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The Brussels Post, 1912-5-30, Page 7Young Folks ie®•ai m.'4D a ARETHUSA'S VISIT, Tommy took his little gray kitten when he went to visit his grand- mother. No one knew- until the Vast minute that he meant to take Arethusa ; what a commotion. that one small kitten made l "My kitty must go," Tommy had declared. "1 can't leave her at home alone!" And then he added, "Tlie conductor will not make her pay her fare ; Sho is not five years old," Arothusa was placed in a market - basket, and when. she "miaued," all the people turned and looked at Tommy, But he did nob mind. Arethusa travelled safely and had a happy visit, but when the time came to go Homo, she had grown to be a large cat, and the question of carrying her dune up again. Mo- ther wanted tc leave her behind to catch the miee in the barn, but Tommy said, "You would not leave me -and Arethusa belongs to me I" One day Tommy came down fkom the attic with a nice brass bird -cage in his hand. His eves were shining, "Wo can carry kitty in this," he said. "She can have meat in one side and milk in the other." He had forgotten that a oat's head is larger than a bird's; of course, to ked her in that way was impossible. When the time came to go, they placed kitty in the cage. It held her very well -all but her tail; that waved between the bars. She waved it often, for she was pleased with her new quarters. Sho purred happily when the passengers spoke to her. "Why, this must be the eat that ate the canary," one said. "Oh, no," said Tommy; "my eat loves our bird. The bird was all moved out before kitty was moved in." -Youth's Companion. tH A GENIAL PERSON. How He Proposed to Buy a Wood - Sled From a Neighbor. Mr. Dunham had just finished his morning chores at the barn and was going in to breakfast, when Briggs, tho man who had bought the neigh- boring Alden farm, appeared. He was a genial person, with a well - padded waistcoat and an engaging smile. Mr. Dunham had met him a day or two before at the post -office, but had not been favorably im- pressed. "Morning ;" said the, newcomer, briskly. "Morning!" said Mr, Dunham. "I'm going to be neighborly right away," declared Briggs, with an air of simple frankness. "I want to borrow your wood -sled for the dray, I've had no time to get set- tled yet, and there's so much to do I don't know which way to turn, hardly. But I've got to get some wood down, and I want to do it while the hauling's' good." "That's all right," said Mr. Dun- ham. "Take it and welcome. It's out there under the shed." Briggs was back in half an hour with a pair of sorewny steers, and went off with the, sled. Mr. Dun- ham heard him come into the yard with it that evening after supper, and found it in its proper place in the morning. A day or two later the now neigh- bor came again. This time he had the oxen with him. He nodded cheerfully as ho passed the house, and remarking casually, "1 s'poso it's all right to take the sled again?" hitched up. This time he kept it two clays. A week later he came when Mr. Dunham away,n whistling Du am was and w s g merrily as he yoked his steers, drove off without question. Dun- ham waited four days, and then had to go after the sled himself. On the next occasion when the new neighbor called, lie found Mr. Dunham, milking, Leaning against the stanchion, with his hands in his pockets, ho began : "Dunham, I like • that sled of yours. It's new, ain't it?" "Why, yes. It was new this sea- son." "Want to sell it?" "No, I don't know as I do." "What did it cost ye?" "I paid Smith twenty-five dollars for marking it, and I furnished part of the stock." "Well, it's worth it, and you ought to have some profit on ib, too, Now, I'll tell ye what; I don't feed right borrowing all the time, and I'd like to buy it, How would thirty-five dollars look to you?" Dunham milked silently for a moment. Then he said, " Well, I guess thirty-five would be all right." "Good enough 1" cried Briggs, heartily. "It's worth .that to me. I ain't got the ready cash just now, but we can fix it up this way: I'll take the sled over to my place, and 14-1,y ti e. vote ;went to Ilse it, you u0nie right'over and get it, just the same as if 'twits yours. I'll keep track of it, and charge ye a reason- able alp unt caoh�� time you take it, --say mehbe a dollar, --and when it comes to thirty-five dollars, why, the sled'11 be mine, and well be THE ACUTE PAIN FROM NEURALGIA Permanently Cured Through the Use of Dr, Williams' Pink Pills. Neuralgia is not a disease -it is only a symptom, but a very pain - fill one. It is the surest sign that your blood is weak, watery