The Brussels Post, 1913-12-4, Page 7Young Folks
eliWaltrevteelleetbAtolle-tenon-
Knotting and Knitting.
"Grandma, make John give me
back my knittiiig-apool1" cried
Dorothy Holthani.
"But I can knit, grandma, See!"
cried John. "I 'Put those strong
brads into the spool in place of
slender pins,"
"But iho ever heard of a bay's
knitting?" said Dorothy,
"But buys de, knit, and men, in
some countries," answered John.
"Shepherds knit their winter jer-
seys while they tend their sheep. 1
read about it,'
"Who was the fast to do knit-
ting?" asked Dorothy,
"No one knows just who was the
first to loop a single thread '•o that
it would make a web. It takes two
sets of threads for weaving, you
know," said their grandmother,
"But when people first began to
make slings out of thongs,—strips
of leather,—and then to twist them
into cords, they learned to fasten
them by many queer knots and ties,
some of which sailors and weavers
use to -day."
"Oh, I know," interrupted John.
"A sailor showed me how aa make
some."
"Probably the very same knots
that the Phenicians and the Egyp-
tians made in their fish -nets we are
using in our hammocks to -day. But
knitting is different from knotting
or netting, because we simply slip
a row of loops made of a single
thread, so, through another set of
loops. See, here on these big
needles I have looped together
enough for a shoulder shawl."
"But it is all full of little holes,"
said Johnny.
"Just so," said grandma, "but
the rubbing of one thread of silk or
wool upon another makes a sort of
electric warmth. It was the people
of Scotland who were first known
as knitters, just about the time that
Columbus discovered America—"
"1.492!" cried John, proudly—
"And about ono hundred years
after that the first stocking -frame
was made on which the stitches
were set up.
",Soon a man invented a second
row of needles on a machine for rib-
bed knitting. Then oasne the cir-
cular knitting -machine. You've
seen me knit round stockings on a
triangle made of three needles,
Well, this knitted a round stocking,
only the loops were set up on a
circle of needles. The most won-
derful help of all, however, was
what is palled a latch -needle, which
holds the thread tight ono second,
and lets it go the next. Then came
power. If you children lived in a
factory town, you would know all
these things as well as you know
your history lesson, for there is a
wonderful peace history as well as
war•history."
"But we don't," said Dorothy,
dolefully.
"Never mind. Some day your
father will take you to see a factory
where this wonderful knitting is
"done On hundreds of machines that
are nothing more. than a giant im-
provement of the spool in Johnny's
hand, with hundreds of pins or
latch -needles spinning a circular
tube or web,and dropping it down
through a hole in the bottom.
"I shouldn't wonder," continued
grandma; "if, long ago, somebody
took a "child's knitting -spool and
thought about it, and thought about
it, and tried tacks and pins and
crochet -needles, and other things.
And perhaps they did not succeed
at first any more •than Johnny did.
But they kept on trying. Year alter
year they thought ,wed worked, un-
til they made of knitting one of the
greatest industriea of the world,"—
Youth's Companion.
No Job for Him.
Mike Hennessey, a hefty young
Irishman, secured his first fore-
manship after serving for some
years as one of the "gang,"
Promptly at 7 o'clock in the morn-
ing he began his duties by calling
the gang to order.
"Ye all have to worrtrk for me 1"'
he shouted. "Worru'k I say I And
I• want every wan of yez to under-
stand itt wance that I kin liok any
man in the gang l"
All swallowed the insult except
one giant -built' warrior, who step-.
ped forward and said;
"But you can't lick me, Mike
Hennessey!"
"Oh, I can't, can't I," yelled
Mike.. a
"No, you can't," ensue back tete
determined answer. •
"\'Vc1l, thin, go to the office and
draw ,your money; I'll have no
man in the gang 1 can't licit."
Certainly 1
"But listen -a moment, Matilda.
Don't you think a goodhusband
ought to tell his wife of her faults tri
"Fysnnder, a good }itieband'doeen'b
think his wife has any faults."
