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The Brussels Post, 1912-4-11, Page 7Young Folks TOMMY'S ADVENTURE, 'Army was a naughty little boy. The thing lie liked doing best when he was not at school was stealing birds' eggs. He could climb a tree better than any boy in the village, and therefore was able'tu get the most eggs- But one day Tommy hied such a terrible'adventnl'o that he never went bird -nesting again. He bad climbed up a very large tree, and hacl come across the nest of a robin. Now this bird is very savage, and if it is anywhere, about when the bird -nester comes to take its eggs it will give him a very rough five minutes. Of eeurso Tem - my thought that all birds were frightened of Iron because he had never had .any opposition ;shown when he had been on these expedi- tions before. So he climbed the tree, and searched about for seas time from branch to branch, and at last he came to a robin's nest which contained four eggs. Tommy being a greedy boy never left any eggs in the nests he found. He had put three of the, eggs in his pocket, and was on the point of tak- ing the fourth when he heard a great rustling in the tree. Turning round he was horrified to see abird flying straight at his face. You know it is not easy to escape when you are up a tree and a bird is fly- ing at your eyes and flapping its wings about your face. Tommy, like all naughty boys, was a coward at the bottom; When he felt the bird's wings banging about his head he started calling for his mother. But it was no, use crying for help, bey cause the tree was so high and no- body could hear him. The only thing loft for Tommy to do was to try to got down the tree as fast as he could. All the time he was going down he was calling for A GOOD MEDICINE FOlt 'TU.)i SPITING. DO Not Ilse Harsh Purgatives — ATonle is All You *Need... Not exactly sick—but not feeling quite well. That is the way most people fee in the spring. Easily 'tired, appetite fickle, sometimes head/when, and is feeling of depres- sion. Pimples or eruptions may appear on the skin, or them may be twinges of rheumatism or neu- ralgia. Any of these indicate that the blood is out of order --that the blood is out of order—that the in- door life of winter has left its mark upon you and may easily develop into snore serious. trouble. Do not dose yourself with pur- gatives, as so many people do, in the hope that you can put your blood right. Purgatives gallop through the system and weaken in- stead of giving strength'. Any doc- tor oe for will tell yea this is true. .What you need in spring is a tonic that will make now blood and build up the nerves. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills is the only medicine that can do this speedily, safely and surely, Every does of this medicine snakes new blood, which clears the skin, strengthens the appetite and makes tired, depressed men, women and children bright, active and strong. Mrs. Maude Bagg, Lemberg, Sask., says: "I can unhesitatingly recom- mend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills as a blood builder and tonic. I was very much run down when I began using the pills, and a few boxes fully restored my health." Sold by all medicine dealers or by mail at 50 cents a box' or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Wil- liams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. F EASIER TO DIGEST THAN BEEF Ilorsenleat Diet for Invalids In France. Horseiie,sh is being largely eaten help and once or (twice he slipped I now in Paris, France, by invalids, off the branches and had to cling°to the tree with all his strength to save himself from falling to the ground. Still the bird kept flying round his head and shrieking, and still Tom- my kept shouting for assistance. By this time he was not far from the ground, and the attacks from the bird were not as numerous, for it was getting tired of having its re- venge. and wanted to see how many eggs Tommy had• taken. So it be- gan to fly towards its nest, and poor Tommy reached safety with a