The Clinton News Record, 1920-9-2, Page 7RUSSIAN EXILES
ON N • FARMS
PRINCES . AND NOBLES OF
CZAR'S REGIME..
Fin4 Refuge Froiin Soviet
Perils"—Pawn Jewels to
Ward Off Hunger.
Fi'ohltconhparative riches to tt-con.
• clition sohlewhat approaching beggary
18 the saddest chapter in the lives of
Russian refugees now in Prance who,
according to French oiiicials, number
nearly 50,000 and none of whom are
anxious to return to Rhssia so long as
Sovietism and its reign of terror con-
tinues fol' the educated classes, Even
princes, generals and former high of -
gentle of the Russian Government are
included in the list of the Reds' vie-
tilns, who, bust as the French nobility
once sought refuge in England, now
rely on Ti'ranee'seauoient friendship to
keep them from starvation, '
They no longer are able to mingle
and spend freely with equals in social
ranks, the Russian aristocrats being
compelled to earn their bread often by
the meanest labors, while a colony of
former nobles and Ceara' omcers are
finding it profitable to manage an es•
tate at Garclhee, near Paris. The
farms are directed by Count Ignatieff.
Until the present Soviet regime the
Count owned 500 herds of cattie and
. fertile Plains 'where he specialized in
the production Of cheese. Now he is
introducing Russian methods on it
miniature farm aided by hie wife, who'
was once reputed to be the meet
beautiful woman at the Russian court.
Surrounded by old friends, such as
Troueltonroil, from the Imperial
Guards, the count is elated at the fact
that the farm has shown a good mar-
gin of•prollt in the two Sean 1t has
beenin operation, aid ho intends to
increase his holdings to give employ -
Silent to others who have felt the hand
of financial oppression. •
One Prince Grows Mushrooms,
Prince Lyszezynkis is another who
is working as a,farru hand under a
eerie which does not reveal to its
overalled .clad companions his, connec-
tion with the Czar's fancily. Prince
Boris and Princess Mer,tchersky are
. both devoting their exile to painting,
while not far from Josephine's palace
at 117almaison Count Ignatieff's second
son is finding consolation not in the
high brewed literary discussions
which were once the "aim of iris sort,
Mit in the intricate problems of mush-
room growing with such rivals as
Prince Georges Dadeshkilian and
Prince Gouchacheff, who formerly was
An basr,ador from Russia to :Spain.
Those with mechanical training like
Cal. Doroshewsky, the famous . Rus-
sian inventor, aremaintaining gar-
ages, and at last reports Gen. Nicol-
aleff was piloting a motor truck
through crowded Paris streets, while
scores of captains of the army are act-
ing as taxicab drivers.
Some of the refugees have evett.
sought their fortunes in the French
colonies, the latest departures induct:
Mg one of the Cantacuzone princes,
descendants of the Byzantine rulers,
and Count Nieroth, who was the hunt-
ing companion of the royal Russian
family. -
But there is another class not so
fortunate, numbering into the thous
ands. After paying their passage they
SICs a
S l ne eMe
Tire °Hones t05; 0 r ataVgY 5O15yc e,
Ilan Water r3oitlea, 1 gnetuf C llloyced
Auto Tires; 'ltubbor Boots, Guaranteed
to eatisty. 50 cents. Poatputd. 'Mail
Your order to -flay,
Schofield, 24 DeMouoie rat„ Toronto,
of
landed in France with a few hundred
rubies and the'remnents of the faintly
jewels, One by one these jewels have
beew'soId to pay doeterei•bilis, while it
is riot uncommon to hoar weepitug Rus-
sian women tell their trienda that they
"meld the .last ring to -day to hely bread,.
Next week we will be hungry uniese
Russia's God overtl'hrow.s Ruseia's
onehniea; ' ..
Hope for Red Overthrow.
The majority in the exiled colony
have nothing. It is composed largely
of those followers of the liberal pro•
Cessions and former intellectuals et
the old state, who now 'live from hand
to mouth, borrowing a few francs
Where. possible by interpreting Rus-
elan documents, or turn out cinema
scenarios -which invariably tell the
same story of suffering, and just as
regularly are not:accepted.
