The Clinton News Record, 1916-11-16, Page 7Guard
Your
.
Your Baby's
Health
Cheerful, Chubby Children
Make the Home Httppy
Weak, puny babies are a constant
care to tired mothers and are subject
to nany diseases that do not affect
healthy children.
Keep your children in good health.
See that their bowels move regularly
-especially during the teething period.
This is a distressing time in the life
of every child and the utmost pre-
caution should be taken to keep them
well and strong.
By the consistent use of
Mr. Window's
Soothing Syrup
it is possible to avoid many childish
ills now so prevalent.
His a corrective for diarrhoea, colic
and other infantile ailments. It soothes
the fretting baby and permits the
child to sleep weli and grow healthy.
It brings comfort and relief to both
child and mother.
Mrs. Winslow's
Soothing Syrup
Makes Cheerful,
Chubby Children
Is absolutely nonmarcotic. It men -
tains no opium, morphine nor any of
thekderivetives. It is soothieg, pleas-
ant and harmless. For generations
mothers in all parts of the world have
used it and millions of babies have
been benefited by it.
Buy a bottle today and
have It hasedY
Relieve, and Protect Your Children
,geld by all dratted/ in Canada and
throughaa the nuerkl
WILL BUY '
Standard Reliance
Cooksliutt Plough Pfd.
Canada Machinery Pia..
Canadian Oil Companies.
Dominion Power &TransmiesIo.
Canadian Consolidated. Pelt Pfd.
Electrical Development Bonds.
Ontario Pulp lcr Paper Donde. •
Spanish River Bonds.
WILL .SELL
Pooploa Loam
Dominion Explosives.
Guelph & Ontario Doan,
Riordan Paper Bonds.
Russian Government Bonds.
British Exchequer a% Bonds.
Anglo-French Bonds to yield 64%.
We buy and sell all Unlisted Securi-
ties. Correspondence invited.
MaCd0114id, BUilOCk & CO.
84 GAT STREET
TORONTO ONT.
THE LAWS OF VSTAII.
Are the Germans Living Up To These
Rules?
Even in war there is a method of
"playing the game," and there are
emmertain things formulated by military
law, written or unwritten, among
civilized nations which, even when
they are at daggers drawn, they must
not do,
These laws forbid the use of pois-
oning the water source of the enemy;
• they prohibit murder by treachery—
that is to say, the assuming of the
uniform or the displaying of the flag
of the foe so as to lure him into a
position from which he. has no escape.
Equally, the slaughter of those who
have surrendered is prohibited, whe-
ther they have done so at discretion
or upon conditiens.
Then arms or prejudices which
cause unneeessary pain or suffering to
an enemy must not be used, teither
must a flag of truce be abused to gain
information coneernitm the strategical
position of the enemy, ane in the in-
terests of art and posterity, there
must be no reckless destruction of
valuable property, such as churches
or ancient buildings, whether public
or private.
The laws of war also declare,
among other things, that only forti-
fied cities shall be besieged. Open
cities, towns, or villages are not to
be subjected to siege or bombardment.
MOST NAKED FORM
OF PROFITEERING
BAD POTATOES SOLD TO POOR
IN GERMANY.
Tricked by Government Into Buying
Food That Sickened
Pigs.
D. Thomas Curtin of Boston en-
titles his article on German condi-
tions published in the London Times
"The Potato Trick; Rich Against
Poor." It charges that the poor of
Germany have been sold rotten pota-
toes with Government connivance.
"The difficulties of the cynical
group who are the real rulers of Ger-
many have increased," he writes.
One of the countless sources of anx-
iety has been the harvest of the very
important potato crop, now an integ-
ral part of the Austrian and German
bread.
"The handling of this crop exhibits
the most naked form of profiteering
to which the poor have been subjected
by the rich.
"Slowly the food situation in Ger-
many has grown worse month by
month. I would ask my readers not
to build false hopes. This is an accu-
rate statement; nothing approaching
actual starvation exists in any part
of Germany. Thus far I have discov-
ered no child without milk. I believe
the infant death rate is less than in
time of peace. No German is without
a sufficiency of some kind of nourish-
ment to carry on existence.
Weak and Delicate Suffer.
