The Clinton News Record, 1920-5-27, Page 7AUTO 3PA!i •P,IAHTO •
for meet mattes end medal• of sari.
Your Old, broaen or worn-out parts
ro luted. Write er wire us demerib»
! what eu want, We carry the
1M tree ane most oom lata • rtosk iir
y na6a of sti fitly :cased ee new parte
a d automobile equiprnent, We ship
D, anywhere in Canada. Sabo
• 'r tory or reined i`n MU our motto,
• w'e An $s1 i'
tilts, t0 � ••• A
ag item e p ,
R00-031 • at. To to n
Ria Yo yy
R11p- D41t . . .. K.. O.
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. •
�W SECRET PRESS
} PCHEERED BELGIANS
•.
ILS,' TIDINGSFF E
O S T BY
PATRIOTIC SHEETS.
..
�I'
Neutralized Propaganda When
Country Was Cut Off by
German Troops.
The story of the clandestine jiresa.
which during the German occupation
of Belgium did so much to harass -.the
l3un and, to• keep up the spirits of the
martyred Belgian people is told is the
Belgian special number of The Lon-
don,Times by 0,eoar grojean, a Bel-
gian journalist, himself editor of one.
of the secretly published patriotic
sheets. He writes:
"If the Belgian people gave to the
world so magnificent an example of
patriotism and oe faith in their future,
if they awaited so stolidly the hour of
liberation, it was itt part due to the
clandestine press. Belgium was, so to
&•peak, cut off from the rest of the
world.
"Can any one wonder that at times
discouragement filtered into the souls
of the people? -But'' the clandestine'
press appeared! It took every form.
It penetrated everywhere, You found
teeth your letter box, on your desk,
seen in the pocket of your ,overcoat,
where surreptitiously, without your
ever knowing how, it had been placed.
It was peios•ed to you by a newsboy,
your barber, or the messenger in' the
Street. Lt was discussed at streetcor-
ners, in 'cares; end wherever men met
to organize res•lstance, .
"At evening the whole family read.
it, gathered, round the, lamp.. And the
little flame of hope and enthusiasm,
almert snuffed out by enemy Plails.genda, .,flared up -anew ,and Deemed
brighter"than et'er. Such was the in-
spiring work ot 'La Libre Belgique,'
`La Revue .de Lit Presse,' and later of
'L'Atne Beige' and of 'Le Flambeau.'
"Le Libre Belgique, '
" :La Libre Belgique" first Saw the
light, on February 1, 1916. The next
day it was famous. It called itself a
bulletin stn a.f patriotic propaganda,ap-
pearing
-
pearilg with''Irregular regularity,'
but despite countless tribulations, des -
Mite incidents more often tragic than
comic. it never carried to appear al-
most weekly up to the day of the
armistice,
-us 'price' was elastic, from zero to
infinity. The offices were 'located'
fog eater security in au 'automobile
aeliera and its telegraphic 'address'
was 'ICornnlaudanteur-Bruxelles:' The
title itself suffices to give an idea of"
the raciness and sprightly humor of
the editors of 'La Libre,' . But its read-
ing matter beggars descriptioitl
"The Germain was held up to scorn
and ridicule, his hair pulled, his nose
tweaked, with inexhaustible velsa-
.tility. Ile ceased to be terrible and be-
came funny. .Everybody knows the
' story or how the polizel, to arrest a
dangerous patriot, 'Andre 'Vesale,' who
hail been denounced as the editor df
the diaper, deployed considerable
forces, and searched every house in
the Place des Barricades, dilly to dis-
cover that the'famous anatomist stood
cant in bream in the middle of the
square!
5atlro Urea All ftp Weapons,
"People Chnideled as.theyplettred to
thems'elvea the fury of the double �.
monkey O3is-etngl, who found in hits
own dispatch box a copy of 'Lit Libre,'
in Which wasprinted a photograph of
himself reading the valiant little sheet,
Belgians laughed themselves sick over
upon he enemy.
rank �' ed
the s Po t
n pia
Satire teed ally its weapons, not neg-
lecting mere t erm:titre, which always
appetite, tothe eses.