few scratches on his hands and face and a verybad headache. He ran home and told his mother what had happened, and if he had not had such a misadventure with. the bird his mother would have given him a sound hiding, for he had torn a good shit of clothes. When the boys of the village saw him with his hands and face plas- tered they wanted to know what had happened, and when he told them they laughed at him, because he bad not hit the bird when it first at- tacked him. But Tommy knew what it was like to be banged about the face with a bird's wings. Afterwards Tommy said it was worth having a few scratches and a headache to get the eggs. But whe- ther it was or not he never robbed any more nests. GAMBLING IS A CURSE. Queen Mary Avoids All horse Race Meetings. Queen Mary has settled down at Buckingham Palace to the quiet life she loves beat of all. It is an ()pen secret that the pomp and cere- monies of the two courts jut over were little to her liking. Neither will she accompany King George when he visits the Earl of Derby at Knowsley for the Grand National race week, as she takes not the slightest interest in the turf. More- ssover she regards gambling as one of England's greatest curses. The hours Queen Mary enjoys most are those spent in supervising the work and amusements of her children. Although they •spend practically the whole of their time indoors at Buckingham Palace, site sees to it that they do not suffer from this sedentary mode of life, and insists on -regular hours of ex- er'c'sc, as well as for work and re- creation. A brawny Highlander, who is al- ways in native costurllb, is the chil- dren's instructor in Swedish drill. The splendidly carpeted corridors on the upper floor of the palace are the trade for many an impromptu race between the young princes. When tired of games they turn their attention to their pets, an aviary of foreign birds and a 'squirrel house being their favorite haunts, The new state coach, built to re- place that destroyed by fire dust ,year, scarcely interested them at all, perhaps because they associate it with the mysterious functions which bare the whole family almost to extinction, ' Many a bride is self-possessed even when given away. "What is society?" It is a place where people who were poor twee- ty-five jrears ago tell of the low ori. - gin at their neighbors, and conceal Then' own humble beginnings, who have been ordered to eat it by their medical attendants. Many Pr'encb doctors hold that horsemeat is more nourishing, easier to digest, and of greater recuperative value f -r consumptives than other meat. The "superalimentation" cure for tuberculosis patients is nearly al- ways based en a diet of horse, in most cases minced very fine and eaten raw. The secretaay of the Horse Butch- ers' Association in the great horse market in the, Vaugirard quarter of Paris declared that each horse is carefully examined and is rejected at once at the least sign of disease or even of age, which would make it undesirable for human food. "Tho animals we kill," he said, "are per- fectly healthy," and he pointed out some fine-looking white Walloon horses. Revive `the Jaded Condition.- When energy flags and the cares of business become irksome; when the whole system is out of sorts and there is general depression, try Parmelee's Vegetable Pills. They will regulate the action of a de- ranged stomach and .a disordered liver, and make you feel like a new man. No oho need •suffer a day from debilitated digestion when so simple and 'effective a pill can be got at any drug store. "You say your hearers sat through your speech in open- mouthed amazement 1" "I thought so at first," replied Mr. Teejus, "but I have learned that most of those fellows are accustomed to sleep with their mouths open." . Specialist Did Skin Trouble No Good Very Itchy and Disfiguring. Got a Little Cuticura Soap and Oint- . ment and Was Cured. "For two summers I suffered' with skin trouble on my arms, and on my legsfrom my knees down, My arms were badly disfigured and I kept