"The weak and delicate are suffer-
ing, and there is a great amount of
national irritability caused by low
diet, but everybody is getting along
somehow—the army and navy ex-
tremely well.
"No people are more easily and
continuously bluffed by their Govern-
ment than ahe Germans. Lincoln's
dictum about not fooling all of the
people all of the time does not apply
to them.
"An abominable deception was
practised upon the public withh the
first potato supply. For many months
potato tickets had been in use, when
suddenly official notices appeared
, saying that potatoes could be had for
!a few clays without tickets.
I "The unsuspecting public ordered
' great quantities, and the agrarians
thus got rid of all their bad potatoes,
selling them to the mass of the peo-
ple. In many cases they were rot-
ting so fast that the purchaser had
to bury them, and it was found that
they produced illness when given to
• swine. What other people in the
world but the Germans would have
stood it?
"Food Dictator Batocki has been un-
able to make the agrarians put the
potato crop now gathered upon the
market even at the maximum price
allowed by the food commission. They
are holding back the supplies until
they have forced up the maximum
price, just as a year ago mane agra-
-Hans allowed the potatoes to rot
rather than sell as millings to the
city at the price fixed by law.
Won't Agree to Fair Price.
"In any other country in a state of
siege the Government would com-
mandeer the supplies. As the indus-
trial classes until recently resisted
the war taxes, so the Prussian aunk-
ere snap their fingers at suggested
fair laws for food distribution. What
state of mind does this produce among
the people?
"Outside Germany there is an idea
that every German is working at top
speed, the spirit of the fatherland
leading him on like a flame, That
Was the spirit witnessed in the early
days of the war. Now there is a
great bluff in circulation throughout
the world.
"The revelation that so angers
them is that it is a lie, that all is go-
ing fairly well in Germany and that
there is no longing for' peace. In cer-
tain rural districts there is an in-
tense longing for peace, not merely a
German peace, but any peace. This
feeling arises not only from military
reasons, but from the utter weariness
of the rule of the profiteers."
The writer declares that the last
potato crop was poor, rye was good,
wheat was fair, oats and barley ex-
cellent, He refers to the great ef-
forts of the Germans to get oil, nuts,
berries and poppies, 'but says the peo-
ple are apathetic, as the Government
has taken the crops at prices already
set. He ends:
"The conquest of Reunania may
yield foodstuffs and oil, and smug-
gling by neutrals will help the army
and munition works, but if the block-
ade is strengthened Germany can be
defeated.
Certainly Fast.
"Mend's husband and Kate's are
fast friends, aren't they?"
"Maud and Kate. think they are.
They both get home about 2 ie the
nros'nmng.
-
Mink of it=-=
People cut out tea or coffee before retiring when these
beverages interfere with sleep. In the morning they
drink freely of them, strangely overlooking the fact
that at whatever time of day the cup IS drunk the drug,
caffeine, in tea and coffee is irritating to the nerves.
More land More people are turning to
Instant Postoin
the drug-free, nourishing, comfortable cereal drink.
"There's a Reason"
(lamellae Postures Cermet .00., Ltd., Windsor, Ont.
THE DOOR TO HEALTH
Is Through the Rich, Red Blood
Dr. Williams' 'Pink Pills
Actually Make.
The blood is responsible' for the
health of the body, If it is good, dis
ease cannot exist. If it is had, the
door is shut against good health, dis-
ease is bound to appear in one form
or another. One person may be seared
with rheumatism or sciatica,another
with anaemia, indigestion, heart pal-
pitation, headaches or backaches, un-
strung nerves, or any of the many
other forms of ailment that comes
when the blood is weak and watery.
There is just one certain, speedy cure
—Dr. Williams Pink Pills. They make
new, rich blood, and this guild blood
strengthens the whole system and
brings good health and happiness.
Thousands owe their present good
health, some, life itself, to the pills.
Miss Devine. Lalibeeti, St. Jerome,
Que., says :-.--"Last year I seemed
gradually to grow weak and run down.