and impure, and that your nerves are literally starving, Bad blood is the ono cause -good, rich, roc' blood the only euro. There you have the real reason why Dr, Williams' Pink Pills cure neuralgia. The- are the only medicine that contains in cor- rect proportions the elements need- ed to make rich, red blood. This new blood reaches the root of the trouble, soothes the jangled nerves, drives away the nagging, stabbing pain and braces up your health in other ways. Among the sufferers from neuralgia, cured by Dr. Wil- liams Pink Pills, is Mrs. Clias. Brown, Durham, Ont., who says' "For months I suffered intensely from neuralgia. The pain in m,y head and face at times was so great as to be almost unbearable. I tried two doctors, and many remedies, without finding a cure, as there seemed to be no let-up to the elan, Finally I was advised to try Dr. Williams' Pink Pills, and I began their use. Soon I found the pains becoming less and after taking the pills for some weeks the trouble en- tirely disappeared and has not since bothered me." If you are suffering from any blood or nerve trouble begin to cure yourself to -day with Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. You can get these pills from any medicine deal- er or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co., Brock- ville, Ont. CHINESE LADS' SCHOOLING. Ideals for Scholarship Bather Than for War. For centuries most Chinese boys have had three or four years of schooling before going to work at the business of their ancestors; but all that the common people got was memory -work by sight and sound, They did not reach the higher grade in which, according to immemorial custom, the teacher began to ex- plain the meaning of words, char- acters and references. Thus most coolies, whose vocabulary is very limited, can read characters a little, but with imperfect comprehension of their meaning. The bright boy is encouraged to go further. Indeed, the ideals of the race have always been for scho- larship rather than for war, for mental rather than for physical ac- complishment, and the hero -tales told to children show ambitious youth arriving ab prodigious learn, ing, and consequently high office in the State, after many years of in- credible labor and self-denial. Society is still divided into the four ancient classes : Scholars, from whom all officials aro chosen; far- mers, artisans and laborers, mer- chants. Yet it is possible for a clever boy of any elass to become a scholar and enter the Government service, and there are many in- stances of poor parents scrimping and starving to keep a gifted son at his long and severe studies until he can pass the final examinations, be- come a mandarin or office -holder and begin to reward his family. P. The average weight of a man's brain is 3 pounds 3 ounces, and of a woman's brain 2 pounds 11 oun- ces. Mf,Ru2ous' IUFEs tiF SKI [-IIJPTION Four Children ConstantlySeratchinga Nearly Tore Limbs Off, Cured in a Month by Cuticura Soap and Ointment "Two of my daughters and two of my eons Were suffering from very bad heads, the doc- tor ordering my daughters to have all their hair cut off so as to prevent 1t from spreading all over their heads, and to get to the seat of the trouble 1n order to bo able to r u b some o i n t- ment, which he Have them, well into the sores. These sores atoned In emnld l0tC5 011 which got larger and larger and then buret and spread all over thele heads, and in some eases down their backs and bo4les. The doctor said it was ctzema, but they owned to bo daily getting worse. The sores formed 11Iro Ilttio bolls, then filled with mutter, incl looked Inco abscesses. They became all Inflamed and irritated, causing them to be Conetan0y scratching themselves. Tile made the sores burst, and the matter flowed all over their, heads. We bad to out their finer nano and at times to put gloves on their hands, the Irritation 1Ba 80 bad, to: keep them from digging Into the flesh, and at night they would nearly tear their limbs off.Tim !platers would be literally covered witblood. '.;'Tho teachers would not let tfidin attend- ipboo1 for fggggpp of Imps on emending among, tis other cldtdren, 80 resolved to ry thhe Cutfctira Remedies wh eh I found to e s en 0 i 0.pohnthe Children read I cont}n 50 w9t Cuticula Soap an Mideast Ointment for one month, and Rini. instill Is a learr'yeloue 01100." (Signed) Ger A h'r Rbbinlion. 87, litswi Illabl St„ KR811an r0m0n, 0r. aA}thntigh Cutlet n 11080 nli Q intiaent are g np ap10o0 del throughout 0. orlo a e seralkin Will IUSIMMS110 Sentafreo en np 1ctit16tl t , the skin 14 0. Corp„ 46 Columbus Ave:, Boston, U. S. A./ Square. That'll save you buying ty ; new one, and I'll feel bettor'n ''e if was borrowing all the time. Is that all dight! What any I" A. SIILART TAFFETA GOWN Is made with panier skirt and long lace sleeves. 