Those who'held subordinate posts in
the Russian army form an equally
miserable class. Despite their poverty
they walk the streets with their shoul-
ders erect and •their heads closely
cropped. They are not trained for any
other life and are hoping against hope
for the return of the old regime, while
the French police records testify that
many are finding the exile wearisome
arid. have abandoned their hopes for
suicide in the Seine. •
Nevertheless, even among the poor-
er class there is a new note of ambi-
tion appearing, The colony is- now
publishing a daily paper•, ' in which
there is found a few details of relief
work in the Red ridden homeland, as
well as inspiration not to give up the
battle because the downfall of the
Soviets is becoming more imminent
every day, Naturally there is always
work in such a colony for Red emis-
saries, but little advaiice'can be made
toward Sovietism among those who
have seen its operation, and the funds
provided for such propaganda reach
other objectives than the pockets of
the homesick Russian patriots.
Theseexiles profess no interest in
politics; but as a former countess de-
scribes it, "every night they kneel be-
fore ikons pleading for the Allies to
restore Russia to its old glory. Even
if penniless her exiles aro willing to
go back and share their bread with the
faithful moujiks, who did not have
enough cash on Ihand to escape the
Soviet yoke and who, despite • the
Soviets, still do not forget the nation's
ideals."
Electricity in Wire Fences.
Some time ago the Department of
Agriculture was led by complaints
from farmers to investigate the cause
of the corrosion of wire fences. Ex -
parts concluded that the cause of the
trouble was a metallurgical problems.
The older iron wire is said to be more
durable than the steel wire later intr,h-
ducod. The results of the tests made
seem to indicate that manganese in
the wire may have something to do
with the corrosion. Manganese dis-
solved in iron up to a certain amount
increases the -electrical resistance, bet
if the manganese is not uniformly dis-
tributed electric currents may be
generated In the wire when wet with
rain, leading to corrosion by eleb-
trolysis. The deep pitting observed
in corroded wire is said to be charac-
teristic of electrolytic action.
Improving the Silkworm -
The moth' •of the silkworm, as a re-
sult of having been raised a pet for
countless generations, is unable to"fly.
Soon atter assuming the winged form,
the female, in certain European cul-
tural establishments, is invited to lay
her eggs on cardboard. All of them
are deposited within a radius of three
or four inelees; whereupon the pieca of
card that bears them is out out and
stamped 'with a guarantee that they
are strictly fresh and free from "pe -
brine" germs.
"Pebrine" is a highly contagious
bacterial disease that attacks silk-
worms, carrying these off in multi-
tudes when once an epidemic starts.
Pier Its prevention, resort is had to
constant inspection work, helped by
microscope and culture tube.
But, in addition, it is very important
;that the eggs shhall represent all that
is best in the way of inheritance,
Which means that the mother moths
seletied for egg -laying are extra large
and robust ingests, For it is obvious
that the offspring of such motile will
he extra -sized and healthy cater'piI-.
Jars, capable of spinning a maximum
quantity of silk" •
Chinese silk growers have common-
Iy persisted in selling each season
, their largest cocoons, which should
have been Inept to produce the high-
grade breeding lnoths. They have
been neglectful of measures to check
the '"pebrine" disease. .Alpo, the con-
servative Orientals have continued to
senor to market sills of a •quality, and
reeled in a Manner, no longer suit-
able to the improved machinery of
their Occidental customers,
Hence, it is that China, which for-
merly enjoyed a world supremacy in
sericulture, now finds herself in a posi-
tion where her raw si11s no longer
commands a favorable market, The
"'pebrine" and neglect of elementary
breeding rules have worked havoc
with the cocoon crops, the yield of
silk., obtained from the cocoons being
small,
Not very long ago, however, an en-
terprising American started a cam-
paign of education m Canton and
vicinity, illustrating by motion pic-
tures the uae of modern methods of
reefing ih our high-speed looms, and
showing why Chinese methods were
responsible for the low market prtce
of Chinese sills" The Chinese quickly
grasped the idea that the' adoption of
up-to-date methods meant money in
their pdcltets, and many of them are
acting upou it.