I did not sleep well, had a poor appe-
tite, and grew pale and generally lan-
guid. I consulted a doctor who told
me I was anaemic, and gave me a
tonic, This I took faithfully for some
time, but it did net help toe, and I ap-
peared to be growing worse, and final-
ly I was hardly able to go about the
house and almost wholly incapacitated
for work. While in this condition a
friend advised me to try Dr. Wil-
liams Pink Pills, and I got several
boxes. It was not long after I began
their use when I could see an im-
provement, which just manifested it-
self in an improved appetite and bet-
ter rest at night. From this on the
improventent was rapid and I was not
long in regaining perfect health. I
think Dr. Williams Pink Pills are a
real blessing for all weak girls."
You can get these pills through any
medicine dealer or by mail at 60 cents
a box or six boxes for $2.60 from The
Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brock-
ville, Out.
THE RUBB_Elt MARKET.
British Government Control Hae
Benefitted the Purchaser.
Since the second year of the war
dawned more every day men and wo-
men have become familiar with the
stock markets—its ups and downs its
short selling, its margins,, exdivi-
dends, etc., than ever before. To
these people the real purpose of the
market means something, where a few
years ago it did not, but to tell these
people that a government, and above
all, the British Government, had in-
terested itself in the. "pulling off" of
a corner would undoubtedly open their
eyes.
Nevertheless, this is true, Great
Britain bee accomplished one of the
biggest corners ever known in the
commercial world and there is every-
thing to indicate that this corner will
continue for years to tome.
The product affected is rubber—now
the commonest of everyday articles—
and the corner, unlike those executed
by private interests, is for the benefit
of the masses, instead of a small
group of capitalists. Great Britain
could, if she -wished, make -it next to
impossible to got any article of rub-
ber beyond those already nianufactur-
ed, but, instead, she has so controlled
the market that, to -day, it is possible
to purchase rubber at about 67c. a
pound, in the crude state, whereas,
before the war, it was $1.67 a pound,
and in 1910, it sold for $3.00 a pound.
While .other conditions have sent
food and staple articles soaring in
price, Britain, through her ingenuity
in this affair, has steadily pushed the
price down. Rubber is to -day the
commonest article for footwear, apart
from leather, and when this is con-
sidered the importance of Britain's ac-
tion is readily seen. Leather prices
have increased, shoes have mounted
in cost dollars a pair at a time, and
still rubber has descended and the
cost of rubber footery has remained
about the same, in spite of the in-
creased cost of fabrics and chemicals,
that enter into their manufacture.
The average person may wonder
how this all happened.- The answer
is -simple. In 1893 the bulk of the
world's supply of rubber came from
Brazil—from the wild treeseof South
America. That same year, Great
Britain, appreciating the importance
of the industry and its possibilities of
increase, conceived the plan • of en-
couraging rubber plantations in the
Malay States, Sumatra, Ceylon arid
Java. .The success of the project is
now apparent.
In 1898 the rubber peoclucedmIn
South America was sufficient for the
world's use. This year, the rubber
supply will be 202,000 tons and the
South American contribution to the
whole is only 23 per cent, in spite of
the fact that the South American pro..
auction is fully as large as it was in
1893
These figures make evident at once
the importance a' the rubber. industese
the wisdom of Britain's control of the,
market, and also bring forcibly to the
mind of the average person the sane- I
ness of the use of rubber as a sets-
stitute for leather, particularly in
footwear—or at least as a means of
saving the mere expensive footgear.
Locomotive and Elephant.
To Stanleyville, 600 miles beyond
Bulcama, a good steamer service is
operated, says the Christian Herald.
From that point to Mahagi, on the
west shore of Lake Albert, no work
has been done, but the survey gives a
distance of 648 miles. From Mahagi
the Uganda Government steamers ply
on the Nile as far as railhead south of
Khartum, where the Sedan Govern -
merit trains and steamers and the
Egyptian Railway take the traveller
through to Cairo and Alexandria,
This, line, when completed, will be
mem than 6,000 miles long. The tre-
yeller may be forced to wait now and
then, while tho crew "shoos" a lion or
e belligerent elephant 'off- the Meek,
and sometimes the engine and ele-
phant may meet head on.
s:
IffinarTs Idniment Cares Diphtheria;
CL/MATE LESS semmetne
What Study of Larger Gliiiiers in
-B. C. Has Revealed.
