt
and Cambrai. The valor of the New-
foundland R.N.R. is commemorated in
four values marked "Royal Naval Re-
serve," and inscribed "Ubique."
Habit may make virtue secure or
vice incurable.
4
0
(77Li rlr'GZ�rTi' l%l%lf' �i71y7i' e1,, 7/1 1!TCT%rrl 'i
Stomachs tire of
the same diet. ..-
When .the appetite be-
... Ones jail. ed,., it-
' sur-
prising
ur
am in hoqquickly
digestion' responds th
a. saucer, oaf •
rho/46's itt.. d..
. W
Ceeedaa read board 4keasa •:2.4341
///•4aa- /,2Y
EAN 1=IGHTING.
Turkish Compliment to the Royal Air
F;irce..
In great contiust to the Germans,
the 'Turks were c ieeII
over they knew tett in the British
they were fighting a chivalrous enemy.,
It is on record that during the Gal -1
lipoli expedition the Turks endeavor.
ed not to elle]] the, British hospitals,
expressed regret if an accident hap
Polled, andsomotitnee,, sent a warning
that the safety of a hospital could not
be guaranteed if it were located close
to a legitimate target. In the con-
fined spaces• of the Peninsula this
protxianity could not elways be avoided.
. In Palestine, however, there was
plenty of room, and there was no ex -
mese for the Turks when they estab-
lished a hospital at Alnrnazl near to
the railway. They were' asking for
trouble. The medical officer in
charge more than once asked for leave
to move his hospital to a building
further removed from the danger
point; but his requests were always
refused. Like many other Orientals
the Turk is apt to leave a great deal
to •chance, or Kismet.
Of course the British air squadrons
raided the railway at Amman, and
one night a bomb accidentally hit the
hospital, That it was an accident got
without saying. British airmen wil
take a great deal of trouble, and wil
risk their own lives to avoid harming
civilians in a town, and to bomb
wounded soldiers would be still more
abhorrent to then].
Do You
Want to Become a Nurse?
Moat women think that
a long and expensive
erraiating is required to
qualify ass nur. e.
lu t•eitlityY t;ound practi-
cal knowledge of nursing
methods can be aequtrect.
in a chart time by home
study.
Nurses are in great de-
mand, They earn from
815 to $30 a week.
The Royal College sys-
tem enables you to quali-
fy as a nurs e• without
leaving. your own home.
Write us for particulars.
Royal College of Science
Dept. 40, Toronto, Canada
The First Robin.
A tawny gleans in the sunlight,
And the flash of a ruddy breast
'Mid the dusky giooms of the hem-
locks
That crowd to the high hill's crest;
And a torrent of song comes purring,
Like a brook from the ice unbound.
While the listening hills and the val-
leys
In echoes give back the sound.
As 1 wake in the misty dawning
Gone is the hemlock hill,
Gone are the tossing pine plumes,
And the whispering winds are still;
But there on a roof a robin
Is singing his heart away,
Bearing me back to the sunshine
i Of a far -off. -golden clay.
1 A. whistle conies clear as a robin's, •
Blithe, sweet and full of cheer,
And I know ere a gay smile greets me
A laddie I love draws near.
0 strange that a note of miner
From the heart of that song should
creep!
Dear lad" Do the robins whistle
On that cross -crowned , hill where
you sleep?
t I am back in the heart of the city,
Some time afterwards the Turkish
Commandant of the hospital was
travelling up to Damascus, and found
himself in the same truck as a British
flying officer who was a prisoner o
war. That officer is now free, and i
is he who told the story, He got into
conversation with the Turkish medi-
cal officer, and from hint learnt of the
bombing of Amman Hospital.
In relating the story of the catas-
trophe the Turk did not display any of
the indignation which always rises to
an Englishman's lips when he speaks
of the deliberate outrages of the Ger-
man flying service. The Turk express-
ed himself as quite convinced that the
British had not dropped the bomb on
MS hospital with deliberate intent.
He knew the sort of man to whom he
was talking.
To no one is it easier, and therefore
more tempting, to break tate rules of
war than to airmen. The honor of the
Royal Air Force is all the greater
therefore because,it has so strictly up-
held the British reputation for clean
fighting.
--0-0-0-0-0--010
LISTEN TO THIS I f
SAYS CORNS LIFT
RICHT OUT NOW
You reckless men and women who
are pestered with corns and who havd
at least once a week invited an awful
death from lockjaw or blood poison are
now told by a Cincinnati authority to
use a drug called freezone, which the
moment a few drops are applied to
any corn, the soreness is relieved and
soon the entire corn, root and all, lifts
out with the fingers.