An "international committee for the
improvement of sericulture in China".
hasdarted in to produce large (mantle
ties of guaranteed silkworm eggs, to
distribute them in silk -growing cen-
tres, to develop mulberry planting and
to advise farmers in regard to the best
methods of rearing the insects.. Egg-
prodteaing stations will serve as model
rearing farms, which growers can visit
in order to learn.
So satisfactory has been the pro-
gress of this work already that it is
believed that China will before very
long amens lied• place as oue 0f the
foremost sills -producing countries
EveryTea and C fie, Driiker
finds a new and . deli ht d.
flavor the first time he tries
health drink
Mete, a Reason"
-at rocers
TWO USEFUL
DESIGNS
Rifled Oil Pipet'`, -
Tbep 0 th,gun p-
e toprincii o o'of oef of.
pit de n p H f ,i h apingriiied.. 1 is Thua
prude 011 at Oalifarnie is Meetly thick,
viscous Gild dilRatllt to pump throngb
long lilies, •Ideating cannot be success-
' fully Applied to a long pipe, itnil mint•
ing with water results hl ash oliltalsion
from which the oil cannot be readily
eenarated, The best means of dealing
with these viscous oils es by means
of a pipe rifled on the inside, so that
the Oil, mixed with about 10 per cent.
of water, ie caused to whirl rapidly.
The water, being heavier than the oil,
seeks the outside and forme a thin.
RIM, which lubricates the pipe for the
passage of ,the oil, - The friction i4
thus so tar reduced that the 011 ]las
been pumped easily through a line
thirty-one miles -Mpg. The water and
the oil come out entirely separate at
the'end of the linea
KEEP CHILDREN WELL
4554 9408
9659—Ladies' One -Piece (douse
Dress- (37 or 35einch length). Price,.
25 cents. In 8 sizes; 84,to 48 ills. bust
Size 36 requires 804. yds, 36 ins.;
bands, 14 yd. 36 ins. Width., 1%. yds.
9408 Misses' Middy Dress (suitable
for smoll.wohuen, or middy with four-
piece pleated skirt attached under
tuek;,iih two lengths). Price, 25 cents.
In 3 sizes/ 16 to 20 years. Size 16 re-
quires 8% yds. 30 ins. wide. Width,
1% Yds.
These -pabterms may be obtained
from your local McCall dealer, or
from tine McCall Co., 70 Bond Street,
Toronto, Dept. W
WHY BEAUTY FADES
A Condition Due Entirety to
Poor, Watery Blood.
- The girl who returns bailie from
school or from work thoroughly tired
out will be fortunate if she escapos a
physical breakdown, because this get-
ting tired so easily is probably the
first warning symptom of a thinning
blood that must not be disregarded if
her health is to be preserved.
When the blood becomes thin and
impure the patient becomes pale, hag-
gard and angular. She not only tires
out easily but stillers from headaches,
Palpitation of the heart, dizzy spells
and a lass of appetite. This condition
will go from bad to worse, if prompt
steps are .not `taken to increase and
enrich the blood supply. To make the
rich, red blood that brings the glow
of health, no oilier medicine can equal
Dr, Williams' Pink Pflls. If given a
fair trial their use brings rosy cheeks,
bright •eyes, a good appetite and good
spirits, Dr. Williams' Pink Pills have
made thousands of pale, languid girls
active and strong. On the first sign
of poor, thin blood mothers should in-
sist upon their daughters taking a fair
coarse of these pills, They will not
only restore health, but will save fur-
ther doctor bills.
Dr. Williams' Pink Pills can be ob-
tained from any dealer in medicine or
by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes
for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams' Medi-
cine Co., Brockville, Ont.
Menmory F'.tsats iii Chinese
SC/1001S.
Chinese schoolroom methods are in-
tere,eting as showing the contrast be-
tween schools in tine Orient, and
schools in this country. Many elderly
people will recall the tate when prac-
tices'in the district schools of Canada
had some of the Chinese thorough-
ness and dependence upon themeni-
ory.
The beginner takes Ills book to the
teacher, who hears. him read
cclumn or more, after which. the pupil
returns to his desk and repeats this
lesson aloud until iso can recite it
from memory. He then takes his book
again to the teacher, turns his back
upon his•master and recites what the
has learned, This is called "backing
the lemon."