Dr, Charles D. Walcott, secretary of
the Smithsonian Institution, and Mrs.]
Walcott have jest returned to Wash-
ington after several months' field
work hi Canada. Accomplished by
only a packer and cook, they spent
most of the summer and early fall on
the continental divide, which forms
the boundary line between Alberta and
British Columbia, south of the Cana-
dian Pacific' Railway, studying the
cambrian rocks, containing the fossil
remains of the earliest animal
Owing to the heavy snowfall of the
previous winter, and the fact that
most of the geological formation
which,they wished to examine were in
the deep snow alma the timberline,
little progress was made in July, in
August, however, sections were ex-
amined and measured in the Mount
Assiniboine region, and from there
northwest to the celebrated Kicking
Horse pass, where the Canadian Pad -
fie Railway bas bored a disable loop
through the mountain in order to ob-
tain a feasible grade on the western
side of the pass.
Some years ago Dr. Walcott found
a. remarkable fossil fauna in boulder
which had been carried into Kiteking
Horse canyon by glaciers that have
long since disappeared. This season
he located the source of those boulders
high up in the mdantain cirque, where
a portion of what must have been a
great hanging glacier is still active.
Mrs. Walcott, formerly Miss Mary
Vaux, of Philadelphia, who has studied
glaciers for several years, and es wel
known as an Alpinist, visited Glacier
British Columbia, where she measured
the position of two large glaciers
and determined that the front ice foo
in each case had retreated at the rate
of t00 feet a year during the past two
years. Steel plates were placed on
the ice on the present surveyed boun-
dary lines. The plates will be buried
beneath the winter's snows, bat, since
their positions are relatively low as
to altitude, the snow will be melted
off next summer, and their locations
then will indicate the amount of for-
ward flow of ice during the year.
Mrs. Walcott's studies prove that the
ice has been steadily retreating during
the past six years. Her measure-
ments agree with observations made
in Alaska, and indicate that the
climate is not as severe as on the Paci-
fic side of the Continent as it was a
decade ago.
During the field work a large num-
ber of photographs were taken, in-
cluding a dozen or more panoramic
views, exposures being made on con-
tinuous alms eight feet in length.
Besides being of great scenic interest,
these photographs form valuable pic-
torial records showing the general
localities visited and definite locations
of certain strata and fossil beds.
The party broke camp at Banff,
Alberta, September 30, which proved
a fortunate move, as the next day a
heavy fall of snow covered the entire
region.
BEST HUN ARMY ON SOMME.
For Neuralgia and''
Sick Headache Use
sehn
'icair Marl
ec4 nal
It soon gives relief. Sold hi
clean, handy tin tubes at
chemists and general stores
everywhere.
Refuse substitutes,
Illustrated booklet mailed
on request.
ClIESEBROUGH MPG. CO
(Ccasollnatnn)
1880 Chabot Ave. Montreal
SOLDIERS'Sent direct trona
tendon, Mum;
s COMFORTSprr 6.4,:h1VVEot hid
tale In about 38 hours perfect%ml
Send for our Special List of
'XMAS BOXES
1
We Can Sand Anything I
Soldiers' Supply Ass'n
Drununond Building, Montreal.
From $2.00 to $5.00
Sarno recent orders : Westmount Sol -
Biers' Wives' League, 1,605 boxes ; 78r0.
pteghnent, 960 boxes, &e., &e.
Quickest ! Surest ! Cheapest !
German Soldiers Object to Belittling
of British Troops.
German views, about you are chang-
ing, writes D. Thomas Curtin, an
American who spent ten months in
Germany, in an article to The London
Times. The contempt in which the
English were held before the war has
now been transferred to my own na-
tion. Good propaganda work for Eng-
land is being done, if very slowly, by
the returned German soldiers, either
wounded or on leave from the west-
ern front, It is to the efforts of
these soldiers and their officers that
the pictures of the long-legged Eng-
lish soldier—usually a Highlander—
running for clear life, or saying that
he won't fight another. battle unless
he gets an extra five shillings, are
disappearing from the comic papers.