Jones—Did your father -in -last+
tsettle anything on you when you
married his daue:ter 1 Brom—
Yes, the rest el the family.,
A WOMAN'S
(HELPLESSNESS
Cured Through the Rich, Red
Blood 1)r. Will/mut' Pink
PHIS Acttlally Make.
Thousands of women suffer from
headaches, backaches, dizziness,
langour and nervousness, low
realize that their misery all coins
fl'oni the bad state of their blood.
They take one thing for their head,
another for their stoinaoh and a
third for their nerves, And yet all
the while it is simply their blood
that is the cause of all the trouble.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills will cure
because they actually make new,
rich, red blood, which roaelies
every organ and every nerve in the
body, carrying with it e new health
and new strength, Mrs, Wni,
Acorn, t,'harluttetown, P. E. 1.,
says : "Before I began the use of
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I was•one
of the most miserable women liv-
ing. For more titan three years 1
lived a life of constant dread. I
was taking weak spells so that I
could not be left alone. If I walked
from one room to another my heart
would palpitate so violently that I
feared I would die. I was continu-
ally sending for the doctor, who
told MCI had no Mood and that my
nerves were shattered. Notwith-
standing his treatment I did not
get any better. I could not keep
anything on my atomaelt, and the
least thing weuld make me sick.
Then my trouble was complicated
with rheumatism, which became so
bad that I had to be Lifted like a
child, and the pain was almost un-
bearable, I was in this deplorable
condition when my husband read
of Dr. `Krilliams' ,Pink Pills, an
get me a supply, When I had
taken half a dozen boxes I felt
motel` bettor, and could go about
the house, I kept on taking the
Pilin until I had used twelve boxes,
and I can truly say they made me a
well woman. Indeed, I do not
think I would be living now but for
Dr. Williams' Pink Pitts. I wish I
could persuade every woman who is
sick to follow my example, for I
have proved they will cure the most
desperate cases, and I consider my-
self a living witness of this fact."
You can get these Pills through
any medicine dealer or by mail poet
paid, at 50 coals a box or six boxes
for $51.50 from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Latest Picture of the President of
France.
Every married man believes that
the household expenses could be
cut in two if he only had a chance
tu'turn his business acumen loose
en the job.
WHERE MONEY IS TIGHT.
Everybody suffers, when boots are tight
your corn suffers, but they can be pain.
ready cured by Putnam's C,otADxtractor,
Guaranteed In all cases, 'dee only Pitt-
mum's,
UGnom's, 26o. at all dealers.
Bravo. a
He—"They say kissing brings on
diseases." She—"Wail, a little ill-
ness must corns into every life."
LIQUID SULPHUR banishes RHEUMA•
TISM,
Home is the place to which some
men go in order to get even when
disagreeable things happen down-
town.
Minard'a Liniment Cures Colds, Se.
Selfish Loot.
"What's your idea of graft4"
".Graft," replied Boss MaN'ab,
'is the easy money that some other
ellow gets,'
A tourist rolling et an Irish:cotr-
tage, noticed a glass shade under
which was a' brick and a faded rose,
Natilrally he inqui$ed why the own.
er of a shanty should cherish two
such dissimilar objects. "Shure,
sol', there's =movies attached to
than," said the IAshman, "Feel
the big dint in pie hotgd1. Well, ib
was the brick that made it," "Bob
the, rose?" said the visitor, "The
rose is off the grave of the man
whet threw the brick," replied the
host.
SI'1DI111-t$tLji.
Especially Suitltbfe For the Nets
That Enclose Balloons.
The silkworm is by no means the
only creature that produces silk.
Spiders make their web, nate, and
egg -cocoons of a kind of silk that is
well adapted for certain of inaii'a
uses, The filaments of spider `.ilk
are much finer than those predur,•d
by the silkworm, but they are re-
latively stronger. Tho webs of
some of the large spiders of tropical
countries .are strong enuugh to en-
tangle Small birds,
As early as the seventeenth ern-
turyt travellers in Paraguay found
that the natives made clothing from
the webs of a species of Elmira, the
gonus to which the common garden
Fpider belongs. Spider -silk has
been used for eenturies in China,
India, and West Africa; notably in
the Chinese province of Yunnan,
where the so-called "silk of the
Eastern Sea" is produced.