4. GOOD AS A DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE. Baby's Own Tablets aro as good as a doctor in the house. They never 'fail to relieve the little one from stomach and bowel troubles, to expel worms, make teething easy and promote healthful sleep. Con- cerning them Mrs. J. H. Turner, Glenora, Ont., says: "I always re- commend Baby's Own Tablets to my friends. I have used them for a long time and find them without an equal. They relieved baby of the feverishness and restlessness while cutting teeth and have made her one of the most healthy babies there is. I always keep them in the house and consider them as good as a doctor." The Tablets aro sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brook- ville, Ont. WHY WE GET HUNGRY. Hunger is not due to emptiness of the stomach, or to hydrochloric acid secreted into -the empty organ, or to congestion of the gastric glands, Cannon attributes ib to contraction of the stomach's muscular walls. By an ingenious experiment he was able to register simultaneously the movements of the stomach wall and the subject's impression of hunger sensation always occurred in uni- son. Both are abolished when food, whioh satisfies the bodily need, is taken into the stomach. The se- quence of events may best be de- scribed in the author's words: "Hunger is normally the signal that the stomach is contracted for action; the unpleasantness of hun- ger leads to eating; eating starts gastric secretion, distends the con- tracted organ, initiates the move- ments of gastric digestion, and abol- ishes the sensation.." 3t• CURE FOR CONSUMPTION. Such is the recuperative power contained in Copoland'o (Juro for Consumption that even the most advanced moos have been cured by its bonefinial action, It can be taken by the weakest patient, to whom it gives a ilghting strength as nothing oleo will The appetite comes book. That weakening P1 'lnIration is stopped. The lungs and respiratory organs aro healed et the same timo. Its elaoaay to fight consumption, weak or bleeding lunge, lingering oouglo and bronchitis is proven beyond doubt not by what I state, but by what is stated by those 10110 have talon it for those ailments and have been cured. Copies of tostinioa isle of those who, after bolts given in; by doctors and apeotalfots, no only slaving a few days to live, and are alive and well today, aro sent on request. Pride $1 per bottle at your drug. gist, or direct from Wm. Copeland, 515 Pane Ave„ Toronto, Canada, HER FORTE, "1 thought you said George had married a good manager 1" "He did.;, "I called on her yesterday and the house was in a terrible disor- der, Ib looked as if everything had been left to take caro of itself." "But you should see her manag- ing George." Considerably more than 200,000 separate species of insects are known. Ask for MInard's and take no other. About eight million men are em- ployed in regular oocupationa in the United Kingdom, London is the healthiest capitol in Europe. Complete census rottrne for New- finundtand last year show that the !population Was 242,000 persosis,an lncreasc of ten par cont. in the last ten years. COMES FROM NOVA SCOTIA THIS TIME ANOTHER SPLENDID CURE BY DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS. R. Moulaison, whom two doetoi'8 treated, finds relief and permcua- ent care in Dodtl's Kidney Pills. Burette Island, Yarmouth Co., N.B., May 20 Special) -Mr. Renin Moulaison, a well known resident hero. is telling his neighbors of his cure from a severe attack of Kid- ney Disease which kept him in a state of pain and suspense for two months and defied the efforts of two doctors wlru were treating him. "My trouble started with a cold," Mr. Moulaison says. "My muscles would cramp and I had backache and dizzy spells. My head ached, and I had a tired, nervous feeling while specks of light flashed in frunt of my eyes. "I suffered in this way for over two months and was treated by two doctors, but they didn't seem M be able to do much for me. Then I started to take Dodd's Kidney Pills and they helped me almost at once. Six boxes cured me." Dodd's Kidney Pills always cure the Kidneys. Cured Kidneys strain all the impurities out of the blood. That makes pure blood and. good health. H BURYING A WATER -SUPPLY. Tho Egyptian Jerboa Stores Up Water, Not Food. Most rodents are provident crea- tures, and store a supply of food for winter use. According to Major Stanton, a former governor