• m a
"Its racy audacity explains the tenor'
MOUS success, which 'Le Libre' met
with among the people. Created by
M, Victor Jourdaln, former editor of
1110 Catholic paper 'Le Patrlote,' with
the assistance of two Jesuits, Father
Dubar and Father Piquet, oe Eugene
Van Doren, D. Schoofs, 112..Leconete
and Albert Van Iierekhove, the lawyer,
it won every ono'& heart, irrespective
of party or of plass,
"It inspired moa and women to ad-
mirable eooriftces—and tits is so true
that neither raids nor seizures, arrest
nor impeisoitment, nor even sentence
ot death, were able to prevent the pa.
per from appearing. New contributors
immediately took the place of those
who foil. After the arrest of• Father
Dither, Instead, ot only one issue, bear -
lag the number 73, we very nearly had
five distinct publications, For months
and menthe the Germans did every
thing they could think of to suppress
it, but `La Libre' Belgldue' joyfully
kept, up its invigorating publication till
the armistice, a
Belgian .Spirit Kept Up.
"'Le Revue de La Presse; published
at Louvain by -Professor Mayence, and,
so it asserted, 'subject to the •1i. K.
censorship,' reprinted the most impor-
tant articles of French and foreign
newspapers. It was a powerful anti-
dote for the poison. disseminated by
the Germanized press. •`L'Ame Beige'
had been started in November, 1915,
by Abbe Auguste Mussche to keep up
'the Belgian spirit, which centuries
have,^leavened with loyalty and hero-
ism,• and which must pass inviolate
aiul immortal to .future generations,'
"When Abbe Mussche, caught after
the tenth Issue, was sentenced to ten
years' penal servitude, MM. Emile I{e-
bore, Hour' Puttemans, Henri Gannet
and Georges Petre continued his work,
and after a time this review reappear-
ed. It aimed' not so much to torment
our tyrants, as 'La Libre' did, but to
glorify our military and civic achieve-
ments. Its propaganda was .flistin-
guished throughout by the maiicten-
ance of a high intellectual standard.
1t was in legal circles that 'L'Ame
Beige' found its strongest supporters.
Four lawyers composed its editorial
committee, The great majority of its
contributors were members of the bar.
" 'Le Flambeau' appeared in March,
1918, when, Russia having collapsed
and the Allies being forced to gitte.
waybefore the formidable
IS;aiser of-
fensive; public opinion for the first
time seemed to be losing heart. Those
who edited it, Henri Gregoire, of the.
University of Brussels; Oscar Grojean,
of the Royal Library, and Anatole
Muhlsteln, a Polish newsviaper man,
were convinced that, the heterogeneous
Austro-Hungarian edifice was about to
crumble, that Bulgars and Turks
would -aeon .be ',obliged to -leave the•
field 'of battle, that the triumph of the
Allies was near and certain.
Tospread their belief and their
hopes they determined to publish a
monthly pamphlet. A series• of bril-
liant articles and convincing docu-
ments told the Belgians why they
should feel reassured and heartened
when considering the political and
military situation of the Allies. 'Le
Flambeau' transformed itself into a
da11q newspaper during the short
period between the armistice, and the
!reappearance of the presse horns in
Bruseele. It has since become one of
the mast important political and lite'r-
.ary monthlies in Belgium. '
"We have merely referred to the
Bathing in S trange Fluids
The average Canadian's idea of a
bath is a tublul et water and plenty of
good soap, and it would hardly seem
to hint that the matter of bathing af-
forded much s cope for eccentricity, Not
a few celebrities, however; have in
tines past regarded water as entirely
too common a thing to apply to their
exalted poisons, and milk has been
Ali usual substitute. Beau Brutumell
was one -of these particular persons,
and even when a prisoner for debtat
Caen he used to have a quantity Of
Mille loft daily at the gaol for bathing
purposes. The famous gambler, the
Dike of Queensberry, took a milk bath
every morning. These and most other
milk -bathers were satisfied with ordin-
ary cow's milk, apparently, but Pop -
papa, wife of the tyrant Nero, kept a
herd et 600 asses to ,supply her with
milk in which to bathe, -Even when
banished, this particular lady would
not give up the habit, though forced to
part with her magnificent porphyry
bathtub and to content herself with
but fifty Gases, .