In the year 170e a Frerie i jurist,
Monsieur Gltentlux of Montpellier,
succeeded in making several pairs
of gloves and stockings from the
silk of garden spiders. The firet
really practical experiments, how-
ever, were made by an Englishman
named Rolt. By his process, he
drew the silk directly from the hotly
of the spider; and the material he
obtained was much stronger than
that spun under normal conditions,
The end of the filament he attached
to a bobbin, which was revolved by
sterane. The process does not seem
to lneommode the spider. After
she has been robbed of all her silk,
she rests for ten days, and is then
ready to yield another supply,
As the silk comes from the spin-
nerets it is eovered with a viscous
substance, whichis washed off in
running stater. The filaments are
very find; from eight to twenty-four
must be combined to form a single
thread. The fabric that these
threads produce is much lighter
than ordinary silk. For that rea-
son, cords of spider -sill` are espe-
cially suitable for the nets that en-
close balloons,
At present the most promising
experiments in the production of
spider -silk are carried on in Mada-
gascar. They use a large spider
called the halabe. At the school in
Tananarive they pay the natives
eight cents a hundred for the spi-
ders, each of which yields a fila-
ment from 1,000 to 1,300 feet long.
The eilk is of a superb glossy yel-
low, but its oolor is not permanent.
A Bad .Heart,.
Its Cause and Cure
Many, Firmly Convinced They Are
Dying of sleart Trouble, Rave
Often the Strongest Hearts.
Sometimes you wake up at night,
heart throbbing like a steam engine,
Your breathing is short and irregu-
lar; pains shoot through . the chest
and abdomen, and cause horrible anx-
ietY. •
Your trouble isn't with the heart at
all. These sensations are the out-
come of indigestion, which has taus-.
ed gas to form on the stomach and
press against the heart.
Just read what happened to Isaac
Mailoux, of Belle River, Ont.:
"Three months ago I was a Weak,
sickly man. My appetite was poor,
food fermented in my stomach, I had
sour risings and indigestion. At night
1 would often waken with gas in
the stomach and heart palpitation.
"I consulted my doctor and used
remedies that my friends advised.
Nothing helped.
"One day I received a sample of
Dr. Hamilton's Pills, and my cure.
commenced. To -clay I have a vigor -
%us appetite, strong heart action, and
no sign of indigestion. I feel young
er and healthier than ever before."
Your druggist or storekeeper sells
Dr, Hamilton's Pills, 25c. per box or
five boxes for $1.00. By mail from
The Catarrhozone Co,, Buffalo, N.Y„
and Kingston, Canada.
The Charitable Williams.
At the funeral services of an el-
derly darky, of Richmond, Va., the
following colloquy was overheard
between two aged negroes:
"There ain't no use in talkin',"
said Mose Barker; "Dick Williams,
he was the most charitablest man
des town ever seen."
"1 reckon dat's so," said the
darky to whom Mr. Barker impart-
ed this information. And he paus-
ed as if waitingfor evidence on
this point.
"Yessuh," continued Mr, Barker,
"Dick Williams, he always owned
a plug hat, and dubs' my time I
ain't never heard that Dick- ever.
refused to lend dab hat to any-
body,"
BIG EIIACKS ON Doctors Condemn
DAE\ID AD FINGERS 13'i9 Liniments
Eczema for Three Years, Broke Out
on Head In Scales, Itched and
Burned Badly Cuticura Soap
and Ointment Cured.