In this way the pupil commits the
whole book to memory, and. he is ex-
pected to learn it so thoroughly that
he can at any momout repeat the
whole of any passage the initial words
of which are mentioned to him.
Just before the noonday rscuss the
teacher Writes a sentiment, a proverb
or a proposition upon a slip of red
paper and pastes -.11 upon the door,
Each boy as he goes •out reacts- the:.
lines, and in the afto'noon.renders to
the teacher another line which will,
with the first, make a couplet.'
In Chinn all honors; social, pecuni-
ary and official, await the scholar; and
the teacher has always at hand iIlus-
trious 'examples to hold up for the
emulations of those who become dis-
°enraged. Among the ancients, as
among the moderns, many who were
poor et stupid rose to e»hiuence by
sheer diligence and sat1•discipllnle,
The teacher tells. of So Chin, who,
beteg afflicted with drowsiness when
at his nightly studies, thrust a. needle
through his flesh so that pain might
keep him awake; tine of the restless
Sal Liu, whose active body revolted
against sitting. at ht) boolis,.and who
cured himself of a constant disposi-
tion to rise and leave diem by placing
a pail of Cold water where his feet
would be immersed in 1t whenever Ise
stood tip,
A warning is given in the career of
the n necrupulous Pang Kien, Who cut
oft the enis of straws that this teacher
told him to 'arrange evenly, while the
easeful and honest Sung Pin separated
a similar bundle and laid the straws
straight, one by 000, and foetid that
they were all of uniform Jewell with-
out cutting, The chare.otttr thus mai*
fasted he. the two filleted their teach -
or eljeiclt of his pupiia would best re,
pity his efforts, and his judgment was
justified by the event, for Pang 'Men
canto to no good, while Sung Pie wale
renown end wealth, anti great honor
came Lhrosgh him to his preceptor,
very salaried 1111011 is a bookkeeper
and accountant in these days of febtt.
Iotas prfeese
DURING HOT WEATHER
livery mother- knows ihow fatal the
hot summer months are to'smali child-
ren. Cholera infrntun, diarrhoea,
dysentry, colic and stomach troubles
are rife At this time and often a pre.
cloud little life is. lost after only a few
hours' illness. The mother who keeps
-Baby's Own Tablets in the house'loels
safe. Tho occasional use of the Tab-
lets prevents. stomach and bowel
troubles, or if the trouble comes sud-
denly ---as it generally does—the Tab-
lets will bring baby safely through,
They. are sold by medicine dealers or
by Mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr,
Williams' Medicine Co,, . Brockville,
Ont:
Used Kaiser's Inkstand. • '
When the Turkish Peace Treaty
was signed here by the envoys of the
Sultan, the pens of the signatories
wore dipped in tice-historic inkstand
made to order for Balsas Williams I.
by the famous Sevres porcelain manu-
factories, says a despatch from Sevres,
Fran ce. •
The inkstand was ordered by the
Raiser two mouths before the declare.
tion•af war with France, and was not
completed in time for delivery be-
fore the outbreak of hostilities. A
masterpiece of French art, designed
by the famous painter, Carrier -Bel -
louse, it base been kept, since its com-
pletion, in the Sevres museum of por-
celain wares. The Kaiser planned •to
take possession of it after his triumph-
al entry into Parts and (muse it in the
signing of a second victorious treaty
to be dictated by Germany at Ver-
sailles.
Although the Kaiser's inkstand was
completed in time for the signature of
the Treaty of Peace with Germany at
Versailles, its existence was over-
looked at that time and the dramatic
opportunity of employing it on this
occasion was missed.
- -C
Not a Laying Bird.
Tommy had been naughty. I-Iis
mother did not know what to do with
him. Sho.wanted to.confne him some-
where, but •ho.showed signs of break-
ing everything in any room she put
him into.
She bethought herself of a place
where there was nothing to break and
where he could not work any (Serious
reyonge. 1 -lo was carried into the gar-
den and locked up in the fowl -horse,
IIe was silent—this was something be-
yond This capacity to talk about. But
as his mother was going away his
head appeared behind the wires.
"aIamma ! "
His mother stopped.
"Mamma, you ean loch me in here
if you like, but I won't lay tiny eggs!"