Marie .tentolnette's bath was a de.
coctient of eerpolet, laurel leaves, wild
thyme, marjoram, sea salt and water,
while crushed stra.wberries and rasp-
berries appealed to Mine. Tallier. To a
bath of perfumed water were added
twenty pounds of ,strawberries and
two pounds of raspberries, and this
mixture, it is asserted, kept the skin
as smooth and soft as velvet. Isabel
of Bavaria had a most catholic taste
in bathing fluids. While she approved
of milk, such preparations as water
distilled from the honey extracted
from roses, melon juice, the milky ex-
tract of green barley and preparations
panes:thing a.linonds arid yoIIcs Of eggs
made' a stronger appeal. John Law,
the originator of the famous Mississip-
pi Bubble, added to his. already per-
fumed bath water the yolks of 100
eggs, some veal broth and wine.
Wine baths have been frequent, and
in. France during the seventeenth con -
1017 they were In groat vogue aniong
the beauties of the court.
In each of these instances the pre-
servation of a'beautiful skin or com-
plexion, or the !tope of attaining such,
was the. motive, About everything
one can think of has been used at one
time or another with the hope 'of im-
proving health, and baths fu various
kinds of mild supposed to have par-
ticular medicinal gatelities are still
popular.
ZERO
va-t.s•vv , > 1.* ev'i
For your break st
A .ria r -to -eat food that costs
but little and is full of to
sound nourishmes ntof whea
and malted la &rle-yra
, •eti
ECOnatniCalA
t
t (Or' ocers Ever 'there'
O RoKIR NOW
The D. PINE CO.. i,imlled,
123 King 8t. Eapt, TORONTO
principal clandestine' publfcatious.
Theis
were many °there.
evs.
h
Tho historian poring over the Paled
pages. of these little leaflets will be
unable to defend himself against emo-
tion. The clandestine press is a worthy
page of our history, It enabled our
Popple to witltetand evil tidings, to re-
Met the poison of the o0nsored sheets,
to fight off the numbing effects of de-
featist propaganda and to, withstand
the miseries of a prolonged occupation
during' fifty weary months of struggle
and 'Mame. It sustained our peace-
ful courage and preserved the uncon-
querable good humor which astonlehed
ourdull enemies."
ANAEMIA -ROBS ITS
VICTIMSSA
BY STEALTH
Conditions of Thin Blood That
Could be Corrected Easily Are
Stealing the Health and Enerr
gy of Many Men and Women,
and Boys and Girls.
Anaemia, whish literally means
bloodlessness, is one of the most pre-
valent troubles of the present day. If
neglected it apt to develop into per-
nicious anaemia, one of the most hope-
less diseases. While anaemia attacks
men and- boys, it Is, more prevalent
among young girls' and women and for
this reason every woman, particularly
every mother, should know how to re-
cognize the signs of this trouble which
makes it approach so gradually and
so ateelthily that it is often far ad-
vanced before the nature of the
trouble is noticed. One general symp-
tom of anaemia is pallor. The cheek%
gradually lose their color, and the lips
become pale or white. With this loss
of color there comes a tendency to
fatigue, a palpitation of the heart, and
breathleseness after slight exertion,
with occasional headaches. In the
more severe casesfainting spellsfre-
quently occur,
In ordinary anaemic conditions, in-
cluding the anaemia that'affecte young
girls in their 'teens, Dr. Williams' Pink
Pllls are all the medicine required.
Fresh air, sunlight and nourishing
food will do the rest.. Any woman or
girl taking Dr. Williams' Pink Pills
can tell by the growing redness of her
lipss that the-pills
are making
her blood
rich and red.
Miss Mabel Teener, Liverpool, N.S„
says:—"Before I began the use of Dr.