then covered. It camp like the hives, and was very itchy. I consulted a specialist, who gave me msdioine, as well as an ointment, but seemed to do no good. It was beghming to appear on my face. "I got a little Outioura Ointment end some Cuticura Soap. The first touch of Ointment seemed to relieve, and before the Cuticura Ointment was finished I was cured. I have not the least sign of trouble. I think iI. wo ld have spread over my whole body if Cuticura Soap and Ointment had not cured' me. S am delighted with them, and do feel pleased to think.I have some- thing I have confidence in. 1 tell all my friends about them, and I think Cutioura Ointment is the best I ever saw." (Signed) M. J. Roddy, 73 McOau1 St„ Toronto, bee. 22, 1910. Cold; Sore Began to Neal With First Ilse of Cuticura Ointment. "Cuticura Ointment cured a very bad cold -sore that gave me hours of severe pain and lose of sleep. I tried lots of other remedies but nothing did me any good till I tried Cuticura Oint- mentand from the very first applies - tion it began to beal and. now there is not oven a soar left." (Signed) Mrs. W. Boyeo,Mermaid larin, For more than a generation Cuttoura Soap and Cuticura Ointment have afforded the speediest safest and most economical treatment for skin and scalp troubles, ofoung„sad old. .Although they ars soldyby druggists and dealers everywhere, a liberal sample of omit may be obtained free, from the Potter Drug h Chem. Corp., sole props., 57 Columbus Ave,. Reston, U, S, A. 4.11,11,g,/i??Ik Sir Robert Ball. ONE ON Silt ROBERT. ..Sir Robert Ball, the astronomer, is fond of telling an amusing story against himself. He is a round- faced, .jovial -looking man in ap- pearance, not resembling " in the least the ordinary conception of a famous scientist. Once he was en- gaged to lecture in a remote part of Ireland and found no vehicle waiting for frim at the station. At last a typical Irish servant came up and said : "Maybe you're Sir Robert Balli" 'When he found that he was correct in his surmise the maxi said : "Oh, shure, your honor, I am sorry to have kept you wait- ing, but I was told to leek out for a gentleman with an intellectual look." MOTHERS RECOMMEND BABE'S OWN TABLETS Baby's Own Tablets are recom- mended by thousands of thankful, mothers who have used them for their, little ones and have found thea safe and sure cure for con- stipation, indigestion, worms, sim- ple fevers and all stomach and bowel troubles. Concerning them Mrs. Auguste Blier, St. Damase, Que., writes: "Please send me an- other box of Baby's Own Tablets. I have already used them and have found them an excellent remedy for little ones. I would strongly recommend them to all mothers." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. SPEECHLESS. I have no decent word To utter That fits the present Price of butter. Why persist in being imposed up- on by buying poor trashy alum bak- ing powder when you can just as well buy, Magic Baking Powder, the health giving "No Alum" brand at the same price? Sixteen ounces for twenty-five. cents. At all Grocers. "People, nowadays," said the old house eat, "don't know how to raise children. They let the youngsters have their ..own way too much." "That's right," replied the old breed hen. "Now, look at these chicks of mine. They wouldn't have amounted to anything if they hadn't been sat upon." Requisite on the Farm. —Every farmer and stook -raiser should keep a supply of Dr. Thomas' Eclectrie Oil on hand, not -only as a ready remedy for ills in the family, but because it is a horse and cattle medicine of great potency. As a 'substitutefor sweet oil for horses and cattle affected by colic it far surpasses anything that can be ad- ministered. "What a perfect idiot I am," wailed Slumper. And for the pur- post of consoling him his wife ab- sentmindedly remarked—"No one is perfect, William," A pleaeant medicine for children is Mother Graves' Worm Extermi- nator, and there is nothing better for driving worms from the system. Russia has an army of 1,200,000 man in time of