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The Brussels Post, 1917-1-11, Page 7From Erin's Green Isle NEWS BY MAIL FROM iRELAND'S GREEN SHORES. Happenings to the Emerald Isle of Interest to All True Irish - Canadians. The Athlone Guardians have re- fused a war bonus to the relieving anti sanitary sub -officers, Hundreds :of navvies` are being Ina ported from Ireland for work at the Alw dra Docks, Newport, • A deetrgotive fire occurred in Derry whoa the entire stock '01 Alex. Byrne, draper, was practically destroyed, Leitrim County Council has refused the application of their assistant County surveyor for au increase in sal ary. Two dollars forty cents has been freely geven in Roscommon for loads of turf that were formert'y considered dear at $1;20, • Mr.. Patrick T, Daly, T.C., who has been interned since the arrest after the rebellion was put down, has been released on parole. A Workers' Protective Association has been established le Carlow, the object of which, Is to combat the in- creasing prices of living. There are 'now -sixteen gravel dig- gers at work in clasnevin Cemetery, but the number of workers is s`tlll so short that burials are restricted. Lord Dunraven says Ireland has not done her duty in the hatter of enlist- ment, and if she does not do her duty, she will stand disgraced. At the last meeting of the Carlow Board of Guardians, the master stated that there was only ono able-bodied man in the workhouse, and he was an imbecile, The Granard• Guardians have decid- ed to discontinue eggs as an article of diet for the workhouse officers, except on. fast days, when two will be allow- ed to each officer.' The members of the V.A.D,, I{i heal, have through their president, the Countess of. `iCilmorey, remitted $1250 to the Ulster Volunteer Force I•Iospital Fund in Belfast. The programme of the Ministry of Munitions for producing munitions in Ireland fa very elaborate and will ne- cessitate the use of every budding available throughout the country. ' Oneof the stone arches of the fslandanny..Bridge, between Abbey- beals and Eilmorna, collapsed as a re- sult of the floods. It -was erected a few years ago at it cost of about $20,000. 'A branch of the French Wounded Emergency Fund has been establish- ed for Dublin and the south of Ireland, under the patronage of the Countess Farnham and several other ladies. The Committee of the Belfast Co- operative Society adopted a resolution protesting against the non-inclusion Of Troland in the Government scheme for controlling food supplies. In view of the Defeuce of the Realm regulations, tee Chief Secretary for Ireland bas ordered that railway ex- cursion traffic, not necessai•Y for the business interests, shall be discon- tinued during the war, Considerable dissatisfaction Is felt in Belfast and the north of Ireland in regard to the sugar supply. Although the price has been fixed by the Sugar Commission, in many districts this Is ignored. BEAUTIES OF THE BIBLE. , Speaks Language of A1h„Ages and All Climes. This grand old Book of. God still stands, and will continue to stand, though science and philosophy are ever' changing their: countenances and passing away, says Tayler Lewis. It is one of the few things in our world that never becomes obsolete. It speaks the language of all ages, and is adapted to all climes. Ever clear and ever young it has the same power for the later as for the early mind; it is - as much the religious vernacular of the Occidental es of the . Oriental races. Instead, then, of being its de- fect, it is its great, its divine wisdom, that it commits itself to no scientific system or scientific language, whilst -I yet it .brings before the mind those primal facts which no science " can ever reach, and for this purpose uses those first vivid conceptions which no changes in science and no obso- leteness in language can ever wholly impair. GOOD THINGS FOR SERVANTS. British ,Have to Cater to Their Do- mestics Now. The' difficulties of obtaining domes- tic servants are increasing, says n London paper. All kinds of induce_ menti, Fire being offered to girls_ to go into "service," and it is now be:-. coming quite common :for maids to be informed that cotton dresses and raps are not insisted upon and that in place of the sterotyped black for afternoons, e noes, coloredfrocks will be pro- vided for them. Many soticty women in addition to having reduced their maids' aprons to almost microscopical proportions, have 'furnished the girls with such smartly cut dresses that visitors ;not having an extended ac- quaintance with their hostesses aro curiously embarrassed, : They fear that when handing their umbrellas to these attractively' dressed gills en )halting their calls they may be his• taking a member of the :family for the maid, Putting Punch in Pre. paredness is not a clues - tion of guns and shells alone —it is a