of Khartum, the Egyptian jerboa, which is a cousin of our jumping - mouse, is quite as thrifty as the rest of its race. But it is singular in this, that it stores up, not food, but water. The jerboa is found most general- ly in arid regions, in whioh the dry season lasts six months, during which time not even a drop of dew falls. In these places, however, there grows, just at the close of the rainy season, a bitter but extreme- ly juicy melon. As soon as it is ripe, the jerboa gnaws through its stem, digs away the earth beneath it, and lets it drop into the hole duns formed. The wind soon covers it with sand, which not only oonoeals it, but also protects it from the heat. On the coming of the drought, the jerboa seeks out one after another of these natural water -barrels, and slakes its thirst at them until the rainy season sets in once more. As the jerboa lays up a supply of from forty to fifty melons, there is no danger of its store of water running sliort. - 'f'- TIIE STOCTING FRAME. Clergyman Inventor Unappreciated In His lifetime. Tho inventor of the stocking frame was the Rev. Win, Lee, cur- ate of Calverton, a small village in Nottinghamshire, England. Like many other great inventors, Lee was unlucky and unappreciated during his lifetime, in his own country, and received little mone- tary encouragement. The stocking frame, as is well known, was the small beginning which led to the ra- pid development of the groat lace and hosiery trades, which during the 18th and 19th centuries were.the staple industries of Notts. Nearly every village around the City of Nottingham earned its living by hosiery, and before the factories of 1812, there were said to be 30,000 frames at work, The cotton trade commenced in Notts, in many parts, before Lancashire. The large coal fol L enc ti fields of Lancashire proved the mainstay for cotton trade, and so operated to the disadvantage of Nottingham. i;4 Very many persons die annually from cholera and kindred summer complaints, who might have been saved if proper remedies had been used. If attacked do not delay in getting a bottle of Dr. J. D. Kel- logg's Dysentery Cordial, the medi- cine that never fails to effect a cure, Those who have used it say it acts promptly, and thoroughly subdues the pain and disease. WHY SHE FAILED, "I thought she married him to re- form him l" "So she did," "But he's just as wild as ever." "Yes. Sho can't keep him home nights long enough to start tho re- formation." Capital punishment by electrici- ty was adopted in Now York in 1889. The Oil for the Athlete. -In rub- bing down, the athlete can find nothing finer that Dr, Thomas' To- lestrie 011. It renders the muscles and sinews pliable, takes the sore - toss out of thorn and strengthens them for strains that may be put upon them. It stands pre-eminent for this purpose, and athletes who for years have been using it ran testify t0 its value as a lubricant. MILES, LONG AND SHORT, Considering the size of Switzer- land one might expect a mile to be about as far es one could throw a ball but the !lardy mountaineers think 9,153 yards the proper thing, even when, as it 'generally is, it is very much up hill. The Swiss is the longest mile of all, being followed by the Vienna post mile of 8,206 yards. The Flemish mile le 0,809 yards, the Prussian 8,237 yards, and in Denmark they walk 8,244 yards and call it a stroll of a mile. The Arabs generally fide good horses and call 2,113 yards a mile, while the Turks nye satisfied with 1,820 yards and the Italians shorten the distance of a mile to 1,700 yards, just six yards more than the Ameri- can has in mind when the agent waves his Hand and blandly re- marks, "About a mile," 4i— -• NOTHING LIKE LEATHER. A London bookseller tells the fol- lowing amusing story of a conversa- tion ho held recently with a well-to- do, but illiterate, client: -"I must have somebooks," the latter re- marked, and went on to explain that he had found an empty library in a house which he had purchased in Kensington. His only condition was that the volumes should be handsome. The bookseller sug- gested that half should be bound in Russia and half in Illorocco. "What on earth's to hinder you from having the, lot bound in Lon- don?" was the unexpected re- sponse. 