peace and 4,500,000 in time of sear, Minard's Liniment for sale everywhere. "Speaking of bad falls," remark - ,ed Jones, "I fell out of a window once, and the sensation was terri- ble. During my transit through the air I really believe I thought of every mean act -1 had ever commit- ted in my life," "Hum?" :growled Thompson; "you must have fallen an awful distance." Servant—"Please, ma'am, -I want to give you a week's notice," 11218- tress—"Why, Mary, this is a sur- prise. Do you hope to better your- self ?" Servant (blushing)—"Well, not exactly that, ma'am, I'm going. to get =Ivied." "Doctor, did my brother kick. about giving' up smoleing?", "Yea, but he wasn't any tee entbthsiastic about giving up $$5." Wearies Liniment ousel Dandruff. .1)JVIEN IN ALL PARP8 ET 'CANADA TELL OF TUB HEAL'lYI DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS BRING. They Nude a New Woman of Mrs. Eli Amirnult who was a Victim of Sidney Disease for over a Year. Amfrauit's Hill, Yarmouth Co., N.S., March 25 (Special)—"Four boxes of Dodd's Kidney Pills made a new woman of me." Thule are the words of Mrs. Elie Alnirault of this place. They are words that have been used again and again by women in all parts of Canada who have suffered, and who have found relief and cure in Dodd's Kidney Pills, I suffered for over a year from kidney disease," , Mrs. Amirault continues, "Nothing I tried help- ed me. At last some one told me to try Dodd's Kidney Pills. Before I had finished the first box I felt better. Four boxes made a new woman of me." • No remedy ever given to the public has brought health and hap- piness into the lives of so many women as Dodd's Kidney Pills. This is because nine -tenths of the ills to which women are subject come from diseased kidneys. No woman who uses Dodd's Kidney Pills San have diseased' kidneys, They al- ways clue the kidneys. F MAY HAVE A BARD TASK. Seven. hundred British Soldiers Sent Into Southern Soudan. A small military expedition has been sent to an unknown region of Southern Soudan to knock the ag- gressiveness out of the wild Anuaks. They are reported to be an excep- tionally savage tribe, of Africans, occupying a region about two hun- dred and fifty miles north-west of Lake Rudolph. Armed with French rifles that have been "run" through to that region by way of Abyssinia, these savages have been raiding British territory and then retiring to their fastnesses in a quarter not hitherto visited by white men. There are thirteen officers and seven hundred men in this expedi- tion, two companies of mounted in- fantry, four of infantry, and two '75 - millimetre guns. They are making for a village they know is called Odongo, but just where it is they cannot tell, but there, are no maps of that interior quarter of 'Africa. Native reports, however, state that the Anuaks are located in heavily guarded villages,, surrounded by triple stockades. For the next month or so no news is expected of the expedition, and it may be more, for unless there have been heavy rains and the undertak- ing becomes unduly risky through swampy country and a persistently hostile enemy, the force may be away till May, penetrating still fur - there into the interior in the hope of giving -an effective lesson to the. raiders. Bolls B C re QUICKLY STOPS COUGHS, CURES 501.09. HEALS THE THROAT AND LUNGS. se CENTS Faint heart ne'er won fair lady, we are told—and the same might be said of a faint bank balance. Only One "BROMO QUININE.", That is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look for the signature of E. W. GROVE. Used the World over to Cure a Cold in One Day. SSB. Some one has defined a gentleman as a man who kinks the cat instead of swearing at his wife when things 'go wrong. Corns cause much suffering, but Holloway's Corn Cure offers a speedy, sure, and satisfactory re- lief. Folly is as plentiful as wisdom isn't. Mlnard's Liniment-.Rolloves Neuralgia. NOTHING DOING. Miss Gaddie—"Mr. Markley is engaged to Miss Summers, and I think we may look for a wedding soon." Miss Wise—"Why