question of men-- and you have to build men out of food. Be prepared for the critical moments in life by eating Shredded Wheat, a food that supplies the greatest amount,of illus- cle-building material with the least tax on the diges- tive organs. For breakfast with milk or cream or fruits. Made in Canada, NEW EXPLOSIVE DRIVE 1 E 9 GERMNS OUT MADE BY FRENCH CHEMIST FOR FORTS AT VERDUN. Paul Painleve Extraordinary Figure in French Public Life To -day. Paul Painleve, a French chemist, is the real cause of the Germans being driven out of the outer forts of Ver- dun. He it was who invented the mysterious explosive against which their field. fortifications went down and before whose' onslaught the Ger- mans had to retire in a week more than they advanced in eight months of the hardest fighting the world has ever seen. As a chemist, Painleve lec- tures before eager classes of the Sor- bonne. Acoording to The London Chronicle, his prodigious intellectual powers were manifest before he reached his teens. A Prodigy Arrives. His teacher in the lay school at Paris decided that A prodigy had ar- rived. Paul was soon idling while the rest of his class had to work, yet knew his lessons perfectly. The teacher went to the director, who de- clared that the boy could be examined for promotion into the next higher class. In due time the same kind of report of Paul waass again handed in. Ile was examine foe promotion again and again he went up to a higher class. The process was continued un- til Paul was in peril of promotion out of the school altogether. At last the director was convinced that he had a marvel of a mind to deal with. Paul was discovered. No pains were spared , with him. A special purse was even t procured from some source. It is af- firmed that in his eleventh year he l h could have taken a bachelor's degree at the university. glory of his political triumph, He would hold a class epollbound at the Sorbonne with the delicacy of his ye- eeerches into the theory of light, heat and sound, and repair at night to a packed hall for the sake of harangu- ing discontented proletrians. "Do you not think," asked Poincare after a riot in which his friend got a blow on the nose, "that you might abandon your absurd politics?" "That is all very fine for you," retorted Painleve, "for you can go shooting in the forest of Rambouillet whenever you please; but I am poor and my only recreation is polities." Knows Sorrows of Poor. -- Painleve knows what the sorrows of• the poor must mean to them. IIis own mother has often told him of her hard lot as a girl. Ho has seen his father g'o all. winter with a threadbare coat and with shoes that did not keep bis feet from touching the ground. His parents were of the wonting class the best of things as they found them and little Paul had to go about in his in the Great World, and do es well as father's patched trousers until the they could while she 'was attending school age was reached. He was to other matters. brought up until his tenth year in one "Now one of t]iese little people was of the meanest neighborhoods in a plump little person in a coat of red - Paris, His parents were so poor that dish -brown feathers, IIs eons Air. they could not afford -wine. Pani was Quail, the great-gzeat-great-ever-so- given water sweetened with sugar and great grandfather of all the Quail. To bread with no butter. Once a weekQuail, as to all the others, Old there was meat. He slept in a large Moth•er Nature said: 'The Ureal World packing -case. Such were the original is new, There is a pisco in it far worldly circumstances of the most ex - elf. but yon must find that plata for treordinary figure in French public yourself. There is work for you to do, but you must find ont for yourself what it is, When you have real need of anything, come to me, but don't bother me mail you do have. No one who proves to be helpless or use- less will live long. Now- run along and prove whether or not you have the right to live.' There are two things for me to find out,' said Mr. Quail to himself, 'what I can't do and what 1 Ban do. The sooner I find out what I can't do, the more time XII have to find out YOUNG FOLKS How The Quail Won a Name. This isn't the story of the B White you know. It is a story that long ago time way back in th beginning of things when the wor was yoeng, and yet I guess it is ju as much our own Bob White's stet as it is his great -great -great -ever -s great gr'andfather's. You see it because of it, of what happened i Bobat White, th long ago time, that Bob White"In those days Olcl Mother Natu was just starting things, So sh started a greatmany of the little peo- ple off in life, and told them to make ob Of e Id at y 0- is ]s ra 0 er hila, his etout little wings took him out of dttera I• like a bullet, "Little by little it carne over hi that he had found his place in Great World, which was, on t 1 ground most of the time. But remembered what Old Mother Nate had said about wont to do, and til worried hila a little. One day watched Mr. Toad catching bug:. 