3 HAVE YOU A SKIN RASH? Zam-Bale Will End It. For skin rashes, eruptions, ecze- ma, etc., either in adults or chil- dren, there is nothing known to sci- ence which equals Zam-Bok in the quickness and certainty of its eura- tive power. Mr. Raymond. Web- ber, of Allanburg, Ont., writes: "I have tried Zam-]luk for many ail- ments, and every time have found it successful. Some time ago I had a bad rash all over my body. I tried home-made salves, herb salves, and various home-made pre- parations, and these proved of no use, but when I tried Zam-Buk I was cured in a quarter of the time that I had been experimenting in vain with other preparations, "My boy had boils, and once again Zam-Buk brought about a complete cure. We have also used it as a household balm and it always gives us full satisfaction." Zam-Buk owes its unique healing power to certain herbal extracts it contains. Unlike most ointments it contains no poisonous coloring mat- ter, no animal fat, but is purely herbal. For eczema, piles, blood poison, abscesses, ulcers, cuts, burns, and all skin injuries and diseases it is without equal, 500. box all druggists and stores. Use also Zam-Buk Soap, 25e. tablet. k Oxygen constitutes one-third of the sulk! earth, nine -tenths of water, and one-fifth of the atmos- phere, and is the most abundant of all substances. They Soothe Excited Nerves. - Nervous affections are usually at- tributable to defective digestion, as the stomach dominates the nerve centres. A Bourse of Parmelee's Vegetable Pills will still all disturb- ances of this character, and by re- storing the stomach to normal ac- tion relieve the nerves from irrita- tion. There is no sedative like them and in the correction of irre- gularities of the digestive process- es, no preparation has done so ef- fective work, as can be testified to by thousands. The London Stock Exchange was established in 1801. Keep Minard's Liniment In the house. It may not be wise to believe all we hear, but it is well to 518e dis- cretion in our declarations of in- credulity. Warts are unsightly blemishes, and corns aro painful growths, Holloway's Corn Cure will remove them. An egg contains 14 per cent. of albumen, Mlnard's Liniment used by Physicians. SAME OLD STORY. Gabe -"I hoard you had a dead slue thing yesterday. How did it come out?" Stove -"It was dead, sure enough." One cannot hope to escape snares through life, but one has no excuse for holding fast to illusions. Bad lood- -�-�" - is the direct and inevitable result of irregular or constipated bowels and clogged -up kidneys and shin, The undigested food and other waste mat- ter which is allowed to accumulate poisons the blood and the whole eystem. Dr, Morse's Indian Root Pills act directly on the bowels, regulating them -on the kidneys, giving them ease and strength to properly filter the blood -and on the skin, opening up the pores. For pure blood and good health take Dr. Horse's !e Indian Root Pi1Ha 90 tri 111 '(yp; R Shi ing vim" Inducuaa, pink eye, epizootic, distemper and all 13008 and throat dia- eases cured, and n11 others, no matter how "exposed," kept from having any of therm dieea8es with SPOHN'S LIOUID DISTEMPER CURE. Three to six dimes often cure a ease. one 50 -cent bottle guaranteed to do so, Best thing for brood mares. Arts on the blood. 50e and 85 a bottle. 58 and 11 a dozen bottles. Druggists and Lammas shops.. Distributors—ALL winima$ALE DRTTOCila .9. SPORN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, Goshen, Indiana. U. S. A. ARPET D Y EIN and Cleaning. Thin let sptolalty with the British American. Dyeing Co' Send partlrulare by poet and lee aro euro to satiety. Unlit Mod dist. Addroes Boz 233, Montreal Maypole CLEANS AND DYES Gives rich glowing colors, fadeless in sun or suds. Dyes cotton, silk, wool or mixtures. Use it yourself at home. No trouble - no muss. 24 colors - will give any shade. Colors I OC,bllack l5c, at your dealer's or postpaid with booklet How to Dye' hon xo6 F. L, BENEDICT & CO. Montreal y THAT DECIDED HIM. Mr. Henpeek-"Is your beef ten- der to -day?" Butcher -"Yes; sir, it's as tender as a woman's heart." Mr. Henpeck -"Then I'll take a pound of sausages." A Pill for All Seasons: Winter and summer, in any latitude, whe- ther in torrid zone or Aretic tem- perature, Parmelee's Vegetable Pills can be depended upon to do their work. The dyspeptic will find them a friend always and should carry them with him everywhere. They are made to withstand any cli- mate and aro warranted to keep their freshness and strength. They do net grow stale, a quality not possessed by many pills now on the market. HIS DESIRE. "I don't want to be a millionaire, but I would like to he rich enough to afford one thing." "Anel what is that?" "To have new potatoes when they're really new." Lfinard's Liniment Co., Limited, Yarmouth, N. 8. Gentlemen,—in January last, Primula Leclaro, one of the men employed by me, working in the lumber woods, had a tree full on him. crushing him fearfully. He was, when found, placed on a Bled and taken home, where grave fear,, were en- tertained for his recovery his hips bring badly braised and his body turned black from his ribs to kis feet. We used 31IN- AR.D'S LINIMENT on him freely to deaden tho pain and with the use of three hot. Des he was completely cured and able to return to his work. SAUVEUR DUVAL. Elgin Road, L'Islet Co., Quo. THE REASON. Sam -"I saw your wife this after- noon, and she looked very thin; any particular reason?" Ham -"Yes, the fashions hale suddenly changed again." �00 Try famine Eye Remedy Nosmartmg-rcolai'1no_SotaQnlokly. 