MOTHER!
"California Syrup of Figs"
Child's Best Laxative
Accept "Caltfornia" Syrup of Sege
only—look for the name California 00
the package, then' you ars euro your
child is having the best and most
harmless physic for the little stow•
act, liver tied bowels. Children love
its fruity taste. Full directions on
each bottle. You tenet say "Ca15.
tornia."
Beth slopes of life are sunny,. and
God seeds just enough tears to indite
the harvest rich and abundant.
Minard's Liniment Relieves Colds, Etc.
Sharks (we mean the sea variety)
are contributing food, gelatine and oil
for Malty purpoees to appease the
evermore homplox needs of mankind,
and now they are being experimented
with as a probable source of shoe
leather, -
EXHIBITION N VI I ORIS
Do not to'get to inspect nut• stock of
88 Note Piano Rolls
Perfection Rolls, 0 for 51.00,
Planoatylo Rolle, 60c., 4 for $2:00.
Word Rolls, 900, Upward,
We have the 1015031 ;lumber of
Beleetionle, best finality, •rhtalreat
prices In 'relento.
We Pay Spcolsl A:tentien to Out -of
'lbws Customers,
OCTAVE MUSIC 1,11.11'1'LY
3 Adelal'de 01, runt • Toronto
6 doers from Yonge Ct.
sVIW+ sigh
.ASTH ¢per p
HAY FEVER
--nsleeplesS Rights, constant
s'neeziylg, streaming eyes,
wlieezyt breathing
RZai :--
f9VgG@� AH
brings relief, Plitt up in cap
sales, easily swallowed, Sold by
reliable druggists for a dollar.
Ask our Agents or send card for
free sample 16 Templeton's. 1,42
ging St• W., Toronto,
Thinking Trouble.
Some people can't think; some. don't
think; some could, but won't, The
minds qt the latter close are quite
good, and might indeed be quite. ex-
cellent, but they are just like a marble
set rolling on a slope. It may - go
straight, or it may go anywhere!
The remedy for those with this sort
of.mind—easily diverted, and hard to
keep in its desired thinking channel—
is to think aloud! ' And if that is not
a complete curd for mind -wandering,
although in a majority of cases it
would be, then all that is .required is
to close the eyes.
One of the most brilliant scholars of
Cambridge, wlio had . but to read a
stiffly -written page. to master it at
ogee and fix"it in his mind and-menory
for all time, always adopted the shut-
eyes-atid=aloud plan,
Closed eyes mean that things which
distract, divert, or disturb, are shut
out: The wisdom of that is obvious.
With many it is..a necessity. 11 is
based on the same principle that if a
class in school is to do good work the
scholars must not be so placed that
.they have a view of the street through
the windows, which only distracts
them.
The "thinking aloud" is crowded
with merit. It "helps composition, for
one thing. It reveals the gaps, the
hiatus, in one's thoughts.
We may think a man—a professor,
perhaps—eccentric when he paces up
and clown, muttering, rsut he is only
thinking aloud, lie knows it is the
best method. Try it! You will fine]
that after, a tinge you have increased
your "think power" by 50 or 100 per
cent. And, after practice, you will be
able to "think aloud without sound,"
Your lips will hove, and that is all.
That meets the objection. that think-
ing aloud might attract the attention
of the curious:
LET "DANDERINErr
BEAUTIFY HAIR
(sirls i Have a mass of long,;
thick, gleamy hair,
sib:''.
Let "Danderine" save your hair and
double its beauty. You can have lots
of long, thick, strcng, lustrous hair.
Don't let it stay lifeless, thin, scraggly
or fading. bring back its colo', vigor
and vitality.
Get a 35 -cent bottle of delightful
"Danderine" at any drug or toilet
counter to freshen your scalp; check
dhindrtiff and falling hair. Your hair
needs this stimulating tonic, then ils
life, color, brightness and abundance•
will return—Hurry!
Tru: Free.
My neighbor has a fair magnolia tree
And when Spring crosses April's
rainy rim,
Its lovely blossom I'd go miles to sae
And breathe a prayer of gratitude to
him.