0 Mr, Toad was grumbling, 'I can keep up with these pesky bugs,' sa _ he. 'When I get my stomach full have to wait for it to get empty ago before I can catch any more. B they don't wait. They keep right o eating all the time, and there won't be any green things left if I don't have help.' Little Mr, Quail grew thoughtful. Then he started in to catch bugs, too, so as to give the green things a chance to grow. He hail found work to do, and he did it with all his might. He forgot he ever had wanted to sail around in the air or flit about in the trees. He had found his place in th Great World, and he had found wor to do, and he had found in these th secret of the truest happiness. H was so happy that he had to tell h neighbors about it. So every morn ing, just before starting work, h would fly up on a stump and whistl with all his might, and what he Inci to say was: 'All—all's right! All all' right!' ' But what his neighbor thought he said was: 'Bob—Bo White! Bob—Bob White!' FARMS FOR VETERANS. What the C. P. R. Is Doing For Re turned Soldiers. �APPE er1'r'i y.6LA' on6 recolvo lilgh,et oneh rloao, We Dead Ohara no oamWleelono-hahryayaro onohurr 9. Wo barep ld oql SUliSns 0i dulItto t0 thou. ean0a of barer In Cancan oho Gond tlrolr'' fgroto no eouaetheyknow ihorpet napuura deal,und ro,alv0 more money for that, tura, You wllialso. Wo buy rooroturafrom lrappore 100 each than any other (Ivo arm, In Cunndu, FREEFREEHettnm'o'rrapperauido/D6p goer ��1i H Iiow'e5 not ,an'e Catalogue t� nub tn'p naw Pot Qaetntlmpl, i\\Y sent lino 'nunoam pty"ur $Addreppauxe'r0,. JOHN HALLAM Limited 120 Hallam Bulidlny, Toronto rn � :.•,e'er' `t'' �`. "�, . ��.,�"�. ,\..C�. \"�``,' life to -day. A CAUSE OF INDIGESTION People Who Complain of This Trouble. Usually .Are Thin Blooded. Thin blooded people usually have stomach trouble. They seldom recog- nize the fact that thin' blood is the what I can do. I've got wings, and cause of the trouble, but it is. In that must menn that Old Mother Na - fact thin, impure blood is the niostiture intends me to fly. I'm glad of common cause of stomach trouble; it that. It must be fine to sail around affects the digestion very quickly. The up in the ail' and see all that is going glands; that furnish the digestive fluid on down below.' High overhead 01' are diminished in their activity; the Mistab Bueznrd was sailing round and stomach muscles are weakened, -and round in the sky, with hardly a nio- there is a loss of nerve force. In this tion of his broad wings. Little Mr. state of health nothing will More Quail watched him a long time, and a quickly restore the appetite, the diges- great longing,to do the same thing• tion and normal nutrition than good, filled him, At !tut ha sprang into the rich, red blood. Dr. Williams' Pink air, and right thtu h.' made a discov-1 Pills act directly on the blood, malting ery. He must beut i,i; wings with all, it rich and red, and this enriched blood his might in order to sstuy in the air.1 strengthens weak nerves, stimulates When he stopped beating them, and tired muscles and awakens the normal held them spread nut as OP Mistah activity of the glands that supply the Buzzard did, he found that he simply digestive fluids. The first sign of im- sailed a little way straight ahead and proving health is an improved appe- then began ton ome down. He must tite, and soon the effect of these blood- keep those wings moving very fast or making pills is evident throughout the else come down to the ground. Then system. You find that whr you eat he made another discovery: in a very does not distress you, and that you are litle while his wings were so tired that strong and vigorous instead of irrit- he just had to stop flying. able and listless. This is proved by "Little Mr. Quail squatted in the the case of Mrs. J. Harris, Gerrard grass,. and panted for breath. He St, Toronto, who says: "About three was disappointed, terribly disappoint - years ago I was seized with a severe ed. 'It's plain to me that Old Moth - attack of indigestion and vomiting. er Nature doesn't intend I shall spend My food seemed to'turn sour as soon my time sailing about in the air,' said as I ate it, and I would turn so death- he. He scratched his pretty little y sick that sometimes I would fall on head thoughtfully. 