q,t Miss Caddie—"She told me she believed in short engagements." Miss Wiso—"So she docs—ahor't and frequent," Podiios might not be so bad but for some of the people in it, En. 4 ISSUE 14 12 OLDEST WOODEN DOOR. Stihl to `(fora 'Bern • Milt ler Church at Rome LAO Years Ago The Dominieatl Order possesses in (tome two churches of great in- terest, Santa Maria Seeps Minerva in the heart of the city, and Santa Sabina en the Aventine. The, latter during the closing years of St. 1)ominick's life Was his home anti headquarters. But the church was already very ancient when he took up his abode there. According to the Rosary it was built A.D. 425, during the pontifi- cate of•St. Celestine, Its founder fs commemorated still in the original mosaic inscription dating from 401 on the western wall of the church, inside the entrance. The mosaie even now is a splendid relic of a very far distant age. Remains of the second church are to be seen in the western corridor, or cloister, where are a number of early inscriptions; on one side the original twisted columns of pavon- azzetto still support the roof, on the other they have been replaced by granite. It was from a window in this cloister that women were allow- ed .sato look upon St. Dominick's orange tree. The entrance door of the church is so ancient that it is said to be the oldest wooden door in the world; as it dates partly from the fifth century, it may be supposed to have been the original door of the church built by Peter the Illy- rian. e' ZA111-BUIL IN THE HOME Read (low' seful It Proved in These Widely Different Cases. Zam-auk's strongest point is its effectiveness in all kinds of skin dis- eases and injuries. Just note how excellent these persons proved it in widely different directions. Sore Reel.—Mrs. C. A. Campbell, of Powassan, Ont., writes: "Ono of my heels was very badly blistered by a pair of new shoes, and the poisonous dye from my stocking got into it, and made a bad sore. For a week I could riot put on a shoe, and suffered great pain. I. applied Zam-But, and in a fere days it healed the wound." Bad Cut.—Mrs. J. Virgin`, of Onondaga, Ont., writes: riZam- Buk •healed a bad cut which I sus- tained, I was hurrying across my yard one day when I slipped and fell heavily, my knee striking a sharp stone. At the moment I .aid not realize how badly I was hurt, but I found I had a bad cut about two inches long, very jagged and very deep. We bathed the cut and applied Zam-Buk. This stopped the smarting very quickly, and in a few days it had healed the wound completely." Eczema Cured.—Mrs. Antoine Ar- senault of Maxiamville, P. E. I., writes : "I had eczema and was un- der doctor's treatment for two'years without any good result. I then tried Zam-Buk and in the end it cured me." Zam-Buk is just as good for piles, blood -poison, festering sores, pimples, eruptions, outs, burns, bruises, and all skin injuries and diseases. 50c. box all druggists and stores, or post free for price from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto. Try Zam- Buk Soap, 25e. tablet. Hope for the Chronic Dyspeptic.— Through lack of consideration of the Gody's'needs many persons allow disorders of the digestive appal"atu.s to endure until they become chro- nic, filling days and nights with suffering. To these a course of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills is re- commended as a sure and- apeedy way to regain health. These pills are specially compounded to combat dyspepsia and the many ills that follow in its train, and they are suc- cessful always. "What aro the Christian names of the young couple, next door 1' "We shan't be able to find out till next week. They've just been mar- ried, 'and he calls her Birdie and she calls hien Fettle." Mlnard's Liniment Cures Burns, Eta. GREEK MET GREEK. "Gimmo your watch and chain!" said the train robber. "Great Scott i sobbed the Pull- man porter, "ain't there no ethics in our profession?" "If you marry Grace," exclaimed an irate father to his son, "I'll out you off without a penny, and you won't have . as much as a piece of: pork to boil in the pot." 