The editors of these newspapers
have received protests from German
soldiers in the trenches saying that
such pictures are untrue and do, in
fact, belittle the German soldiers,
who have to fight such unexpectedly
worthy enemies.- For it is the flower
of German infantry chat are sent to
face you oar the.Somine. It was the
best available German troops that
were destroyed in Wave after wave in
the great German defeat at Verdun.
They are now systematically sending
their best against the British, Aus-
tralian, and Canadians. That was ad-
mitted to me repeatedly.
"Can you direct me (hit) Onother
shi''cOlei?e'r.i there, of coarse."
"Jusht been over there (hie) an'
they tol' me it wash over here."
rdinartft DiniinenT;--res Dietemper
On the Border.
"Watch yourself, man! 'Be more
careful with that rifle!" the range of-
ficer exclaimed angrily. "You just
mi,s,Dst sttoet ''
rbadly rattled re-
cruit responded. "I'm awfully sorry,
sir -aril try to do better next time!"
to preserve her complexion, and
she finds this an easy task, if she
uses Sam -link. This herbal baler
not only keeps the surface skin
'smooth and soft, but penetrates to
and feeds the Underlying tissues.
It stimulates the cells to healthy
actin, and prodiices vigorous cir-
culation, which by carrying away
all impurities creates a perinea -
sally clear compleeion. How
much more satisfying than a
lemporery complexion produced
by powders anti ommictice I
50e, box, all drielaists or Zeal -
Buie Co., Tolionto,
1UNIFORMED RAT-CATCHERS..
Profession Once Prominent and Hon-
orable in England.
The death of the oldest rat catcher
in Englaiid reminds one that this
profession is not so prominent to -day
as it once was, says the London
Chronicle. Many boroughs at one
time kept their municipal rat catcher,
and at the head of the profession
stood the Royal Rat Catcher, "an
honorable office," as a newspaper of
1741 called it in recording the ap-
pointment of a Mr. Gower to the post.
And this royal functionary had a uni-
form befitting his office, scarlet em-
broidered in yellow with rodents de-
stroying wheat sheaves.
D. C. M.
It was not the intention of the
weaver, about whom London Tit -Bits
tells, to pose as a hero. He joined
the army at the outbreak of the war.
From "somewhere in France" he
wrote home that among other things
he had had a D.C.M.
When he came home on a short fur-
lough, to his surprise the mayor,
councillors and town band met him at
the station and conveyed him to the
town hall for a banquet. Speechless,
he went through everything.
, During the course of his speech the
mayor said how proud they all were
of him, and that he fully deserved the
Distinguished Conduct Medal,
Then a light appeared in the
"hero's" eyes.
"Distinguished Conduct Medal!" he
said. "What they gave Inc was a Dis-
trict Court Martial for pinchin'
chicken!"
ACHING TEETH
RELIEVED AT HOME
Sloan's Liniment Robs Tooth-
ache of Its Terrors. Pain
Vanishes in a Few Minutes.
NO need to pace the Ileor all night
with the agony of a throbbing tooth.
Sloan's Liniment will quickly relieve
the pain and give you rest.
A single application and the pain
usually disappears. Sloan's Liniment
gets right to the root of the trouble.
Like a warming balm it relieves con-
gestion, and in a few minutes tooth-
ache is reduced,
To soothe the throb of a tooth that
pains with neuralgia. apply Sloan's
Liniment externally, Aching muscles,
theme/leen gout, bruises, sprains,
lumbago, chilblains, sprains and stiff
neck can also be most effectively
treated with Sloan's Led/neat Clean-
er than messy plaster's ox' poultices,
Sloan's Liniment at all drug stores
in 26c., 50c, and $1.00 bottles.
Why Not?
Jimmie giggled when the teacher
read the story of the man eyho swam
across the Tiber three times before
breakfast.
"You do not doubt that a trained
swimmer could do that do you ?"
"No, sir," answered Jimmie, "bat I
wonder why he did not make it four
said get back to the side where his
clothes were,"
Minardle Liniment Cures Iltarget in Cottle
. Couldn't Stand Them.