Lyons Brook; N. S.--'"3 suffered with
eczema for three years. It started on my
hand, first in sores between my angers and
all over tho palms of my band
and angers were big creeks,
Thou 1t broke out on my head
in scales. It itched and
burned so badly I could not
sleep. It was so Itching and
burning that I scratched and
made Bores and my hair camp
�`� out awfully bad. I did not
know what it was
"I was treated for a long time and it did
not do any good. I gave up my work for
a month but as soon as I started doing my
house -work again my hands got just as bad
as over. I used two bottles of — and
it did not do any good. Ono day I road
about Cuticura Soap and Ointment and
decided to try them. I sent for a sample
and I used them till I caw it stopped the
itching and burning, eel got three cakes of
Cuticura Soap and a box of Cuticura Oint-
ment and that cured mo." (Signed) Mrs.
P. 3. licKearnoy, May 27, 1918.
Not only are Cuticura Soap and Ointment
most valuable In the treatment of eczemas
and other distressing eruption of skin and
scalp, but no other emollients do so much
for pimples, blackheads, red, rough skins;
Itching, scaly scalps, dandruff, dry, thin and
falling hair, chapped hands and shapeless
nails, nor do 15 so economically. Sold by
druggists and dealers everywhere. For a
liberal free sample of each, with 32-9. book;
sand post -card to Potter Drug as Chem. I
Corp., Dept. D, Boston, U. S. A.
DIVE FOXES
WANTED
WRITE POR PRICES
W. C. GOFFATT, - Orillia, Ont.
FROM MERRY OLD EPJOLA33
NEWS BY MAIL ABOUT JOHN
GULL AND HIS PEOPLE.
Occurrences in Tho Land That
Reigns Snpremo in the Com•
merolal World.
Some 9,``00 fewer persons were
sent to prison last year than in the
preceding twelve months.
An anonymous donor has given
£10,000 to Leeds University for the
erection of a Sohooi" f Agriculture.
The will of Walter Whitehead, of
Colwyn Bay, formerly of Manches-
ter, surgeon, has been proved art
£176,892 net.
An Ulster athletic club is to bo
started in Birmingham to preparo
young men for any emergency
whioh may arise in Ulster,
A new company has been formed
to connect North and South Shields
by tunnel through which an electric
railway will run.
General Sir James MacLeod Fra-
ser-Tytler, G.O.B., who has • just
oelebrated his 92nd birthday, is
probably the oldest Indian Mutiny
officer alive.
Last year there were 1,061 cre-
mations in the United Itingdosn,
the largest number recorded since
cremation was introduced into the
country in 1885.
The British Museums 1ms books
written on bricks, tiles, oyster
•shells, bones and fiat stones, toge-
ther, with manu•scr'ipts on bark,
ivory, leather, parchment, papyrus,
lead, iron, copper and wood. ,
What are
Post
Toasties?
Thin, watery bits of choice
Indian Corn -- p e r f e c t l y
ooekecl; . delicately flavoured;
then ]toasted to an appetizing
golden broe n, and packed in
tightly .sealed packages with-
out being touched by hand,
"Toaeties•" aro for break-
fast or, any other meal—•served
direob from ;package with
dream, .or milk, and a sprink-
ling of sugar.
Post Toaaties aro convene
lent, cavo a lot of time and
please the palate immensely 1
But after all, a trial is the
beet aveyswor,
Grocers everywhere •sell
Post Toasties
""r
Ottra4hn Postern Cereal Ob„ Ltd,
Windsor, Ontario.
Polite Are Warned Against Strong -
Oily Liniments Con.
gaining Deviant Acids
and Aminonia.
Many people have clung to the old.
fasiuoned idea that a thick, greasy
liniment is the best kind. Doctors
say not—and they know.
Recently a number of these white,
oily liniments were analyzed, and they
were found to contain an enormously
high percentage of harmful acids, and
such irritating chemicals as ammonia,
etc. For the moment they may cause
a warm sensation when first applied,
but their continued use never cures
rheumatism, and only deteriorates the
skin, sets up inflammation, and causes
endless trouble,
When a doctor warns you to quit
using a white, oily liniment --do so.