'I can fly pretty he floor after vomiting. I tried a lot fast for a short distance,' he continu- of home remedies, but they did not ed, talking to himself, 'but that is all. elp me. Then I went to a doctor That must mean that I have been giv-' who gave me some powders, but they seemed actually to make me worse in- stead of better. This went on for nearly two months and by that time my stomach was in such a weak state that I' could not keep down a drink of next best thing' will be flitting about' water, and I was wasted to a skeleton in the trees.' nd felt that life was not worth liv- "So after he had rested a bit, little! ng. I was not married at this time Mr. Quail flew to the tree where the nd one Sunday evening on the nvay other birds were flitting about, and o church with my intended husband there he made another disappointing I was taken with a bad spell on ,the discovery. Try as he would he, treet. He took me to a drug store couldn't flit about as they did. More-! here the clerk fixed up something over,•he didn't feel comfortable perch -1 o take, and my intended got me a box ed in a tree for any length of time. It' 1 Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. By the made his toes ache to bend them end of the first week I could feel around the branch on which he was: ome improvement :from the use of sitting. Ile watched the other birds,' the Pills, and I gladly continued tak- and his bright eyes soon discovered 1 ng them until every symptom of the that their feet were different from his, rouble was gone, and I was again en- feet. Their toes were made to' oying the best of health. These Pills clutch twigs and hold then! there con -1 fortably, and his were not. `Old Mother Nature doesn't intend I shall �The Shell and the Gurkhas stood side by side with their British -born com- rades in a supreme effort to dispel the absolutist nightmare, They thought that Egypt and the Soudan must assuredly turn against those whom they erroneously designated as their oppressors. But even the reli- gioue tie between the Egyptians and Germany's bewildered friend, the re- trograde Turk, of whose methods of government the inhabitants of the Nile valley have had some bitter ex- periences, failed to produce any of-. feet, whilst the perfect tranquility of the Soudan, garrisoned by a mere handful of British troops, rendered the most emphatic ti testimony p y as yet recorded in history to the soundness of the foundations on which the Brit- ish Empire rests,—The Earl of Cro- mer in the January Yale Review. Miaard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria, m the SACRIFICE THEIR PETS. he he London Patriots Give Up Their Cats re is and Dogs. he In these days when nearly every - Id body is giving up something to the 't cause of the war, pet animals have id played a prominent part as a form I of war charity, says - a London news - in paper. People have given their dogs ut and cats to charitable institutions to n be auctioned off to raise money for wounded soldiers. So many unsale- able pets have been offered as to make them a burden to the animal protection societies. At a recent sale, many of the cats, and dogs were so old, decrepit and dirty that no bids could be obtained for them, and they were handed over to the societies to be put to death by gas. Leader of Men. M. Briand, Premier of France, is quoted as having declared that Pain - leve is a born leader of men with an unparalleled capacity for administra- tion. .Clemenceau pronounces him an a inspired debater..; Phe effectiveness of r Painleve in the laboratory is based a upon qualities totally different from t those which win him success in poli- tics. He has a passion for order, s symmetry, harmony, method in his re- ' searches. "You are an old maid!" the s late Henri Poincare is alleged to have e told him. "Minerva was an old maid," he replied with his- characteristic smile. "She came down full grown from the head of Jove and was never 1 young." Poincare, himself the su- preme rouble mathematician of his time, des- 1 paired of the universal Painleve, who took all science for his province. His Political Triumph. Side by side with the glory that has come to him as a member of the academy of sciences, marches the Ings for use mils in lime of need, There are some birds flitting -sheet in a tree. They seem to be having a' good time• I think I'll join them.' If I can't sail. about in the air, the Why Wait Mr. Tea or Coffee .Drinker, till heart, nerves, or stomach " give way? " The sure, easy way to keep out of tea and coffee -troubles is to use the pure food;drink— PUSTU Better quit tea and toffee now, while you are feeling good, and try Posttnn, the popu- lar Canadian beverage. " There's a Reason" 1 are now my standby and I tell all my friends what they did for me." You can get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills from any dealer in medicine or by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr, Williams' Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont. _—q.. — COFINNS HIGH IN AUSTRIA. ! Vienna Undertakers Increase. All Their Funeral Charges. In reporting that the Association of Vienna Undertakers has decided to raise its prices, the Vienna Arbeiter- Zeitung expressed its indignation