It is a sticky ether compound which
dries the moment it is applied and
simply shrivels the corn without In-
flaming or even irritating the surround-
ing tissue or skin. It is claimed that
a quarter of an ouace of freezone will
cost very little at any of the drug
stores, but is sufficient to rid one's feet
of every hard or soft corn or callus.
You are further warned that cutting
at a corn is a suicidaT\habit.
BRITISH DUKES LOSE PEERAGE.
Their Graces of Albany and Cumber-
land Are Enemy Aliens.
The Duke of Albany, the Duke of
Cumberland and Viscount Taafe, who'
adhered to the enemy during the war,
have been deprived of their British
peerages by a King's order -in -council,
says a London despatch.
The Duke of Albany, who is a cousin
of King George, and the Duke of Cum-
berland, a cousin of the late King Ed-
ward, both served with the German
forces for a part at least of the late
war. Eacl' inan was a Royal Duke of
Great Britain. Both were British born.
The Duke of Albany served the Kaiser 1
under the title of Prince Charles Ed-
ward of Saxe-Cobourg and Gotha, and
he Duke of C'nmberiand as Duke of
Brunswick and Lunenbourg. Both
dukes had courtesy commands in the
British army, the Duke of Albany be -
ng a full general.
Prior to the war the Duke of Albany
took precedence over the Duke of
Connaught, the Archbishop of Canter-
bury and the Lord Chancellor. He
held three anct the Duke of Ciumber-
land two British peerages, each with
hereditary seats in the House of
Lords,
Viscount Taafe is a. member of an
ancient Irish family, He was living in
Silesia at the outbreak of the war and.`
fought with the Austrian, army as a
captain,
Cleopatra's Needle.
now officially 1
Wy
As is a o� o c is ly stated, eopat-
ra's Needle is the only public monu-
ment in Loudon which was struck by
a German bomb. Numberless people,
to whom this is news, are now visit-
ing Victoria Embankment to survey
the extent of the damage. It is very
slight indeed. The plinth, andthe
steps and the supporting sphinxes
have sufferer but the
v 1. obelisk i'
is tf.
e is
merely scratched, and stands ate, erect
as it ever did at Alexandria In the
.clays when Augustus Caesar reigned:
'Mid the housetops smoky and grim
The bird sings over and over
The notes of Itis morning hymn.
And something I catch of its -meaning:
There's a song in my soul to -day,
Of the life that blossoms in Spring -
land,
And never shall fade away.
I was cured of Acute Bronchitis by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
Bay of Islands, J. M. CAMPBELL.
I was cured of Facial Neuralgia by
MINARD'S LINIMENT.
Springhill, N.S. Wii. DANIELS.
I was cured of Chronic Rheumatism
by MINARD'S LINIMENT.
Albert Co., N.B. GEO. TINGLEY.
The Song of the Highland Corporal.
Blue were her een, and fair to see
Was the saft smile she gie'd to me
When she went by.
I was the Corp'ral o' the guard
That mounted on the old courtyard
0' the Chateau de Beauregard,
A palace high.
And she, la petite madeanoiselle.
Within the, stately walls did dwell,
0' great degree. •
The bluest blood in all broad France
Was in her veins and prood her glance,
And weel I keened there was nae
chance
For sic as me!
Oh, had I been an officer,
'\Vi' clankin' sword and jinglin' spur,
Or had she been
.A country maid, I mint ha'e tried
To walk a moment by her side;
But 'twixt us was a gulf as wide
As knave and queen.
Had I but been a chieftain bold,
I micht ha'e stormed that castle old,
And claimed a bride!
But being just a corporal,
And that's no kind o' rank at all,
I kent what went before a fall,
And saved my pricier
And I will never wait again
To hold her slender bridle -rein
And gain her smile.
But maybe in the land o' dreams,
Where fancy builds its fairy schemes
And memory weaves its oldest themes,
We'll meet awhile.
Minard's Liniment Believes Neuralgia.
FROM EAST TO WEST.
Path of Civilization Follows the Way
of the Sun.
It is a curious fact, and one that has
never been explained, that civilization
goes the way of the sun. In the east,
man first emerged. ,,)Yestwards he has
travelled since, carrying the torch of
progress in his hand,
The history of ("Mina dates back to
thousands of years before human foot-
marks began to appear in Britain.
From Asia civilization spread west-
wards, travelling right across Europe,
and thence to America. To -day Japan,
instead of absorbing the apathy of her
nearest neighbor, is touched by the
westward flow, and is raising her
head.
The., majority of domesticated ani-
mals* in o
prolee are asiatic algin, such as
horses, dogs, mules, donkeys, sheep,
goats, honey -bees, chickens, ducks,
;etc., and this alone shows that domes-
tic man had his first kingdom in Asia.