He knows that a thick liniment can't
penetrate, can't sink through the pores
and reach the seat of the pain.
N.,hcn asked his opinion a few days
ago, an important physician stated
that be considered, a strong, penetrat-
ing, pain -subduing liniment, such as
"Nerviline," to be superior to any of
the white ammonia liniments, In his
twenty-five years of practice he had
witnessed cases of rheumatism, sclat.
tea, and lumbago that simply would
not respond to ordinary treatment --
but Nerviline cured them. The same
physician also spoke of the great ad-
vantages of keeping a preparation like
Nervlline in the house, because of
cramps, diarrhoea, stomach disorders,
earache, toothache, headache, and
such minor ailments. Nerviline is a
drst•elass cure.,- There is scarcely an
ache or a pain, internal or external,
that Nerviline won't eure. In thou-
sands of homes no other path -reliev-
ing medicine is used. .Fifty years'
continued success and the endorse.
; ment of the profession are proof that
Nerviline is the liniment for the home,
dr--'
Removing a Splinter.
A splinter in the hand is not only
uncomfortable, but also dangerous,
as it may cause blood -poisoning.
You should, therefore, always re-
move a'splinter directly you feel it.
If you have no surgical instrument
at hand, excellent tweezers can be
made from an ordinary wooden
match. Split the match a little
way down the centre, and to ex-
tract the splinter use it just as you
would a pair of tweezers.
Oftentimes They Are.
Scientists claim that eyes furnish
an index to character. Yes; a
black one often shows that the
other fellow has a rude and violent
disposition.
Use LIQUID SULPHUR and prevent
disease.
The Modest Enthusiast.
"How did you enjoy my sermon 1"
"Fine, I know a lot of fellows
you were hitting hard,"
Minard's Liniment Cures Carget In .Cows,
If yen think the average woman
is weaker minded than the aver-
age man, you are entitled to an-
other think.
Try Murine Eye Remedy
If you have Red, Weak, Watery Eyes
or Granulated Eyelids. Doesn't Smart
—Soothes Eye Pain. Druggists Sell
Murine Eye Remedy, Liquid, 25c, 50c.
Murine Eye Salve in' Aseptic Tubes,
25c, 50c, Eye Books Free by Mail.
An Eye Tonle Good for All nye* that Hood Care
Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago
When a man brings home a box
of candy for his wife she imagines
he is concealing a confession he
oughtto make—and usually she is
right.
LIQUID SUCPHUR cleanses and heals,
THROUGH QUICIiSAND.
A Party of Men Had a Terrible
Experience.
Fording a river whore there is
quicksand is something like rushing
hums out of a burning stable. In
"The least of the Plainsmen" Zane
Grey describes how a party of men
and horses passed through the 'tiara
cherous Little Colorado River. It
was a wide, .shallow stream of swift-
ly running, reddish-nlud<ly water.
Through the channel, cut by floods,
little streatanlets trickled and mean-
dered in all direotions.
The sand seemed firm, but water
oozed out round my feels; and when
I stepped out, the whole bar shook
like jelly, I pushed my footthrough
the crueit, and the cold, wet sand
took hold, and tried to suck me
down.•
"How can you ford this stream
with horses 1" 1 asked Emmett
"We must take our chances," re-
plied he. "We'll hitch two towns
to one wagon, and run the horses.
I've forded bete at worse stages
than this. Oiree ateam got stuck
and I had to leave it; another time
the water was high, and washed mo
•down-streaixt,"
Emmett sent his son into the
Stream en a mule. The rider lashed
his mount, and plunging, splashing
along, got through at a pace very
near a gallop. Ho returned in the
same manner, and reported one
bad place near the other side.