A well-known Clyde shipbuilder tells
the following story:
"Whenever I see a toothpick I
think of a dinner that was given in
Rome in honor of two Turkish nob-
lemen, I sat near the younger of the
noblemen, He glittered with gold
embroidery and great diamonds, but
nevertheless I pitied him sincerely, for
he was change to our, table manners
and' some of this error's were both ias
dierous and painful.
"Toward the end of the dinner a
servant brought to the young Man a
plate toothpieks. He waved the
Plate &wily, •
"'No, thank you,' he said. 'I have
already eaten two of the awful things.
I want tominmee"
•
GASOLINE LOCOMOTIVES.
The Resew% Ar e Now Using Them
at the Front :
The mobility of advancing troops
and their ability to hold a position
successfully depends upon the bring-
ing up of supplies from bases beyond
the reach of enemy shells, The task
is still more difficult when sudden as -
melte call for heavy reinforcements
of fighting men end munitions at
scattered points. The motor truck
has enswerecl admirably upon many
occasions, but railways, when avail-
able, are still better. Steam traction,
however, is not practicable where
coal and water are not readily at
hand, and, besides, the coal -burning
engine is not so economical as might
be desired.
The Russian armies have suffered
from a deficiency of coal and steel lo-
comotives, but they have made great
use of small, light, gasoline locomo-
tives which are easily and cheaply
built. These sturdy little tractors
are to locomotives what the army
mule is to the horse. They are trust-
worthy and hard-working, and need
little care. All they ask is narrow-
gauge tracks laid upon almost any
kind of roadbed and enough gasoline
to feed their motors. The Russians
use them not only to carry forward
supplies to the advancing troops but
to haul ammunition and food to the
trenches. Each locomotive weighs.
about seven tons, but it can draw over
a rough roadbed at least thirty tons
of load.
The tractors operate on high and
low gears. On low gear they do four
miles an hour, and at full speed about
eight miles. They can run with equal
facility forward or backward. One of
their good points is that the exhaust
can be muffled, so that they make
very little noise—and of course they
make no smoke.
The Germans Are Overtaken.
The British and French have gotten
so far ahead of the Germans in artil-
lery that the Krupp works will add
20,000 employes to increase their out -
pet. It is hardly likely that this will
meet the emergency. France and
England have far more iron establish-
ments than Germany and they are
now completely organized for the
manufacture of arms, and. their out- I
put must be much greater than any-
thing that Germany's single establish-
ment can produce. It is said that
the guns on the Allied front in France
are so close together that there is
hardly room to walk' between them.
JUST THE THING
FOR LITTLE ONES
Baby's Own Tablets are the best
medicine a mother can give her little
ones. They regulate the bowels;
sweeten the stomach; banish consti-
pation and indigestion; relieve colds
and simple fevers and make teething
easy. Concerning them Mrs. Herbert
Johnston, Maymont, Sask., writes:—
"I have used Baby's Own Tablets for
the past four years and find them just
the thing for babies and young chil-
dren." They are sold by medicine
dealers or by mail at 'Is cents a box
from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co.,
Brockville, Ont..
Faster.
"I'm surprised to hear of Maud be-
ing engaged to Mr. Gayman. He's so
awfully fast, you know."
"Oh, I don't know; apparently he
wasn't fast enough Co get away from
Maud."
His Basic Thought.
Victim — What has happened?
Where am I?
Doctor—You have been seriously
injured in a trolley accident. But
cheer up—you will recover.
Victim—How much?
Minard's Liniment Co., Limited.
Gentlemen,—Last winter I received
great benefit from the use of MIN-
ARD'S LINIMENT in a severe attack ,
of LaGrippe, and I have frequently
proved it to be very effective in cases I
of Inflammation. . I
Yours,
W. A. HUTCH NSON.
End of Friendship.
She—How did they ever come to
marry?
IIe—Olis it's 'the same old story.
Started out to be good friends, you
know, and later on changed their
minds.
• GranulatedEyelidd.
Eyes inflamed by. expo-
sure to Suit, Dust and Wind
quickly relieved by Beane
ye a -ye Remedy. No Smarting,
just Eye Comfort, At
Your Druggist's SOC per Bottle, Shrine Es
Salve inTubes 25c. PorpOok eilhaEyeriaCesk
Druggists or Marine Eye Remedy Co., Cblca
rgiaard,s Liniment Cures Colds. as.