Williams' Pink Pills I felt like a com-
plete wreck of my former self. My
blood was thin and watery; I suffered
from faint and dizzy spells, and had
headaches almost every day. I was
taking doctor's medicine, but it was
not bellying me and at this time I was
learning -•my -trade as a tailoress, and
was forced through my illness to give
up work. After reading an advertise-
ment of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills one
day I decided to give the pills a trial.
After taking two boxes I felt that I
was being benefited, and continued
their use until I was fully restored to
health, The pills certainly did won-
ders for me, and I cannot recommend
them too highly,"
The purpose of Dr. Williams Pink
Pills isto build up the blood. They
do this one thing and they do it well.
They are for this reason an invaluable
remedy in diseases arising from bad
or deficient blood, as rheumatism,
neuralgia, after-effects of the grip and
fevers. The pills are guaranteed to be
free from opiates or any harmful
drug, and cannot injure the most deli•
melt system. You can get Dr. Wil-
liams' Pink Pills through any. ,dealer
in medicine or by mail,at b0 cents a
box or six boxes for $2.60 from. The
Dr. Williams' Medicine Co„ Brockville,
Ont,
Minto is Neighbor to
Prince of Wales.
On his 4,000 -acre ranch, which, lies
adjacent to that of the Prince of
Wales, about 50 miles south-west of
Calgary, the young Earl of Minto, son
of a former Governor-General of Cana-
da, will raise thoroughbred horses and
develop racing stock, with Shorthorn
cattle as a aide line. He is bringing
out 12 thoroughbred nares from Great
Britain, including a three-year-old filly
by Radium out of Ghe,rmeuse. Mine-
field, a five-year-old by Rocksand, a
Derbywinner, is another member of
the shipment. Roekeaird also won the
St. Leger and the two thousand
guineas.
The earl will remain• until June and
will return later and remain until win•
ter, and he has expressed the hope
that he will be able to spend a great
deal of his time In Alberta. He was
badly knocked out in the war and was
also injured by a fall from a home and
he hopes that life on the ranch will re-
store hien to the best of health,
If You Lived on the Moon,
Of course you couldn't really live
an the moon, because there is no air
there; but if you didn't die—
Yon could jump thirtysix feet in
the air, since the force 01 gravitation
is one-sixth of what It ie here,
You coulel not speak, because there
would be no air to matte sound waves.
You could not smell, because smell.
ing requires air to carry particles• of
the substance to your nose.
You would have a whole month to
work and play in every day; for the
moon takes a eonplete spin on its ttkits
in just the same time that it takes to
go around the earth -'that i4, twenty'.,
seven and ono•tlilyd days, or what we
east a lunar month,
Hie ]Missed Hie Pot,
IriJnaa>lovely•"Ddru't yogi faire oft your;
'hat when you a!!lt sof n job?"
Demobilized obili',e P
� d gild-1Jllouso me)•
I'm so used to niy ileillnet thAt I doe
bareheaded with this itarlied 1?ldod pt•
reit oil,"
Wooten Vote Genera.
They alai a very Y+'iiy lot, the Britian
politicleeis; but wives of candidatep
often do splendid servlcos for th
sir
husbands in their campaigns, In the
cane of 9lle large working „class eon•
stituoncy the wife of one o1 the Ottani-
dates .attended all the meetings ad-
dressed by her better hall and .sat on
the knitting d r ug the
pi
o
wettings, She contrived to melte the
audience aware of the fact dist it
Was by 00 means fancy work wherein
she was engaged, but that she was
busy on a half -limit sock of o1d-faehion-
ed blue yarn tnteuded, of course, for
her husband. '
While votes may be thus easily
gained, they arealso easily lost by
trifles. The story, is told Low, during
a general election wherein Gladstone
led •the"Libera'1 forces, a grocer in a
London constituency placed in hie
shop window this announcement:
"Gladstone says, '.lam U the best
substitute for butter,' Give our home-
made jam a trial,"
Before an election in that constitu-
ency was over, an angry woman, wbo
had bought a pot of the jam in ques-
tion, entered' the grocer's shop ex-
claiming indignantlyti '1'11 never trust
Mr. Gladstone again as long as I live!"
The grocer was bewildered, and per-
plexed. "Why not?" he asked.