Janes and 1 got on the first wa-
gon and tried, to coax up the' four
hovse•s, but they would not start,
Emmett had to dash thein bo ,tart
these. T.'ha obher Moiunnoeis riding
alongside yelled at thorn, and used
their whips. The wagon bowled
into the water with a tremendous
splash. We were wet through be-
fore we had gone twenty feet. The
plunging horses were lost in yel-
low spray; the stream rushed gurg-
ling through the wheels; the Mor-
mons yelled. I wanted to see, but
everything was hidden by a veil of
yellow mist. Jones yelled in my
ear, but I could not hear what he
said. Once the wagon - wheels
struck a stone or log, and we al
most lurched overboard. A muddy
splash blinded pie. I cried out in
niy excitement, and punched Jones
in the bsv'k, lie next moment the
keen exhilaration of the experience
gave way to horror, We seemed to
drag, and almost stop.
Surra one roared, "Horse down 1"
There Was an instant of painful
suspense, in which the imagination
pictured another tragedy added to
the story of this deceitful river—a
moment filled with intense feeling,
Then there came a sound of furious
splashing and yelling; and so the
three horses dragged their com-
rade out of the quicksand. ()nee
out, he regained his feet, and
plunged on. Spurred by Leer, all
four horses increased their efforts,
and amid clouds of spray galloped
the remaining distance to the other
side,
"We made that find and easy,"
remarked Emmett.
d
As Luolt Would Have It.
"Sure, it's Mike, the boy, that's
the lucky man."
"How was he lucky 1"
"Why; mum, he got insured for
$5,000 and the very next day lie
fell off the ladder, paintin', and
broke his neck."
A GOOD MEDICINE
FOR THE BABY
Baby's Own Tablets are the very
best medicine a mother can give
her little ones. They •sweeten the
stomach, regulate the bowels, break
up colds, promote healthful sleep --
in fact they are a cure for all minor
ills of little ones. The mother may
feel absolutely safe in giving them
to her children for they are guar-
anteed by a government analyst to
be strictly free from all injurious
drugs. The Tablets are sold by
medicine dealers or by mail at 85
cents a box from The Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont.
2'
For work in connection with the
navy Franca ]las ordered 35 more
dirigible balloons.
Minnrd's Liniment Co., Limited,
Gentlemen,—Last winter I received great
benefit from the use of MINARD'B LINI-
MENT in a,ervsre attack of xis Grippe,
and I have frequently proved it to be very
effective in cases of inflammation.
Yours,
W. A. B.UICRINSON.
An Omaha inventor has patented
an electric' alanni for refrigerator
drip pans.
•
LIQUID SULPHUR Corea any form of
ECZEMA.
A Scotch builder has invented tt
new type of wall tie that grips half
a dozen bricks instead of two, as
usual.,
Mlnard's Liniment Cures Distemper.
The Better Way.
Mrs. Hoyle—"Do you go through
your husband's pookets?" Mrs.
Doyle—"Sure; it's the best thing
for him." Mrs. Hoyle—"How le
that 1" Mrs. Doyle—"The doctor
says that he must avoid excitement,
and I think my method is better
than exciting Trim by asking him
for money.
PLUM
PUErn G
Ready to serve after-heating—unsur-
passed for quality and flavour.
Don't waste your time In preparation,
—Buy "Clerk's". si
THOUSANDS
of farmers
and horsemen
have saved
money by using
vin Cure for Spavins, Curb, Ringbone,
Splint, Bony Growths and Lameness
from many otber causes. It keeps
horses working. A $1 bottle may
save a horse for you. Get a bottle the
next time you are in town. Sold by
druggists everywbere, 51 a bottle, 6
for No, also ask for a copy of our book
ATreatise on the Horse "—orwrite to
Dr. B. J. SiENDALL COMPANY
Enosburg Falls, Vermont 80
IMIORKIMageteszomsgse
More than 300 species of fish are
possessed of voices that are audible
to human ears.
Minard's Liniment Cures DIRhtheria.
EDUCATION.
'S jt LLIOTT'r BUSINESS COLLEGE, TO.
as •J rento, Canada', Popular pommel..
clal School, Magnificent Catalogue free.
FARMS FOR 8ALL
H. W. DAWSON, Ninety Colborne Street.
Toronto.