Yet it is strange that the countries
with the longest human histories are
to -day the least advanced.
The deepest known lake in the
world is Lake Baikal, in Siberia.
Turkish parents punish their
naughty children by hitting them on
the soles of the feet.
i1EClnard's ddniilaent Crrere Daxtdrug'.
The Price of Meat.
I3utcher—"What cut, madam ? a
She ----"One from the lower part of
the animal, please. Hubby says most
of your cuts are too high,"
A Cheery Welcome.
"Are you' the trained nurse mother
said was coming?" said little Bobby.
"Yes, dear, I'm the trained nurse."
"Let's see your tricks, then!" de-
manded Bobby.
Our Laeav'age.
"Did :you call Edith up this morn -
;log ?"
orn-dile''?"
"Yea, but she wasn't down,"
"But why didn't you call her
down?"
"Because she wasn't up."
"Then call her up now and call her
down for not being down when you
called her up."
Got the Chocolates.
Little sister was telling the next-
door little girl all about it,
"My sister Beatrice is awfully
lucky."
"Why?"
"She went to a party last night
where they played a game in which
the men either had to kiss e girl or
pay a forfeit of a box of chocolates."
"Well, how was Beatrice lucky?"
"She came home with thirteen
boxes of chocolates."
The Biggest War Personage.
A group of Old Country house-
wives were talking over the events
of the day. The question under dis-
cussion was as to who had done the,
most to win the war. Some said
Haig, others Beatty, others Foch.
At Iastone woman chipped in.
"I don't know who's done most to
win the war," she said; "but I know
who's been most talked about."
"Who's that?" came a chorus.
"Why, this 'ere Alice Lorraine that
the French and Germans came to
blows over,"
Wasn't His Fault.
On Johnny's first day at school he
was given a registration card on
which his mother was to write his
birth record. The following day he
arrived late and without the regis-
tration slip.
"Johnny," said the teacher, "you
must bring an excuse for being late,
and don't forget the slip about when
you were born."
All out of breath next day Johnny
rushed in, holding a note from his
mother,
D�)�"s 1'AIy1i 013' 1'IGISONS .A:hD ITP.
Write for�T ices. I. Weiniituch et Son,,
10-18 St. Jean I�laptiste Market, b ,Mont-
real• flue,
1'QEC lS,lt$s1t
INT 111.,1. EQUIPPED NDWY11'AI'Lri3
•• T and ]ala printlnu plant In I,astersa
re , -1 ,. .nsuragce earrled 51,500. Wii1
P' or .11200 on autek Bale. Box 4x.
iti'ilpin. Publishing c'o. 741.. Toronto.
'pi7.1;:51:1s1.Y iVsswSP.ABBit PO11 13A1401'r in New Ontario. Owner going to
Francs Will sell 02,000. Worth double
that amount Apply J. 11., cio Wilson
1'ublishtnf Co., Limited, 'Toronto.
4i'Et1CRERS WANTED
TIT ANTED—A QUALIFIED TEACH-
ER for School Sectiou No. 5,
McLean: to commence duties Ma.y 5th.
Salary 5500: duties light. Address
J. I). Smith, Sec.-Prc'as.. Baysville.
ILAT ANTED—PROTESTANT TT1ACH-
V ER—with third-class certificate,
for S.S. No. 2, Bethune and Proudfoot,
at an annual salary of 5500,00; duties
to commence after Mutter holidays. Ap- .
ply to S. C 1411MI,i'P.'i, Sec. -Trews.,
Kearney, Ont.
EKSCELLANDO'1 E
CANCER. T5Tbi0RS. LUMPS. ETC..
Internal and external. cured whit.
cut train by our home treatment Writs
Us before too late. Dr. Beaman Modloal
Co.. Limited. Collinr;wood. ant
(TunE')0UR 1311oiTC1IITXS, CO'CTGas,
'.J COLDS, 13ROlcTCD' AX 11.STI ELIA
AND, T oemsm'ESS As WE CURED
CURS: We have hundreds of testi-
menials from every part of Canada tes-
tifying to the wonderful healin" rower
of WrzTE BRONOIXITIS 112IKrlUStE•
Mr. Clarke, 776 Indian Road, Toronto,
coughed for 86 years with Bronchitis; it
cured him. Mrs, Clarke, No. 1 Yorkville
Ave„ Toronto, coughed for 10 years;
one bottle cured her. John E. Gibbs,
Fenella, suffered fifteen years ' with
Bronchial Asthma, says there is nothing
like it. W. McI3rayne. New Liskeard,
"It is the greatest Mixture I ever took.