"Because fain is not the best substie,
tuts for butter," cried the woman. "I
have trief't,it, and it won't fry my fshl
My husband shall never vote Liberal
again!"
A comical thing occurred at a parlia-
mentary election in Cork some years
ago. The contest waxed hot between
rival - Nationalist candidates. • The
wives of four voters whose political
views differed from their husbands
rose early on the polling day and car-
ried off every article of Male attire in
their homes, The strategy of the wo-
men was not, bowever, successful, far
the tour voters turned up •in most ex-
traordinary fem'le get-up.
'We all icmow the story of the beauti-
ful Duchess of Devonshire, one of
Fox's most zealous lieutenants; whose
smiles and kisses won so any votes
for, him, and how she converted a
"stubborn and impracticable butcher"
by the bribe of a salute from her pret-
ty lips. "During the canvass," says
Horace Walpole, "the duchess made
no scruple of visiting the humblest of
the eleetons, dazzling and enchanting
them by the fascination of her man-
ner, the power of her beauty, and the
influence of her high rank,"
English Country Houses.
Although the public may not think
so, all the country houses in England
are not in the market, says an English
newspaper. There are still some in
n where1 ll •
the same hands the life has o
been taken up again, and house parties
are going on with some of their old
sprightliness. Many of the old houses
now belong to the new people, and in
these the parties are more sprightly
than, before. Nearly all the old fami-
lies have been severely hit in the war,
but whether from a real hardness
within or a surface hardness that they
think necessary for their caste, they
certainly show less eigneof• their sor-
rows than middle-ciase people do.
Their houses, too, do not show the
visible signs of war that you would
expect.
Tba change back from hospitals or
convalescent homes to stately and hos-
mansions has been affected
with a speed and thoroughness one
would hardly expect in these days of
labor shortage and servant scarcity.
If the Owners are wealthy they do alt
the papering, painting and structural
realterations at their own expense;
where they have been financially hit
the Red Cross gives assistance. What
remains ot the old aristocratic life of
the country goes an as Before in these
rooms so lately inhabited by pain and
Surgery' and dying young men.
It is in. London where most of the
large houses are still unrecovered.
Many of them will never become town
mansions again. The government
s•tilI holds on to afew of them. Crewe
House, for instance, in Curzon Street,
is still a government office, and Lord
and Lady Crewe have taken a house
in Bruton Street,
How to • See the Wind.
Choose for the trial a windy day,
when the air Is free from rain or snow.
Takes bright, Olean hand saw, or any
other•polished metal object about two
feet in length and having- a Straight
edge. }Iold the saw or metallic sur
face at right angles to the direction of
the wind. Incline it at about 85 or 40
degrees. to the horizon, and with the
back up, so that the moving air, in
strildng the surface, will glance up-
ward and flow over the edge of the
metal, as water fiows ever. a dam.
Sight oarefullyalong the edge of the
metal et a sharply defined Medect, and
you will See the wind, or air waves,
Pouring over the edge la graceful
carves,
A OTHERS MICE
Once a mother has used Baby's Own
Tablets for her little ones she is• al-
ways happy to recommend them to
others. Her advice, given after a
cereal' trial, can be readily followed
With assured good results. The Tab•
lets are a mild but thorough laxative
which -never fail to regulate the
bowels and sweeten the stoinacb.
They always do good—they cannot
possibly do harm even to the youngest
babe. Concerning them Mrs. P. La -
forest, S1. Nazalre, Quee writea':—
"For three months my baby was eon-
stipatod and cried' oontlnually, On,
the advice tlf a friend X gave 111111,
Baby's OWnt Tablets and no* itt thQ
age of five months he la pOrfeetly •welt
and Weighs. 'twenty pounds is ant do'
lighted, to bo able f;o a1"r'lile other
mother fa use them," The 1rablat3
are 001.4 Inodlciffe dealers ee liy
midi at 25 dente a bc,>c front Tito ler,
' 'iiiiattls IVledidfila alit Ilrookyt ie,
Ont, ..
i 11 the geld int'Ae world Were.
mo>lto into ingots lit might bo slip,
tf
a 21ptin a reeve 28 feet square q aro and
18 :f eet high.