Tf F 700 WANT TO BUY OR BELL A
it Fruit, Stock, Grain, or Dairy. Farm
write H. W. Daweon, Brampton, or 9l{
Colborne St., -Toronto,
14 W. DAWSON, Colborne St, Toronto.
190ACIRES, IN MIDDLESEX CO TY*,
soil rich clay loam, 2 ser
chard, 2 wells, wire fences, 2 story frame
house. a numberof excellent outbuild-
ings,
utbuildings, 1 toile to RR. station and market.
Terms easy, Apply to The Western Real
Estate Exchange, Limited, Loudon. On.
tatrin.
NEWSPAPER FOR SALE.
COrrNTRY WEE1cLY NEWSPAPER F011
Bele in Food Ontario town Excellent
opening for man al -energy. Write WnaoO
i",hlIFhing Company, Tnronto.
MISCELLANEOUS
'FORSALE—SILVER PATCHED FOYER,
'FOR
dark reds.. with to buy 100 pair
of Mink for breeding liurpasea, Graham
Bros., lt, 11, No. 1, Strathroy, Ont,
CANCER. 10110R8, - LUMPS, ETU..
L Internal and external, cured with.
out pain by our home treatment, Write
IN before too late. Dr, Hellman Medical
en Limited, a 11,neword, Ort
cry ALL STONES, KIDNEY AND OILAD.
CT der Stones, Sidney trouble,Gravel.
Lumbago and kindred ailments positively
oared with the new German remedy,
Sanol," price. 51,50 Another new remedy
for Diabetee•Mellitne, end sore cure, Is
Sanol'e Antic -Diabetes." Price- 52,00 from
druggists or direct. The Banol Mannino.
tinting Company on Canada. Limited.
Winnipeg. Man,
When buying your Piano
insist on having an
10
Piano Actio`\
Don't waste thuie on inforlr
or salves because they're a
few cents cheaper.
I have proved Zam«Bak
best for Eczema, Piles, Skin
Diseases, and Injuries
As a mother, youowe it
to your family to use the
best, that's Zam.Duk
50e box, Ail D,egsitfa and Sfoms,
R13AL NBAC,.
CHAMPION EVAPORATOR
MAKES
THE
BEST
SYRUP
(
NOW Is tete time to give your Maple
Syrup bus ness serious attention.
Order now and have your Evapo.
rotor In place before .the cold •
weather sots in, This Insures caro
of your first—and most profitable
—runs of sap. Write for booklet.
THE GRIMM MFC. CO,, LIMITED
88 Wellington Se., f0ONTREAL,QUE.
Why we pay more for your
RAW FURS
We are the oldest RAW FUR HOUSE
as well as the largest collectors of
CANADIAN RAW FURS in Canada,
That moans larger experience, larger
markets and a LARDER PRICE to you,
Ship direct to us,, Returns made cattle
day furs are received,
Shipments held separate en request.
Fall price' list now Toady. Write, for It.
HIRAM JOHNSON LIMITED,
094 St. Patti St.
Moil Dept, "0' Montroai.
RINGS
FREE
To Agents 4911\\‘'
We wall give tbts 141, gold filled, Sl
Ring (with your Initial engraved on 1t)
ihle 141. gem rent (Yet with your OR
*tone.)free of all d ,u•te, to any beer
81x1 wile will boll 30 Bela of our beaut,t
embossed xm,e past -tarda at 111 eent,f
set Osis lovely acrd,, in each riot.)
1f ionr 'birth/thy I,, In January YOU eheul(t
Wear it thrust. February, emethyet; Merril
bloodstone: J,.pr11, ditmend (brilliant
may, amoral; June, poarit Taly, rub
August, ,ardonyx; September, ea»pbir
October, opal; November, topasi Decen+herl
turquoise,
send ea taut memo elft 8 draw and r,
will mend veu theacrd■ toA. w cell. When,n,a
Hieeettribs on Lynn ai0odo.Addr,lstri ,end'ya
rehear'-IVarroll 00. oept,108, Tnroii