'Well," said the young man, "Grace before meat," and he immediately went in search of a minister. "Did yotr tell the proprietor of the hotel that the water leaked into your room?" "No; I was careful not to let him know it. I was afraid he would charge me for a shower bath!" Old Gent—"Here, you boy, what, are you doing out thero fishing'? Don't you know you ought to be at school?" Boy—"There, now, I know I had forgotten something 1" Talk to yourself if you want an, appreciative sudieneo. POr lNSr' I T E F,I " 154! tyino eye, ever, tic, ➢t+l-� pts�05' ribipping Ferur, and Catarrhal Fever. Sure cure and positive preventive, no matter how horses at any age aro infected ur "exposed.e Liquid, given on the tongue, Acts on Om Blood and Glends, expels the poisonous germs from the body. Corns Distemper in Dogs and Sheep, and Cholera III Poultry. i.argest selling live stock remedy. Cares 1-a Grippe among human beings and is a One kidney remedy. roc and as a bottle; t5 and all a dozen, Cut this out. Keep it. Show. it to your druggist, who will set it for you. Pres Booklet, 'Diatom Per, Calm's and Canoe," DISTRIBUTORS—ALL WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists and aacleriolseists, GOSHEN.INU..ILS.A, and ARnPET ning bo,DYE N ThisBritish Amerloan Dyeing Co' Sand psrtioulare by poet sod we ere sura to satisfy, Address Box I50, Montreal. A DOUBLE BREAK. "I just saw Hunter and he looks pretty bad. What's the matter with him, do you know i" "Compound fracture," "What sort of compound frac- ture?" "He's broke, and Miss Richley, discovering the fact, broke her en- gagement to him." In its initial stages a cold is a local ailment easily dealt with. But many neglect it and the result is often the development of distressing seizures of the bronchial tubes and lungs that render life miserable for the unhappy victim. As a first aid there is nothing in the handy medi- cine line so certain in curative re- sults as Bickle's Anti -Consumptive Syrup, the far-famed remedy for colds and coughs. • Clerk—"I want more salary, sir, because I am going to get mar- ried." Employer—"But I don't be- lieve in 'unions' raising the price of labor." To whom it may concern: This is to eertity that I have used MINARD'S LINI- MENT myself as well as preeeribed it in my .practice where a liniment was required and have neverfailed to get the desired effect. - C. A. RING, M.D. "Has Dinny got a atiddy job yit, Mrs. Mulcahey l asked Mrs. Bran- nigan. "He has that," said Mrs. Mulcahey. "They sint him to the pinitinchery for twenty years." 101717;72 Try Murine Eye Remedy Ifs Plne—Amts Quickly. 6 ® re ae CrnnulaturEyellda.'Inuatrntedn0000 pin noon Package. MCRINE la com- Ey s M ge;e`'hurgo. k _ .t., PLyeel N e ,yy lana'Praeaee 001 1511, years. Sere i- gag dearntod to the rubilc and eald by .0 a I, e1lnngglataatee0-t2epar bottle, ittr a Paye ealre In Asept10 Totes, 25.3-11(1e. a.® Murine Eye Remedy Co„ Chicago It is called flattery when other people tell us the nice, things we have always thought about our- selves. PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS. Yonrdrug let will refund mmay if PASO ()INT. TIENT fairs to cure any Oft30 0f nuttier, Biin•i Bleeding or Protruding Pileses in d w It days. boo MODERN PHILOSOPHY. "When a rich man marries a poor girl, that is romance," writes a wo- man who never was married and who never expects to be, "When al rich girl marries a poor man, that's fiction; when a rich pair marry each other, that's wastefulness; when two poor folks marry each other, that's foolishness." IL IN THIS is a (SOME DYE Mat AKY IME can use FARMS FOR SALE OR RENT. H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street, Toronto. rORTY ACRE' FRUIT FAR21.