Rees Minard'e Liniment In ttio,.hesise.
NEURITIS
Somen* have eu t
that painful, ,psrfalgning
anllammatiola.:of rho
no vee. Do notqutter an -
qt er day,
tr day., . I1 yeti ars 10
vlotWe y
Tem' letonts
'Rheumatic
a+
;Ca sules
lthothtng else brings teller
so gide ly and ep surely,
Send ter , free sample, to
Tam setons, 142 Elug:61.
W.,. Toronto..
For sale at reliable drug.,
glide for $1.0.1 a box.
ASTHMA
Templeton'e FtAZ-WA 13 Cap-
sules are guaraxetoed to relieve
AST II MA. Don't suffer an-
other day.
Write Tonapletone,142 Ring 8I
W., Toronto, for freeeempie.
Reliable druggists seI1 them at
01.04 a box.
English Bay Road, Stanley
Park, B. C.
Vancouver would be famous if it
had only the attraction of "Stanley
Parke," was the opinion of an English
tourist who had circled the globe.
That peerless playground bf 1,000
acres of virgin forest, with many acres
of priceless waterfront and over six
miles of marine panorama of park
foreshore, is the greatest municipal
park oh the continent. It is fringed
by English Bay which abounds with
mirrored' reflections• of forest trees
and birds of every shade and plumage
bank on the surface. No bulwarks' er
ocean wall mans, the beauty, no roar -
Ing billows disturb tranquility, but
there is all the beauty and majesty
and novelty of its placid surface with
a soft calling of thewaves.
The park is picturesque with its
magnificent firs 'and cedars, and is
largely in its natural state, yet with
touches of the conventional in that 11
is encircled by a perfect motor road
which affords the pleasure of enjoying
the innumerable points of interest hi
this wonderland, The unique bril-
liancy of the exquisite scenery In the
distance where panatelas of grace
and stateliness farm a group of pealre,
grey end green and rose-colored, call
one again and again by their enchant-
ment Dower their pine -clad slopes,
sylvan streamlets `wind their way. A
variety of enormous trees, spreading
their branches on the green lawns,
greet the eye, creeping ivy decorates
the base of these giants of the forest.
Walks through the park reveal pic-
turesque
C
turesque
retreats where the aroma of
nature in. all her bewildelnient of
luxuriant growth, sweetens the out-of-
doors: ,
The "Lions;" the "Sleeping Beauty,"
"Siwash Rock," the grave of the Indian
Princess Poetess, Pauline. Johnson,
who cast over the lovely surroundings
a gracious mantle of romance, are
some of the points of interest—C.G.
"SYRUP OF FiGS" -
CHILD'S LAXATIVE
Look at tongue! Remove poi.
sons from Attie, stomach,
liver and bowels
Accept "California Syrup oC Piga
only --look for the name California on
the package, then you are sure your
child is having the best and most
harmless laxative or physic for the
little stomach, liver and bowels. Child.
ren love its delicious fruity taste. Full
directions for child's dose on each bot:
tle. Give it without fear.
Mother! YOU mus: say "California."
A member of Parliament has made
a spectacular stand against the high
east of living in England, He bought
ithree clothing factories and is manu-
facturing' men's clouting to.be sold at
prices ranging ;from $9,26 to $14.50 a
suit. So eagerly slid' filen rush to talcs
advantage of the low prices that de -
fore eight o'clock on the morning
when the first advertisement appeared
a line a hundred yards long was wait
Ong to get into the store. 'S'oon traffic
' was blocked, and the police wore called
to maintain order. The demand for
the clothes has •continued ever since
fit
and at least one s. on
of professiai
tailors has begun to make low-priced
suits.
Keep YIllif Health
TONIGHT TRY
for that Cold and Tired Feeling.
Get Well, Keep Well,
Kiri Spanisht Flu
by using the OTS BELIM314R,
MINA -RD' S LINTITUNIT CQ, Lturrnin,1
Yarmouth, N 9,
!IV/May opill much good worlc for the
legit of a little More.