7 y 110,, 1003, Weak, wohry 15,,11.0, 001 00 e, nnlnie,l liyelida llhnotratod 50010 001•E In h 1'arle,a 51na1NE l0 0001- E7 e s l,oTiV br nor tirntl,t,—notan';v2 MOd s' ren an t or in n y years. j e d 0101,' 1•rneolc0 rmany 500re. No 7S' doll .bated to the Public, and 9013 by 0,�' �° 1'yo Hale, 111 Asnplip 0000, 91e1000. Morins Eye Remedy Co., Cheese The total capital of the Bank of England is over 814,500,000. - Minard's Linlmont Lumbsrman's Friend, Agriculture supports nearly 19,- 000,000 of the inhabitants of the German Empire. Mother Graves' Worm Extermin- ator will drive worms from the sys- tem without injury to the child, ha - cause its action, while fully effec- tive, is mild. LIMITS OP NATURAL VISION. The limits of viszon vary with ele- vation, condition of the atmos- phere, intensity of illumination and other modifying elements in differ- ent eases. On a clear day an ob- ject one foot above a level plain may be seen at the distance of 1.31 Milos, one 10 feet high 4.15 miles, Ion feet high, 12.1 miles, one a mile high, as the top of a mountain, 95.23 miles, This allows seven fnolies, or, to he exact, 0.99 inches, for the curvature of the earth, and emurnes that the size and illu- mination of the object are sufficient to produce an imago. In one year over mew offenders have been brought before ]ilitish fuveniie Courts. FARMS FOR SALE, H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street, Toronto. it IGRT 'r1HO17SAND DOLLARS WILL a buy bean-.iful hundred acres 1n Northumberland County,.including Stork and Implements. There is in the stock 4 horses, 10 rows, etc. This is a snap, and can be had on easy terms. Possession at once. 1 100n FARMS IN LINCOLN, WELLAND, .11LL Balton, Peel, York, Durham, North. timberland, Prince Edward counties at reasonable prices. A LBERTA, SASKATCHEWAN AND J. Manitoba lands in large or small blocks. GRUI'r 7415118—ALL SIZES, IN THE Niagara Fruit Belt. H. W. DAWSON, Toronto. nth ACRES IN ERAEX COUNTY—SOIL 57i7 Slay .loam; 19 acres mixed timber; 1 acro orchard; frame house; frame bank barn. Will exchange for 50 acre farm. Western Real ]:state, London. AGENTS WANTED. EVERAL GOOD SALESMEN TO handle the Closest -in Subdivision in city 01 Edmonton, Alta. Money -making Proposition for gond live men. Apply D. R. Pratt & Co., 408 Kent Building Toronto. �� DAY --FOR AGENTS ON DOLLAR w book, 'Destruction of Titanic," commission 50 nor cont,; credit given; freight paid; order Free Sample quirk. Forty sales day reported. Nichols Co., Limited, Publishers, Toronto, Canada. MALE HELP WANTED. 'YS AILWAY AGENTS, TELEGRAPHERS 11.., and Clerks in great demand through- out Ontario and North West. Six months will qualify you. Day and Mail courses. Positions secured. Free Book 18 explains. Dominion School Telegraphy, Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS. LIPE FOXES WANTED—Y0'ONG OR old. Wm. Pearson, Guelph, Ont. F[ 47 and FARH SCALES. Wilson's 11 Ceole Works. 9 L'anlansde. Toronto. Gv ANDER, TUMORS, LUMPS, eta. In. ternal and external, oared without vain by our home treatment. Write us before too late. Dr. Bollman Medioal Co., Limited, Collingwood. Ont. GTON SCALE GLTARANTEFO. Wilson's 6cale Works• 9 14spinnnde. PURIFIG0 WRITE FOR CURES CARER AND TUMOR Canadian Branch: Purif100 Co., Bridgeburg, ent. X8 OMs LAVE "ET X 2EZ.' CREOSOTE; Protect—Preserve—Beautify Samples and Booklets on Application JAMES LA}IOM81R & CO., Limited 18761 Bathurst Street TORONTO Keep Files Ofir Your Cattle nY ITAI\0 OO =COM 0 T (Guaranteed) Uee Cow•Comfort to improve the con. dation and yield of your cows, SI Pe gallon. Freight paid. (Dilute with 4 gallons of water, reducing the price to 490. nor gal). Agents wanted everywhere. Write for terms and pamphlets. SAPHO MFC. CO., Montreal. ALLURING ARGUMENT. Agent -"Like some awnings, mum? We fit and fix 'em cheap." Housewife -"I don't want awn- ings, They keep out the sun, and we get little enough sunshine here as it is," Agent -"You need never use 'em, mum. They'll roll up." There are sixteen cables morose the North Atlantic Ocean. ED, 4 IPStE 21-42