Send me three more bottles." The above
are only e. few names of the many thous-
ands that have benefited by this great
mixture. Write any of the above. They
will be only too pleased to tell you more
about it. The above mixture is sold un-
der an iron bound money back guarantee,
to cure any of the above aliments. Ten
times more powerful than any known
preparation, acts like magic. One dose
gives instant relief and a good night's
rest without a cough. Price 60 cents,
15 cents extra for mailing. Three bot-
tles mailed free for $1.50. Sold only by
Truckle., The Druggist, 97 Dundas St
East. Toronto.
To -Day.
To -day a thousand rivers run,
Filled brimming with our teat's.
The misery -stricken heart of earth,
Filled with the woe of years,
Is eased....Adown the country roads
The willows burn like fire.
Sweet beacons of returning Spring,
'Mitch slowly moveth higher.
Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere.
As far as can be learned, the earl-
iest
arliest use of the nickname John China-
man as a designation for Celestials
is in "A Letter to the Committee of
Management of Drury Lane Thea-
tre," published in London just one
hundred years ago.
Aces AND PAINS
QUICKLY RE IED
"Teacher," he gasped, "I .brought;
the one about being late, bat I forgot
my excuse about being born."
MONEY ORDERS.
Pay your out-of-town accounts by
Dominion Express Money Orders. Five
Dollars costs three cents.
Church Parade.
Above the pew
I saw the hair
Shine, as she bent
Her head in pray'r;
The choir sang out
"Magniflcat! "
I look'd to where
My lady sat,
The padre said,
"Think on the straight
"And narrow path
"T6 heaven's gate!"
Think as I would,
My thoughts stopped at
The heaven beneath
My lady's hat.
Kiinard's Liniment Cures Burns, Eto.
India holds the records for images.
It has been estimated that there are
quite 800,000,000 images of the var-
ious gods there.
Men and women who work among
lavender, gathering it or distilling it,
seldom have neuralgia or nervous
headache.
S! GIRLS! TRY ill
STOP BANNI.IFF AND
ER ENI YOUR Li
Hair stops falling out and gets
thick, wavy, strong and
beautiful,
n
Your hair becomes Iigbt, wavy, fluf-
fy, abundant and appears as soft,
lustrous and beautiful as a young
girl's after a "Danderine Fair cleanse."
Just try this --moisten a cloth with a
little Danderine and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking ono small
strand at a time. This will cleanse
the hair of dust, dirt and excessive oil
and in just a few moments you have
doubled the beauty of your hair.
Besides beautifying the hair at once,
Danderine dissolves every particle of
dpndruff; cleanses, purifies and invig-
orates the scalp, forever stopping itch-
ing and falling hair.
But what will please yea most will
be after a few weeks' use when you
will actually see new hair ---flue true]
downy at first—yes —but really new
hair greeting all over the F d \ if
you care for pretty, hurt heir ane 1 tr
of it, surely get a smell b t i cf.
Knowlton's Danderine from ene n
gist, or toilet counter fur .t i.
You'll find Moan's Liniment.
softens the severe
rheumatic ache
Put it on freely. Don't rube it in.
Just let it penetrate naturally. What a
sense of soothing relief soon follows!
External aches, stiffness, soreness,
cramped muscles, strained sinews,
back "cricks"—those ailments can't
fight off the relieving qualities of
Sloan's Liniment. Clean, convenient,
economical. Made in Canada. Aslc
any druggist for it.
806,E LOc.,
"Bad breath is a sign of decayed
teeth, foul stomach or unclean
bowel." 12 your teeth are good,
look to your digestive organs at
once. Get Seigel's Curative Syrup
at druggists. 15 to 30 drops
attar meals, clean up your food
passage and stop the bad breath
odor. 60c. and $1.00 Bottles.
Do not buy substitutes. Get
the genuine. 6
PIMPLES ITCHED
AnFRE
1w
FaceWas Badly Disfigured.
Cuticura Soap and
Ointment Healed,
"Small red pimples and black-
heads began oak my face and my
e."face was badly disfigured,
Some of the pimples fes..
tered while others scaled
Over ancj thore were places
where a tins"pim pr les were
in blotches. They used
to itch And ,burn terribly.
"I saw an advertise.
anent for Cutietiee. alxr ;,�i,tried them.
They stopped the itchitl anditnl-
ing and I used four r l if:of Soap .
and three boxof Ointment which
healed me." (Signed Mies V. A.
Hayne, Stormont, N. ., Dec.26,'18.
The CnticuraToilet Trio, consisting of
Soap, Ointment and Talcm;promotesscin
purity, coda uti
p Y. fo t and health when used for
every -day toilet purposes. For Sample
Each Free by Mail, address: "Cuticure,
D ra
.A, ol
itzt, ,S.A q
Sold
everywhere,
ISSUE I5 --r19.
7.
£SStt 1a u -':1i►.,