—NEAR ii Niagara River, well planted. Revenue 1911 nearly thirty per cent.. en price asked. ABEAUTIFUL FARM OF TWO HUN- dred and ninety acres on St. Joseph's Island. with fine house, up•to- date barn and outbuildings. Owner wishes to devote his time to other business, so. will still cheap for quick sale. Full par. titulars furnished on application. HUNDRHUNDRED AND FIFTY-SEVEN ACRES ED Norfolk County, @ix acres fruit; up-to-date house; new bank barn; a very desirable property at a bargain. HUNDRED AND FIFTY ACRES—WITH good house; two barna; ten metes. Orchard; in County -Peel. A real snap. ONE HUNDRED ACRES—GOOD HOUSE `' and outbuildings: near Teeewater. A first-class farm worth the money. ,}, N IDEAL FARM OF TWO HUNDRED acres in County of Wellington; with fine bride house; gond outbuildings; can be bought on easy terms. 'I iOUR HUNDRED ACRES IN COUNTY A.' of Simcoe, with Hundred Acres Good Timber; 20 aeree apple orchard; •-ood Frame House; two Barna. Can be bought right. WBNTY-FIVE ACRE FRUIT FARM— S Near St. Catharines; Brick House; Barn; twenty acres planted. Can be bought veru reasonable. ONE OF TiIE BEST FRUIT FARMS IN i St. Catharines District—Fifty -acres, thirty of which are planted; Elegant House, also Cottage and fine outbuildings. Will be sold on easy terms. ORTY ACRES — ST. CATHARINES — Buagala and Cottage and good out- buildings. Thirty-four acres planted in fruit, and a money maker. The owner wishes to retire and anxious to sell. I HAVE MANITOBA, ALBERTA, SAS- katchewan and British Columbia lands. both improved and unimproved, in quarter. half or whole sections, also in larger lots un to five hundred thousand acres. If thinking of investing in West. ern lands it Is to your interest to 'consult me. 'Phones; Main 6900, Park 828, N. W. DAWSON, Toronto. pply ACRES, COUNTY OF MIIIDLEX; in / soil splendid olav r Market, : good burld- inge; a (Poet Of to Market, Railway Sta- tion and Post Office. D1 health reason for selling. 'Anson 27nttbowa, Denfield P. 0., or Western Real. Estate, London. -MALE HELP WANTED. IEARN TO BE A TELEGRAPHER OR A Station Agent. Big demand for men. Free Book 18 explains work and wages.. Dominion School Telegraphy, Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS. HU5IBOLnT. SASICATCIIBWA,'t', WANTS alis Spring, settlers or 4,000 free homesteads. Beet mixed Pefrming aerri- tory in West. Also improved farms 515 to 530 per erre. Write "commissioner, Board of 'Credo. Rumbold;: TT 18 and FARM SCALES. Wileon'e' YY ➢➢. Scale Works, I:epiauade. Torotlto. !�1 ANCER. TUMORS, LUd{PS, etc. In- `, ternal and external, cured without pain by our home treatment. Writeun before ton late. Dr. Bellmnn Medical Co.. Limited, Colliogwood, Ont. V TOR e50ALtsO, D9ARINEaED-Wiloon'rl Toronto. ]C, AL 1ST' EPr 7.�,r:� ZiT X iE ,'moi 0RDOSOT211 55213Lai3i. $,cam *a3 xzs Protect - Preserve ereautify Samples and Booklets an ,Application. JAMES LANGMUIR & CO3, Limited 18745 Bathurst Street TORONTO FirsFend tor (gree Book glving full pnrlieulsrs or TRENCH'S REMEDY, the World-fomoue Cure for Epilepsy and Flo. Simple home treatment. C„ 21 years' surmise. 'Testimonials from all , tp�j��g Paris of the worldear,. Over A 1,000 in ane y TRENCH'S REMEDIES LIMITED 107 St. dames' Chambers, Toronto..+ when buying your Piano insist Olt; IidVttety7 an TT ^. f MEL" PidrRO Actior5 I „sass I dyed ALL these ,>,DIFFERENT KINDS of Goods with the SAME Dye. =P used ONEDYEF°BALL KINpSoreoatS CLEAN and SIIMPLIZ to Use, thence of ertIng the WRONG Dye for the C:ooda one hen to ci,lor. All eolore from ?our Osegul,1 or b len Flinn Color ones 1 sq One murmur I t, The .)minion-Richoolson Co., Limited, tlgnneal, TWO GUISES --ON TIM— R VICTORIA, LUISE GOADS Tonal 0 - From New York Nov, 12, 1912 ?rine San Francisco Feb, 27,1913 U Will visit Madeira, Spain Italy, Egypt, N Wit., Ceylon Strolls Soltlemnnts, Jaya, Philippine., China, Janne, 6andwkh `elands, with Overland American Tour. .INLAND EXCURSIONS AND SIDE TRIPS tHEOPTIONAI,j 17 Moir) India TOURS 11417nyninJapnb Wi ' ' Duration 110 Days .Mich A $650 ond.ii4eluding all nee- �t,L' arab op 2n Gary nxpenae� R aboard and eahore. R"Aalt anyone who her ntedr he L FYrilrfar ,7jbot(ef. D fAMBtJkG - AMSRICAI'i 414515ROAbWAY, N.: 1. or 000aft summary) 'oun' A ! 6 yr 80 votigo st.. The onto, canaria.