at the high cost of dying, and says that while it is hard enough to live during war times, it is almost as hard to die, Metal coffins are to be doubled in price, those of wood are to be 80 per cent, higher, the interior furnish- ings of coffins are to be raised 130 per cent. Hearses and mourning car- riages are raised 50 per cent, Com- plaints have been made to the City Council by bereaved persons,but the city fathers, having gone into the matter, find tite new prices just. According to the report, as reprint- ed in. the London press, the municipal burying authorities have added $5 to the price of all the funerals con- ducted by them for destitute persons. These persons are burled in the "fifth class;' or that hi which a minimum 4f funeral pomp is displayed. There is n "sixth class," for which the price has not been raised. Ther are 89,000 miles o£ railway (lc'rmnny. spend my time in trees," said he sor- rowfully, and flew down to the ground once more. "Right away his feet felt better. All the ache left them. It was good to, be on the ground. Pretty soon he began to run about, It was good to run about. He belt as if he could run all day without getting tired. Hunting for food, he discovered that! if his toes were not made for porch -1 ing in trees they certainly were made' for scratching over leaves and loose, earth where stray seeds were hiding. Then he made still another discovery. His coat was just the right color to make it' hard work for others to see him when he squatted clown close to the ground. If an enemy did discov- ISSUR G.10.1: ,ETT' ,i MAp IN C.4NA®A For making w� For Soften- gullet,inWater.. For removing' For Wslnt'Acting refrigerators, bloke, Oloaete, dralneand for 900 other purposes, eereie eenerneysa r1' IIs Was Wrong Right, "I really believe, Will Atwood, that you married me because I have mon- ey," she announced, with a fine dis- play of feeling. "No, you're wrong," returned her husband, candidly. "I married you because I thought you'd let me have some of it." 'When Your Eyes Need Care ' OseMnrinegye Medicine. No5marting—Feels Pine --Acts Quickly. Try it for Rud, Weak, Sore Eyes and Granulated Eyelids, Murine le COIDppoeodcd Uy Onr Oemiste--not r! "Pates Medicine"—bat used to nucoeueful Phyalclano Practice for many years. Now dedleated to the Public and sold by druggists at aoc per Seise, Murine Eye E;.Ive In As,+ptie Tubes, o and aro, write for nuolr of the 1l. a Free, &Murine Eye Flomody Company, Chicago. Ada Must Have Been in the Dark Age. "How many years ago did he live?" "Who?" "The man who said that two could live as cheaply as one." 32inard'o Liniment cures Colds, Zto. YQftw9P*PE38 3'03 same J2 ROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB e - towns. The moat useful and interesting k of all businesses. Full information on application to 'Wilson Publishing Corn - e pony, 79 West Adelaide Street, Toronto, ie TAKE NOTICE Offices for sale in good Ontario "We publish simple, straight testi- " menials, not press agents' interviews, e from well-known people, d From all over America they testify -- to the merits of MINARD'S LINI- e MENT, the best of Household Re- medies. MINARD'S LINIMENT CO., LTD. The decision of Lord Shaughnessy' to provide, through the department of Natural Reseerces of the C. P. R., farm homes for many of the returned soldiers, is a further proof of hi desire that those who take part in th war will have recognition of their services. This subject received much attention during the past year. The extent and magnitude of the work of preparing 1,000 farms will be realized when it is noted that it involves: Building 1,000 houses, building 1,000 barns, constructing 1,300 miles of fence, digging 1,000 wells, breaking and cultivating 50,000 acres; the build- ings will require about 20,000,000 feet of lumber to erect. The preparation of the farms will entail an expendi- ture of about $3,500,000. One thou- sand farms will of course provide for an extremely small proportion of re- turned soldiers who will want to ob- tain farm homes, and the Dominion Government must adopt some general policy of providing these homes. How- ever the Canadian Pacific Railway has led the way in trying to solve the pressing and troublesome question and no doubt the Dominion Govern- ment will announce its general scheme, An examining committee Will select the prospective farmers. There will be inspectors and advisors to help the soldiers from the time they get on the land. Under the im- proved farm scheme 160 acres may be allowed to a settler and under the assisted colonization scheme' as much as 320 acres may be allowed. The terms of payment for the land are very easy. GERMANY'S FAILURE. ENGLISH POTATO CROP. 180,000 Tons Below Average is the Latest Report. A preliminary statement issued by the Board of Agriculture shows that the estimated production of potatoes