It seems alenoat incredible, but the
London police have recently disk: rdotl
fl3' t11e fins time FA. t...•
„err '• Nlu-rashion od
,antern that burns 'oil. The
efeebrje flashlight that has replaced it
(s cleaner, cooler and more conven-
ient, (but those who cling afPeetionate-
fy to old customs al's sorry to &e0 the
morn picturesque dirk lantern go.,
ISSUE No. 22—'8b,.
The Old Chair.
•t'lmpte'1ltbfld'eg 11edide"tlfe waning ffe
And; asth '; ifibers singly marl
,
Smoke,
It: dreams of all the sad and JiaSSY
folk
Ito days 'have known; a maid Iii gay
attire
Waiting impatient for some gallant
squire;
A mother, grieving that her boy is
grown
Too' mu'oit a auan to be'qutto tall her
own;
A lad•who slums a song of love's. de,
sire.
It dreams that once again the children
climb
Intoits cosy depths and Gravely
read
,Quaint fairy tales of "once upon a
time"—
And no it wakes to mourn o'er
vanished need.
Two glad young lovers steal across
the floor,
And, nestling close, its ancient joy re-
store.
—Charlotte Becker,
A Wonderful Thing.
]bnhuslasnt le dhe dynamic& of your
personality. Without it, whatever
abilities you may have lie dormant.
You may p'ossese knowledge, sound
Judgment, good reasoning faculties
but no one will know it until you dis-
cover how to put your heart into
thought and action. A wonderful
thing is this quality which we call en-
thusiasm.' 2f you would like to be a
power among men, cultivate enthusi-
asm. People will like you better for it;
you will escape the dull routine of a
;mechanical existence and you will
snake headway wherever you are.
GIRLS! DRAW A
MOIST CLOTH
THROUGH HAIR
I:et "Danderine" save yaw
Bair 'and double
its beauty
Chmeifaed Ativertleenteinttl.
>17peirid,orso, • .
C T1o139NS+0OMP d'%
rA
wilt pay, u, �i.coveEtarbpr0ug1. Ontario, _
•
7 i*05 bprrIttr 1 t ki .A,P
a
ane, sob prinans plane in' 1rtu1
O to°
In•
tats u
ran
A .
�g to
.ti
R 00
O e "
A .n�i of
.o.
Wtison'�
an �••,
�ai� � „•ant •:• er
1 P d..�
sol,. E. vuarr#D,
---mi
� IOIsaws
i W, ANTIOD,
8 0N
.
$
'Dnoker,unollp:yuogormunialts vus, Keenen iro•'Liml ed. Owen Roa
n
Ont,
LADINO WANTED.
A
LAMBS WANTas12 TO DO I'Iu 10(
and light sewing at home, whole or
spare time; good pay, work sent any die.
diose, °bargee paid. Send stamp rot
'particithlrs... National Manufacturing
Co., Montreal,
TEASSTDSG SCHOOL Sou 7111115130,
8q)�9110I8TBP1D TRAINING S0II00
9.1, for Nurdos: St, Elizabeth Hospital
804 South Broad. Street, Elizabeth, Neyr
Jersey, Complete course. monthly al-
lowance: first year $5.00, second $10,0
third $16.00, Address: Superintendent,
WittlCIMLYHrl:0010,
CANC00, :TUMOISS, LUMI'y, Hero,,
internal and external, cured without
pain by our home treatment 'Write u•
before too late. Dr, Beaman bfedle•1
Co„ Limited. Conintrwood. Ont.
The Chinese boil all their bread in-
stead of baking it—or, if baked at all,
it ie browned after boiling.
Ask for Minard's and take no other,
COARSE SALT
LAND SALT
Bulk Carlots
TORONTO SALT WORKS
C. J. CLIFF - TORONTO
.'0merloa'a P?on.oer Dos $smiles
Bt oa
Dolts' 6001SirASES
and Now to Veal
Otatled, Tree to,nny Ad•
dread by the Author.
It, may Glover Co., Ina
118 West 81st Street
. Now York. U.g,A..