She Had.
Lady (engaging nurse) ---Have you
had any experience with children ?
Applicant—Sere, and I Magi° be a
child myself, '
Killing the Calves
—All sorts of excuses are
offered for the high price of
beef, the most plausible be-
ing the alleged ,demand for
veal—"the killing of calves
which should be allowed to
grow into regular beef." You -
cannot have beef if you eat
it as "veal," but you can have
Shredded Wheat Biscuit
which contains more real
nutriment than beef and
costs much less. Shredded
wheat biscuit is the whole
wheat steam -cooked, shred-
ded and baked. Make it your
"meat" for ten days and see
how much better you feel.
Wholesome and strengthen-
ing for any meal with milk
or cream or in combination
with fruits.
, Made in Canada
SEED POTATOES
BED POTATOF.S, IRISH COB -
biers, Delo ware. Carman. Order
at once, Supply Broiled, Write for rms.
tetione. It. AV. Dawson, Brampton
rrnwsnannno pot BADE
JjitOPIT-MAKINO NBWS AND .103
Offices for sale In good Ontario
towns. The most useful and Interesting
S all businesses.- Pull information on
application to Wilson Publishing Corn.
Pally. IS West Adelaide Street, Toronto.
ntasonnzeurnou—s.
CANCBR, TUMORS, LUMPS, ETC..
internal and external, oured with.
out rain by our home treatment. Write
us before too late, Dr. Bellrnan Medical
Co., LimiTed. Collingwood, Ont.
When buying your Piano
insist on having an'
" OTTO IlIGEL"
PIANO ACTION
BOOK ON
DOG DISEASES
And Row to Feed
MUM free to any address by
the Author
H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc.
118 West list Street, New York
I LL1ARDS—
Those lOng winter nights
you will need indoor recrea•
Mon. Why not instal a
Rome Billiard Table?
Write for particulars of
our famous -
Maisonette Table,
for cash or on easy terms.
Burroughes&Waffs,Ltd.
Makers to K. 1st. the King.
34 Church St., Toronto
ire
T011 CAN'T CET OUT A
Bog Spavin or Thoroughpiti
but you can clean them off promptly with
and you work the horse sense time.
Does not' blister or remove tin
hair. $2.00 per bottle, delivered.
Will tell you niece if you write.
Book 4114 free. ASSORDINE, JR.,
the antiseptic liniment for mankind,
reduces Varicose Veins, Ruptured
Maeda or Ligament., Enlarged Mande, Wen.,
Ems. Allaye pain quickly. Price $1. and M
a boor a dmegirits or delivered. Made in the II S.
11, F. YOUNG, P. D. F., 516 tymans 8Idg,, Montreal, San,
tilisorblac and Absothine, Jr., are made Is Canals.;
C
TE
hi%.D
For AB Departments
Steady Employment
Good Wages
APPLY
lildopoildBitt rifilfliEr Co.., Ltd..
MEPRITTON, ONT.
tiv 15
llmlilt
•
thee 4. ISSUE 47—'16.
A RARE XMAS GIFT
iy scuffing now for ()Ur Price
List of
Beautiful Musk Ox
You win have nice time to look
It over for your Ohrthtmas buy-
ing, A fortunate purchase sll-
Nbles lis to offer these 11A fin
and 1919ST STYLI') Sleben; :it
prices less than half I hair 'ism,/
cost.
They are a rich bre•wn-Idatelt,
with beautiful lustre and per-
fectly tanned. Unsurpassed for
warmth and appearance, The
vary thing for
Ante, Carriage, Or Sleigh
Makes also a, luxurious
Floor Rug for the Rom,,
eureheeers are advised ' to
make an early selection as the
musk Ox is becoming dEvoeidirig-
ly scarce ; the skins thorefors
will soon* be unoqatnehle.
Write to -day for price list
from the largest dealers it
canasta.
LAMONTAGNE, LIMITED
P.C. Box 1410
338 Notre Deane St. Went
11101TTREAD.
Manufaoturers of tlualitY
Entuese, Trunks, Zings, Ste.
,31sta,blisited lace.
emsms.rammosparramosra,