I know a distant sweep of lawn where
stand
Long lines of iris and their splen-
did blues
Color my dreams in May, though a.
straliger's hand
Will ever hold then as a Spring-
time lose.
And when afield on Autumn's smoky
clays
1 stray where salvias born by gar-
den wall;
I drink their beauty mid October's
haze
And pay no toll to manor or to hall.
Mtnard's Liniment For Burns, Etc.
The crop of apples this year is said
to be the poorest known in England
for years.
MONEY ORDERS.
Send a Dominion Depress Money
Order. They are. payable everywhere.
You can (lodge respohsibilties; bet
can you also dodge the results of your
dodging
Minard's Liniment Reifeves Distemper
The financial returns from land in
Ragland are so small and the taxes
are so exceedingly heavy that the
great landowning families are selling
hundreds of thousands at acres, and
the last traces of "feudalism are van-
ishing. In one respect the results are
a surprise to theorists; the tenant
farmers who buy their farms are
often dissatisfieri with Their changed
con(l;tion. Raving 'borrowed money
at a high rate of interest and Having
become liable to a whole set of taxes
that the landlord formerly pail,• they
are sometimes eager to sell their new-
ly acquired property rind to got out of
their predicament as beat they can.
'issue. No. 36---'20,
Diamonds in River Beds,
Deep to the Vaal River in .South
Africa isle diamonds, 'Po get .them a
device on the diviiig-bell, principle is
employed, having a tabular shaft and
an stir block, This device consists of
two ppntoons rigldiy connected by
decks, betwean wlhioh 1r roohny eels=
or diving bell is sunk to the river bed,
A tubular shaft loins the ohisson
to a. chamber alms the Water level
and the whole ts" air locked, To (seep
the Caisson submerged it is weighted
with iron ballast, says the South ,Aid•
pan Mining and Engineering Journal. "
Compressed air is forced into the
interior of the upper or air lock chem•
her the shalt and the bell or caisson,
and the river water being thus) forced
out below it is -possible toearly en
digging and loading operations con-
veniontly. The gravel is hoisted 111)
the shaft and delivered into a chute
which holds about a ton, The bell is
provided with collapsible seats at-
tached to 'the wall for thera000,noda
tion of workers during lifting opera,.tions,
Orders by Pigeon Post.
An entirely practical use of homing
,pigeons 15 reported from England: The
inventor of the system is a butcher's
son, who ,employs hie birds regularly
to carry orders from outlying districts
—presumably where there are no tele-
phones—to his father's shop. The:
plan worke excellently. i
When" the boy )cess to collect orders I
he takes six of hie fastest birds in a i
trap with him. After he has gone a
mile or two and collected a dozen or-
ders he liberates a pigeon with the
slips enclosed in a little nletaI caro
attached to the bird's foot. Before
five minutes have elapsed these orders
are in the shop.
At the various stages of hts round,
which usually takes three hours, the
other lords with more orders ale set
free, and by the time the shop is
reached all the orders received by this
pigeon post have been despatched.
St. Isidore, P.Q,, Aug. 18, 1894,
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen,—I have frequently used
MINARD'S LINIMENT a.nd also pre-
scribe it for my patients, always with
the mast gratifying results, and I con-
sider it the best all-round Liniment ex-
tant.
Yours truly,
DR, JOS. AUG. 51R015,
The French do not regard aero-
planes- as profitable for use in com-
merce over the Sahara Desert; it costs
too much to move the mineral wealth
of the territory by aeroplane when
pack mules and camels can be used
instead. But to suppleinent the desert
police and to maintain French •prestige
military aviators are well worth while,
The Arab tribes have deep respect for
them and take -to their heels whenever
an aeroplane appears.
Minard's Liniment For Dandruff.
In the early days of Greece and
Rome all the doors of dwellings open-
ed outward. A person passing out of
the house knocked on the door before
opening it. ___..__.____.
SCENTED RED
i4O%�'e:3re 111 CEDAR CHESTS
Absolutely moth -proof and wonder-
fully handsome Macao of furniture.
Direct from, manufacturer to you.
Write for free illustrated literature.
Eureka Refrigerator Co., Limited
Owen Sound, Ont.