Oh, gine, such an abundance of
thick, heavy, invigorated hair; a per-
fect masa of wavy, silky hair, glorious-
ly'fluffyabeight and -so easy'to pian.
age.
Just moisten a cloth with a little
"Danderine" and carefully draw it
through your hair, taking one small
strand at a time;, this magically re-
moves all dirt, excess oil and grease,
but your hair is not left brittle, dry,
stringy or faded but charmingly soft,
with glossy, golden gleams and tender
lights. The youthful glints, tints and
color are again fn your hair.
"Danderine" is a tonic -beautifier.
Besides doubling the beauty of the
hair at once, it cheeks, dandraff and
stops failing hair•. Get delightful
Danderine for a few centa at any drug
or toilet counter and use it as a dress-
ing and invigorator as told on bottle.
"Let this be your teaching: Antici-
pate nothing but good in the fettles.
Burn all doleful prophesies. They are
lies. Some evils must befall you, but
those about which you are 'certain will
never come true. The devil is no pro-
phet."—Frank
rophet"—Frank C. Haddock.
alinard's Liniment for sale everywhere
Cake pans shoulei be absolutely. dry
before they are greased or your cake
will stick.
MONEY ORDERS.
Dominion Express Money Cede:a are•
on sale in five thousand offices
throughout Canada. ,
Grains should be fed as a pact of
the balanced ration. Btud'tr the In,-
alyses of your grains.
Mlnard'e Liniment used bas Pliyslolane.
Purebreds pay whew given the
proper opportunity. 1 purebred' sire
is "the biggest half of the. herd,"'
How to Parity
the Blood
• "Fifteen to thirty drops of
Extract of Roots, commonly
called II/lather Sei9eI's 1nra iv
c
• Syrup, may be taken in water
✓ with meals and at bedtime, for
the cure of indigestion, concti-
p pation and bad blood. Per,iet.
di once in thio treatment w=_11 effect
p a cure in nearly every case." -yy
n Get the genuine at druggists. �p
Beautiful 'Women
of Soclety,duringthe past
seventy yearn have relied
upon It for their distin-
guished appearance. The
soft, refined, pearly
•white' complexion It
renders instantly,' Is
always the source of
flattering comment.
Anoint Irritations %Vith
Sees Catkin
First bathe with Cuticura Soap and
hot water. These super -creamy
emollients not only soothe, but in
most cases heal annoying rashes,
irritations, eczemas, etc. Nothing
so insures a clear skin and good hair
as snaking Cuticura Soap and Oint-
ment your every -day toilet prepa-
rations.
Soap 2$c, Ointment 25 and Loc, Sold
throughouttheDominion.CanadianDen l
Hv. ,na.no, Limited, St. Pail St., Montreal.
.
aaeGt-Cutienrn Soap shaves without map,
ONLY TABLETS MARKED
"BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN
Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer Cross"
...r. gree ara�a. qa i
The. nand "Bayer"' identifies the contains proper directions for (*'nlds,
only genuine 'Aspirin,—tho Aspirin Headache, Toothache, elnrnrttn, Neu.
pprescrlboclbyphysleians for over nine- ,night, Lumbago, lilnttn.,ntlsmn, Sent.
oori
nrt-
oon years and new made In Canada, tis, Joint Paine, and Pain generally.
Always buy ml unbroken package Thi boxes of 12 tablets cost but
of "Mayor Tablets of Aspirin' which a few cents. Larger "ilavrr" patl.aig s.
'7fitexe Is only ono Aspirin-•."7`layon"-,-"Fon moat any "Sayer"
Aspirin 15 C1tn trod, mark froalatrrrd In C's oln) of tln}rr u,»,, rn I urn n" 91m1,,-
aeotlraeidoslrr fit l;nih•yInarl4. whit• It to WO) htloWn Out Ar1.1.t, t an t: ,..•r
manutao,tnrn, lo n -slot tor. pubic ag ln'i ImIcallonnt the t lla3 0° L.,t•.-i tAna ust
will b0 atarnpod With their aouuru! Cad° mat:, thu "Dam Cross,"