e in England and Wales in the year 1016 is 2,503,836 tons, which, with a somewhat reduced average, is about 350,000 tons below the average. _ The average yield is estimated at 6.85 tons per acre, or just one-third of a ton below the yield of 1915 and the ten years' average. --a rdinard's Liniment Cares Distemper, She held a Mistaken Idea of Union of the British Empire. The Germans thought the British were a decadent race, 'which was wholly the prey of materialism, and which would never submit to the sacrifices necessary in order to resist the onslaught of the German mailed fist. The reply was that, n an incre- dibly short space of time? the whole nation abandoned those One -honored traditions, which had been cherished for centuries, and sprang to arms. The Germans relied on the occurrence of civil war in Ireland. The result was that the Ulstermen gave his hand to his Southern opponent. They antici- pated that the overseas dominions would shake off their loose connection with -the Mother Country. The reply was that Canadians, Australians and New Zealanders shed their blood like water in order to preserve that con- nection which German politicians er- roneously held to be irksome, They thought that South Africa was yearn- ing for revenge and for complete in- dependence. To their amazement they found that the policy of -daring conciliation," as it has been rightly termed, adopted by the British de- meeracy after the Boer War, led to the expulsion of Germany front her South African possessions, They pin- ned their faith on Indian discontent and disloyalty, and again they found the light fetters, forged by a benign democratic imperialism, constituted a far stronger bond of union than the hear' yoke intposod by absolutism, AN ARTIST'S ADVENTURES. Newspaper Man Who Painted Tanks Had Lot of Bad Luck. Mr. Alfred Pearse, who has painted a tank in action for the king, has had an extraordinary number of mis- haps and adventures during his long career as a newspaper artist in Eng- land. It is said that he had been nearly drowned three times, suffer- ed concussion of the brain five times, thrown from vehicles four times, shot once, fallen down Beachy Head once, between a train and platform once, injured by a runaway horse, nearly hanged by a madman, and blinded for two days. Evidently Mr. Pearce has the most valuable of assets—a charm- ed life. _•.._ . Minard's Liniment Cures target in Cows, Hunan nature is an interesting study, but it's a mistake to thunk the finest examples are found in a bar- room. rdrSOiILLANEOUs ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS. ETC„ internal and external, cured with- out pain by our -hotne treatment. Write its before too late, Dr, Beliman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont, 1 Artificial Teeth Bought Send us your old false teeth, plates and gold. We remit best cash value by return mall. Gold & Platinum Refining Co., 24 Adelaide St. West, Toronto BOOK ON DOG DISEtASDtS And How to Feed Mailed free to any address by America's the Author Pioneer H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. Deg Remedies 118 West 315t Street, New York The Soul of a Piano is the Action. Insist on the "OTTO HIG L,a, PIANO ACTION '1 RAW FURS It will pay yon to ship all your fur to a reliable bowie where ttot value.you Ask forgoar priooget full arnst and shipping Instructions, EDWARD POLLAK & CO. 080 ST. PAUL ST. WEST. MONTREAL, QUE. HIRAM JOHNSON LIMITED. 410 ST. PAUL STREET W. MONTREAL Isstablished over 39 years as Ravi Fur sealers Write us for price list. Send us your furs and get the highest market price. A Homo Billiard Table Will provide you and your fatally with the flutist form of indoor recreation during the long winter even - bags. Our Fembua Maisonette Table Is made specially for the home n.t a reasonable price. Cash er on terms, BURROUGHES & WATTS, 1. d. Makers to IS M. the King. 34 Church SS, Toronto Rheumatism Is My Weather Prophet. Ican tell stormy weather days off by the twinges in my shoul- ders and knees. But here's an' old friend that soon drives out the pains and aches. Slunn'e Liniment it so easy to apply, no rebblag at all, it sinks right in and fixes the pant, Cleaner than mussy plasters and ointments. Try it for gout, lumbago, nen- rah ie, bruises and trireme. At your druggist, 25c. 50c. and $1.00. f•-• A fraternal nod Maureen rcclet7 that Ircteels its members in n e :Mance t+ If the umloptoltnnLazd. Sidi and nrabelief; a opt, chat, Authorized to ohthin members nod rh:,rtor lodges in everyi'rev.nca In Candi t. Purely Canadian, safe, Daum end vaunts mind, if thero to no loam rodga of Clio ,1 c8s in your diatrlet, apply direct 5, ,.uy ,.1 1i54 following odious: 0r.J,W,gdwards,ALP. W. r. hien tr Grand Councillor. '' Gran I . order, W. P. Campbell, .1, 1i 11t1,5',“., Grand Organiser, Go, c<..sia'a;. ('HAMILTON • ONTA:.'l)