Just Out 2
A manual for fox farmers covering
ranch construction, housing, feed-
ing, breeding, and furring foxes, by
E. H. Rayner, ono of the best known
fox breeders on P. E. Island.
An invaluable handbook for all who
wish to make a success of raising
four. Sent postpaid to any address
in Canada or the Ignited States
far 51.00,
Send orders to
R. G. CLARK
Box 514, Summerside, P. E. Island
friassified Advertisements, *,u
N° orris!:we oat t#i0I4l511Ai,, s;<aat'fu ,
should he wltheit our 015 0111-
ablator. 'Adds, sulttrants, multiplloa
and dlvldse. Hame speed arid efflelsnoy
as $400 meoillnos, Agonte wanted, Welt
w004 hahoa Co., I3ox 101, Ottawa, Ont.
Th. GREATAST NIT 05 YEAR$r
IMUs Dodtcatedlg,ttoUn11541'eralera
4 end cs, psasod by+n,c wa5t'knewn
SONG
nen trr'ter;'MMorrie orrie 1tioelny,
/�tl Words and 0fesic 3ua, poaleg4
ta�aeor amnia. Addreanr
Ceocltaa I'aess, I.,non' o, Publielars, 45 and 64
Lombard Street, Toronto, out,
COARSE SALT
LANG SALT
Bulk Carlota
TORONTO BALT WORKS
c.. J. CLIFF « TORONTO
{iutericWr 1'19a4or D1,r stemeaiaa - -
DOG DISEASES
mad $ow to reps .
Mailed:S'ree to,any AM
Areas by the *tither.
Mt. [lay Glover 00., apo..
100 West SlutrStraei
New 'York, L,H.A.
The largest part of some people is
their wishbone.
PREMPRISI
PREMIUMS!
PRE ill
List of Premiums for the
TORNIO
Fat Stook Show
Now ready for distribution.
Write To -day for Your Copy.
Show will be held at
Union Stock Yards, Toronto
I$ecerniter eth &'10th
C. F. TOPPING, Secretary
Box 638 - West Toronto.
Used for 70 Years
Thai its use Grandmother's
youthful appearance has
remained until youth has
become but a memory,
The soft, refined, pearly
white appearance it
renders leaves the•joy
of Beauty with yo
for -many
years.
SINCE 5010
0148PSCEeVG S'
ClearYourScalpand
Ski Wi h Cut erir
After shaving and before bathing
Muth dandruff and itching, pimples
and blackheads withCuticuna Oint-
ment. Wash all oft with Cuticura
Soap and hot water, using plenty of
Soap best applied with the hands.
Oris -Soap for all uses, shaving,slcam-
pooing, bathing,. •
Soap 25c, Ointment 26 and 60e. Sold
tl ouglroattheDomta ion. Canadtannepet:
',mann Limited, at. Poral St.. Montreci.
duttcura Soap &mica withoutmur.
(7. Weatherproof the Shingles
There's added years of cervico if your
is preserved with
t oof
SHINGLE STAIN
ASK YOUR DEALER
ONLY TABLETS MARKED
`I AYERfs AK ASP MIN
Not Aspirin at All 'without the "Bayer Cross"
Tito name "Bayer" en Aspirin Is of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" which:
like 14 Karat on gold. 51 positively cotttaine proper directions for Colds,
• identifies the onlqenuine ilepirin, headache, Toothache, Earache, Nett-
the
eth
the Asph'iu preeeribed by physician i•al ia, Lumbago, Ithnuhnatsun, Nowt -
for over nineteen years . end now tis,, Joint :Pains, and Pain generally.
matte in Canada. Tin boxes of 10 tablets coat but
Alwaya buy an unbroken package a few cents, Larger "Bayer" packages,
'lamp la only can AspletIn—."13agev"•-roil rstntett say 'Mayor"
hrritrtn is the t ads matin (reat,•5^t'nd in r'ai,erlal et Myer efbunfaemee 01 Mono-
0,,15ineadester,r£ taitcvlicnnid, Wilily It to n,ar karma that.teptrrn mann) 7layen
manufacture, to nnatst 55,' rat tie ncolurt ln,1lntlohi, the "rad+inls cl Bayer compete
:ivJli bo stamped with their general tredo r,tarl., the '1layor Crow;'